Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The peafowl might also nest on crevices in the buildings, and disused nests of vultures. [15] [45] The female lays a clutch of three to eight oval shaped eggs. The eggs measure about 2.45–3 in (6.2–7.6 cm) in length and 1.42–2.2 in (3.6–5.6 cm) in width. They appear polished and have thick shells with pits and pores.
A peacock served in full plumage (detail of the Allegory of Taste, Hearing and Touch by Jan Brueghel the Elder, 1618) In ancient Rome, peafowl were served as a delicacy. [64] The dish was introduced there in approximately 35 B.C. The poet Horace ridiculed the eating of peafowl, saying they tasted like chicken. Peafowl eggs were also valued.
1781 painting by Maruyama Okyo Adult female head and upper neck Male profile. The green peafowl is a large bird in terms of overall size. The male is 1.8–3 m (5 ft 11 in – 9 ft 10 in) in total length, including its train, which measures 1.4–1.6 m (4 ft 7 in – 5 ft 3 in); the adult female is around half the total length of the breeding male at 1–1.1 m (3 ft 3 in – 3 ft 7 in) in length.
The number of eggs laid in a single brood is referred to as the clutch. Clutch size is usually within a small range of variation. Some birds respond to the accidental loss of eggs by laying a replacement egg. Others will stop laying based on the apparent size of the clutch.
Monotremes, only five species of which exist, all from Australia and New Guinea, are mammals that lay eggs. They have one opening for excretion and reproduction called the cloaca. They hold the eggs internally for several weeks, providing nutrients, and then lay them and cover them like birds.
Eagles can typically lay up to three eggs, as they did in 2022, all of which hatched. So, there’s still a chance for a third egg to appear, if it hasn’t already by the time you read this story.
If the eggs happen to hatch, the parents will immediately start feeding them fish and keeping them warm. If the eggs don't hatch, the parents will slowly start leaving the eggs a little bit at a time.
They also excrete creatine, rather than creatinine like mammals. [77] This material, as well as the output of the intestines, emerges from the bird's cloaca. [85] [86] The cloaca is a multi-purpose opening: waste is expelled through it, most birds mate by joining cloaca, and females lay eggs from it.