Pheasant-tailed Jacanas
Jacana Information & Listing of Species ... Jacana Photo Gallery


The Pheasant-tailed Jacana (Hydrophasianus chirurgus) is a jacana. It is the only member of the genus Hydrophasianus.
The jacanas are a group of waders in the family Charadriidae, which are identifiable by their huge feet and claws which enable them to walk on floating vegetation in shallow lakes that are their preferred habitat.
They are found worldwide within the tropical zone. Capable of swimming although usually walking on the vegetation.
The females are more colourful than the males and are polyandrous (meaning they form stable unions with more than one male).
Distribution
The Pheasant-tailed Jacana breeds in India, southeast Asia and Indonesia. It is sedentary in much of its range, but northern breeders from south China and the Himalaya migrate into peninsular India and southeast Asia. It is also resident in Taiwan, where it is considered endangered.
Resident on lakes, marshes and ponds where it feeds on invertebrates, frogs and fish.


Description
This is the only jacana to have a separate breeding plumage, when it is a conspicuous and unmistakable bird. The male sports a long "pheasant"-like tail in the breeding season.
They are 31 cm (12") long but the females are larger than the males. In the breeding season, the long tail adds another 8 cm. The outermost primaries (= longest wing feathers) have a spatulate extension of 2 cm and the seventh primary has a broad protrusion.
Breeding adults are mainly black other than white wings, head and fore neck. The hind neck is golden. There is a striking white eyestripe. The legs and very long toes are grey.
Non-breeding adults lack the long tail. The underparts are white except for a brown breast band and neck stripe. The side of the neck is golden.
Young birds have brown upperparts. The underparts are white, with a weak brown breast band.
Measurements (From Rasmussen and Anderton):
- Length: 310 mm 390-580 mm (breeding)
- Wing (with extension of primary):
- 190-244 mm (adults)
- 168-228 mm (juveniles)
- Bill: 23-30 mm
- Tarsus: 45-58 mm
- Tail:
- 194-376 mm (breeding)
- 110-117 mm (non breeding)
Breeding
In the breeding season, the male grows the 15cm (6") arching tail, to which the bird owes its name. A female may mate with up to ten males, each of which incubates a clutch and raises his own brood. Four black-marked brown eggs are laid in the floating nests.
They breeds on floating vegetation during March to July. In southern India it breeds in the monsoon season June-Sept.
Habits
The Pheasant-tailed Jacana's food is insects and other invertebrates picked from the floating vegetation or the water's surface.
Call / Song:
Their call is a mewing me-onp and a nasal teeun
Diet:
It feeds on invertebrates, frogs and fish.

Adapted from Source: Wikipedia.org. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License
Photo Gallery





Photo, Video and/or Article contributions are welcome! Please click here for info
The Avianweb strives to maintain accurate and up-to-date information; however, mistakes do happen. If you would like to correct or update any of the information, please send us an e-mail. THANK YOU!





