Orange-footed scrubfowl
The orange-footed scrubfowl, also known as orange-footed megapode or just scrubfowl, is a small megapode of the family Megapodiidae native to many islands in the Lesser Sunda Islands as well as southern New Guinea and northern Australia.
Description
It is a terrestrial bird the size of a domestic chicken and dark-coloured with strong orange legs and a pointed crest at the back of the head. It utilises a range of forest and scrub habitats and has colonised many small islands throughout its range. It is prolific in suburban Darwin gardens, where people refer to it as a bush chook, bush chicken, bush turkey, or most commonly, the bush boiby
Conservation
In general, populations seem to be stable and the conservation status of the species is considered to be of Least Concern.
Diet
The orange-footed scrubfowl feeds on seeds, fallen fruit and terrestrial invertebrates.
Breeding
As with other megapodes, it nests in large mounds of sand, leaf litter and other debris where the heat generated by the decomposition of organic material serves to incubate the eggs. Construction and maintenance of the mounds, which may reach in height and in diameter, takes place throughout the year.
Taxonomy
There are 5 subspecies. Some of the subspecies may be treated as full species, such as the Tanimbar scrubfowl, while other subspecies may be considered subspecies of other species.
The Kunwinjku people of west Arnhem Land know this bird as kurrukurldanj. The people of Flores Islands in Indonesia named this bird as Wodon