National Bird Of India | Indian National Bird
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The Peacock, Pavo cristatus (Linnaeus), the national bird of India. It is
symbolic of qualities like beauty, grace, pride and mysticism. Peacocok is a
colourful, swan-sized bird, with a fan-shaped crest of feathers, a white patch
under the eye and a long, slender neck. The male of the species is more
colourful than the female, with a glistening blue breast and neck and a
spectacular bronze-green train of around 200 elongated feathers it is able to
expand its tail erect like fan as ostentatious display. The female is brownish,
slightly smaller than the male, and lacks the train. These birds do not sound as
beautiful as they look they have a harsh call. The elaborate courtship dance of
the male, fanning out the tail and preening its feathers is a beautiful
sight.
The peacock is widely found in the Indian sub-continent from the
south and east of the Indus river, Jammu and Kashmir, east Assam, south Mizoram
and the whole of the Indian peninsula. Found wild in India (and also
domesticated in villages) they live in jungle lands near water. They were once
bred for food but now hunting of peacocks is banned in India.
The Peacock
is depicted in picture with the company of Indian Gods and Goddesses. It is the
sacred bird of the India, protected not only by a religious sentiment but also
by parliamentary statute. It is fully protected under the Indian Wildlife
(Protection) Act, 1972.
The significance of peacock is attached to cultures of India, Far East, Ancient
Persia, Greek and Christian. In Hinduism, the image of the god of thunder, rains
and war, Indra, was depicted in the form of a peacock. In south India, peacock
is considered as a 'vahana' or vehilce of lord Muruga. The figure of peacock is
painted in various Islamic religious buildings. In Christianity, the peacock was
also known as the symbol of the 'Resurrection'.
In India people believe that whenever the cock spread its tails in an ornamental fashion, it indicates
that rain is imminent. In a way it is partly true. At the sight of dark clouds
the bird outspreads its tail and starts dancing in rhythmic fashion. Most of the
folklore including Bharatha Natyam has got special dancing poses for the peacock
dance.
The peacock is the national bird of India. The species is found
in dry semi-desert grasslands, scrub and deciduous forests. It forages and nests
on the ground but roosts on top of trees. It eats mainly seeds, but also some
insects, fruits and reptiles.
Females are about 86 cm (34 in) long and
weigh about 3.4 kg (7.4 lbs), while males average at about 2.12 m (7.3 ft) in
full breeding plumage (107 cm/42 in when not) and weigh about 5 kg (11 lbs). The
male is called a peacock, the female a peahen. The Indian Peacock has beautiful
iridescent blue-green plumage. The display feathers on its back are enormously
elongated and ornate with an eye at the end of each feather. The female plumage
is a mixture of dull green, grey and iridescent blue, with the greenish-grey
predominating. In the breeding season, females stand apart by lacking the long
'tail feathers' also known as train, and in the non-breeding season they can be
distinguished from males by the green colour of the neck as opposed to the blue
on the males.
They are most notable for the male's extravagant
display feathers, despite actually growing from their back is known as a 'tail'
and also known as a train, a result of sexual selection, which it displays as
part of courtship. This train is in reality not the tail but the enormously
elongated upper tail coverts. The tail itself is brown and short as in the
peahen.