Southern cassowary


The southern cassowary, also known as double-wattled cassowary, Australian cassowary or two-wattled cassowary, is a large flightless black bird. It is one of the three living species of cassowary, alongside the dwarf cassowary and the northern cassowary. It is a ratite and therefore related to the emu, ostriches, rheas and kiwis.

Taxonomy

Presently, most authorities consider the southern cassowary monotypic, but several subspecies have been described. It has proven very difficult to confirm the validity of these due to individual variations, age-related variations, the relatively few available specimens, and that locals are known to have traded live cassowaries for hundreds, if not thousands of years, some of which are likely to have escaped/been deliberately introduced to regions away from their origin.
Cassowaries are closely related to the kiwis, both families diverging from a common ancestor approximately 40 million years ago.
The binomial name Casuarius casuarius is derived from its Malay name kesuari. The southern cassowary was first described by Carl Linnaeus, in his 18th-century work Systema Naturae, as Struthio casuarius, from a specimen from Seram, in 1758. It is now the type species of the genus Casuarius.
The southern cassowary has been described under a large number of scientific names, all of which are now considered taxonomic synonyms for the species.
Synonyms
Struthio casuarius Linnaeus 1758
Casuarius casuarius altijugus Sclater 1878
Casuarius altijugus Sclater 1878
Casuarius casuarius aruensis Schlegel 1866
Casuarius aruensis Schlegel 1866
Casuarius australis Wall 1854
Casuarius casuarius beccarii Sclater 1875
Casuarius beccarii Sclater 1875
Casuarius bicarunculatus Sclater 1860
Casuarius casuarius bicarunculatus Sclater 1860
Casuarius bistriatus van Oort 1907
Casuarius casuarius bistriatus van Oort 1907
Casuarius casuarius casuarius Linnaeus 1758
Casuarius casuarius chimaera Rothschild 1904
Cassowara eximia Perry 1811
Casuarius casuarius grandis Rothschild 1937
Casuarius galeatus Bonnaterre 1790
Casuarius casuarius hamiltoni Mathews 1915
Casuarius casuarius intensus Rothschild 1898
Casuarius bicarunculatus intermedius Rothschild 1928
Casuarius casuarius intermedius Rothschild 1928
Casuarius casuarius johnsonii Müller 1866
Casuarius johnsonii Müller 1866
Casuarius casuarius lateralis Rothschild 1925
Casuarius casuarius salvadorii Oustalet 1878
Casuarius salvadorii Oustalet 1878
Casuarius casuarius sclaterii Salvadori 1878
Casuarius sclaterii Salvadori 1878
Casuarius casuarius tricarunculatus Beccari 1876
Casuarius bicarunculatus tricarunculatus Beccari 1876
Casuarius tricarunculatus Beccari 1876
Casuarius casuarius violicollis Rothschild 1899
Hippalectryo indicus Gloger 1842
Casuarius hagenbecki Rothschild 1904

Description

The southern cassowary has stiff, bristly black plumage, a blue face and long neck, red on the cape and two red wattles measuring around in length hanging down around its throat. A horn-like brown casque, measuring high, sits atop the head. The bill can range from. The three-toed feet are thick and powerful, equipped with a lethal dagger-like claw up to on the inner toe. The plumage is sexually monomorphic, but the female is dominant and larger with a longer casque, larger bill and brighter-coloured bare parts. The juveniles have brown longitudinal striped plumage. It is perhaps the largest member of the cassowary family and is tied as the second heaviest bird on earth, at a maximum size estimated at and tall. Normally, this species ranges from in length. The height is normally ; females average, while males average. The northern cassowary is about the same size on average and is perhaps very mildly less sexually dimorphic than the southern. Most adult birds will weigh between. It is technically the largest Asian bird and the largest Australian bird.

Range and habitat

The southern cassowary is distributed in Indonesia, New Guinea and northeastern Australia. It mainly inhabits tropical rainforests but may make use of nearby savannah forests or mangroves stands. The species prefers elevations below in Australia, and on New Guinea.
LocationPopulationTrend
Southern Papua New GuineaunknownDeclining
SeramUnknownUnknown
Aru IslandsUnknownUnknown
Northeastern Australia1,500 to 2,500Declining
**Paluma RangeUnknownDeclining
**McIlwraith Range1000+Declining
**Jardine River National ParkUnknownUnknown
Total2,500+Declining

Behavior

It forages on the forest floor for fallen fruit and is capable of safely digesting some fruits toxic to other animals. It also eats fungi, and some insects and small vertebrates. The southern cassowary is a solitary bird, which pairs only in breeding season, in late winter or spring. The male builds a nest on the ground, a mattress of herbaceous plant material thick and up to wide. This is thick enough to let moisture drain away from the eggs. The male also incubates the eggs and raises the chicks alone. A clutch of three or four eggs are laid measuring. They have a granulated surface and are initially bright pea-green in colour although they fade with age.
Cassowaries make a thunderous call during mating season and hissing and rumblings otherwise. Chicks will make frequent high-pitches whistles to call the male.
Cassowaries have a reputation for being dangerous to people and animals, and are often regarded as aggressive. The birds can jump quite high and kick powerfully with their blade-like claws. However, deadly encounters with cassowaries are rare. Only two human deaths have been reported since 1900. A 2003 historical study of 221 cassowary attacks showed that 150 had been against humans: 75% of these had been from cassowaries that had been fed by people, 71% of the time the bird had chased or charged the victim, 15% of the time they kicked. Of the attacks, 73% involved the birds expecting or snatching food, 5% involved defending their natural food sources, 15% involved defending themselves from attack, and 7% involved defending their chicks or eggs. Only one human death was reported among those 150 attacks.
The first documented human death caused by a cassowary was on April 6, 1926. In Australia, 16-year-old Phillip McClean and his brother, age 13, came across a cassowary on their property and decided to try and kill it by striking it with clubs. The bird kicked the younger boy, who fell and ran away as his older brother struck the bird. The older McClean then tripped and fell to the ground. While he was on the ground, the cassowary kicked him in the neck, opening a 1.25 cm wound that may have severed his jugular vein. The boy died of his injuries shortly thereafter.
Another human death due to a cassowary was recorded in Florida on April 12, 2019. The bird's owner, a 75-year-old man who had raised the animal, was apparently clawed to death after he fell to the ground.
Being fed by people tempts cassowaries into closer associations with human-inhabited areas, increasing the already high risk of vehicle strikes - a major cause of cassowary mortality - and increasing the likelihood of encounters with humans. Many "aggressive" birds are simply responding to having been fed by humans in the past. Unfortunately the poor reputation of this species leads to confusion and misinformation among the public, which hampers conservation efforts of this shy bird.

Conservation

Although subject to ongoing habitat loss, limited range, and overhunting in some areas, the southern cassowary as of 2017 evaluated as Least concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. The Australian population is listed as Endangered under Federal and Queensland State legislation. Some threats are habitat loss, feral animals eating their eggs, hunting, and roadkill. Road building, feral animals and hunting are the worst of these threats. It has an occurrence range of, and between 10,000 and 20,000 birds were estimated in a 2002 study, with between 1,500 and 2,500 in Australia. Southern cassowaries have been bred in many zoos around the world, like at White Oak Conservation in Yulee, Florida, United States.

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