Dangerous Australian Native Wildlife - Cassowary
November 26th 2010 01:28
The Cassowary, (Casuarius casuarius) is Australia’s second largest bird, after the emu, and both are flightless. There are two separate isolated populations inhabiting rainforests on the east coast of Cape York Peninsula in far north Queensland. It is also known as the Southern Cassowary to distinguish it from its northern cousins which inhabit the rainforests of PNG.
Standing about a metre tall, there is little sexual dimorphism between male and female cassowaries, except that females are slightly larger. Both sexes have glossy blue-black plumage with brighter blue head and neck feathers and a bright red wattle hanging from the neck. Cassowaries also have a bony crest, or casque, on top of their heads which is believed to help it barge through the undergrowth.
Secretive and solitary, cassowaries feed on fallen jungle fruits and berries, occasionally straying into canefields and orchards. They can also swim when necessary. While not native inhabitants of the Gold Coast, this pair was photographed at Australia Zoo.
Cassowaries communicate with low rumbling booms and growls, loud roars and sharp hisses. They can be dangerous when disturbed, and have been known to kill people in defence of a perceived threat. They can leap forwards with both sturdy legs outthrust, to strike with the long sharp claws on their three toed feet.
Cassowaries nest in a scraped hollow on the ground lined with leaves. Females may lay a clutch of three to five eggs, two or three times in a breeding season, which occurs between June and October. The males incubate the eggs, and feed and protect the chicks, while the female seeks a new mate.
Standing about a metre tall, there is little sexual dimorphism between male and female cassowaries, except that females are slightly larger. Both sexes have glossy blue-black plumage with brighter blue head and neck feathers and a bright red wattle hanging from the neck. Cassowaries also have a bony crest, or casque, on top of their heads which is believed to help it barge through the undergrowth.
Secretive and solitary, cassowaries feed on fallen jungle fruits and berries, occasionally straying into canefields and orchards. They can also swim when necessary. While not native inhabitants of the Gold Coast, this pair was photographed at Australia Zoo.
Cassowaries communicate with low rumbling booms and growls, loud roars and sharp hisses. They can be dangerous when disturbed, and have been known to kill people in defence of a perceived threat. They can leap forwards with both sturdy legs outthrust, to strike with the long sharp claws on their three toed feet.
Cassowaries nest in a scraped hollow on the ground lined with leaves. Females may lay a clutch of three to five eggs, two or three times in a breeding season, which occurs between June and October. The males incubate the eggs, and feed and protect the chicks, while the female seeks a new mate.
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Anyway, here's the story:
About 20 years ago, some people here began raising emu for food and eggs. It could be bought at the local grocery. However, it did not sell very well in this area, it mostly did better in the western states for some reason. There was a house near a place called John C. Stennis Space Center where rocket engines are tested for the space shuttle, here. Around it is an area about 15 miles where the government owns the land called the "Buffer Zone." A tree fell during the hurricane and broke down a section of the fence. People are not allowed to hunt that area, so now, we have flocks of emu overpopulating the swampy area inside the buffer zone near the Pearl River in Southern Mississippi. They estimate there to be several flocks and the numbers of the emu somewhere near 150. There have been several accidents due to these birds.