Recently, a man was hit by a peafowl in Kerala after which he died. This incident has turned the spotlight on the increasing population of Indian peafowls in the state.
Important points:
- The collective name for peacocks is peafowl. The male of the variety is called a peacock and the female peafowl is called a peahen.
 - The Indian peacock is also the National Bird of India.
 - Peafowl (Pavocristatus) belongs to the Phasianidae family. They are among the largest of all birds that fly.
 - Phasianidae is the pheasant family, a bird family that includes among its members the jungle fowl (from which the domestic chicken is descended), partridge, peacock, pheasant, and quail.
 
The two most-recognizable species of peafowl are:
- The blue, or Indian, peacock of India and Sri Lanka.
 - The green or Javanese, peacock (P. muticus) found from Myanmar (Burma) to Java.
 - The Indian peafowl is a native of India and some parts of Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
 - The species are currently habituated more in central Kerala, followed by southeast and northwest parts of the state.
 - At least 19% of the states’ area is suitable habitat for this species and this may increase by 40-50% by 2050.
 - They are well adapted to living in forest edges and cultivated areas.
 - They are a threat to paddy farmers in Kerala. They destroy its seeds and cause man-animal conflict.
 - Agriculture expansion and deforestation have caused other species to ‘invade human territory’.
 - The growing population of peafowls signals climate change. They are known to grow and thrive in dry conditions.
 
SOURCE: THE HINDU,THE ECONOMIC TIMES,MINT
        
        
        
        