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Wild Turkey - Meleagris gallopavo I was hiking in the woods when I heard a cacophony of drumming, gobbling, and clucking from off in the distance. I followed the noise, in addition to tracks and scat, and came upon a flock of turkeys dusting and sunning themselves in a small clearing in the woods. I tried to sneak up on them, but there were a lot of big rocks to scramble over and I was not as stealth as I thought I could be. They saw me, and headed up a hill. I thought I could overtake them, but I underestimated their speed when being pursued. They were practically sprinting up a steep hill, while I ate their dust. So, I only got a couple blurry photos! <br />
<br />
 Wild Turkeys are very large, plump birds. They have long legs, wide tails, and small heads on long, thin necks. They have dark plumage with a bronze-green iridescence. The bare skin of their heads and necks varies from red to blue to gray. <br />
<br />
 Wild turkeys were nearly wiped out by hunters and habitat loss by the early 1900s, but they made a comeback due to conservation efforts. However, for the past decade or so, turkey populations have again started to fall across much of the United States. This current decline is due to many factors - including, overhunting, habitat loss, climate change, disease, predation, etc. <br />
<br />
Habitat: Mixed forest. I have not provided the exact location because we have a hunting problem in our area where hunters will even trespass on protected lands in order to hunt turkeys.<br />
<figure class="photo"><a href="https://www.jungledragon.com/image/71736/wild_turkey_-_meleagris_gallopavo.html" title="Wild Turkey - Meleagris gallopavo"><img src="https://s3.amazonaws.com/media.jungledragon.com/images/3232/71736_thumb.jpg?AWSAccessKeyId=05GMT0V3GWVNE7GGM1R2&Expires=1759968010&Signature=Gse74hU15%2FwXMP5bQZyafmIeMbU%3D" width="200" height="130" alt="Wild Turkey - Meleagris gallopavo I was hiking in the woods when I heard a cacophony of drumming, gobbling, and clucking from off in the distance. I followed the noise, in addition to tracks and scat, and came upon a flock of turkeys dusting and sunning themselves in a small clearing in the woods. I tried to sneak up on them, but there were a lot of big rocks to scramble over and I was not as stealth as I thought I could be. They saw me, and headed up a hill. I thought I could overtake them, but I underestimated their speed when being pursued. They were practically sprinting up a steep hill, while I ate their dust. So, I only got a couple blurry photos! <br />
<br />
Wild Turkeys are very large, plump birds. They have long legs, wide tails, and small heads on long, thin necks. They have dark plumage with a bronze-green iridescence. The bare skin of their heads and necks varies from red to blue to gray. <br />
<br />
Wild turkeys were nearly wiped out by hunters and habitat loss by the early 1900s, but they made a comeback due to conservation efforts. However, for the past decade or so, turkey populations have again started to fall across much of the United States. This current decline is due to many factors - including, overhunting, habitat loss, climate change, disease, predation, etc. <br />
<br />
Habitat: Mixed forest. I have not provided the exact location because we have a hunting problem in our area where hunters will even trespass on protected lands in order to hunt turkeys.<br />
https://www.jungledragon.com/image/57991/wild_turkey_-_meleagris_gallopavo.html Fall,Geotagged,Meleagris gallopavo,United States,Wild turkey,turkey" /></a></figure> Fall,Geotagged,Meleagris gallopavo,United States,Wild Turkey,Wild turkey,turkey Click/tap to enlarge

Wild Turkey - Meleagris gallopavo

I was hiking in the woods when I heard a cacophony of drumming, gobbling, and clucking from off in the distance. I followed the noise, in addition to tracks and scat, and came upon a flock of turkeys dusting and sunning themselves in a small clearing in the woods. I tried to sneak up on them, but there were a lot of big rocks to scramble over and I was not as stealth as I thought I could be. They saw me, and headed up a hill. I thought I could overtake them, but I underestimated their speed when being pursued. They were practically sprinting up a steep hill, while I ate their dust. So, I only got a couple blurry photos!

Wild Turkeys are very large, plump birds. They have long legs, wide tails, and small heads on long, thin necks. They have dark plumage with a bronze-green iridescence. The bare skin of their heads and necks varies from red to blue to gray.

Wild turkeys were nearly wiped out by hunters and habitat loss by the early 1900s, but they made a comeback due to conservation efforts. However, for the past decade or so, turkey populations have again started to fall across much of the United States. This current decline is due to many factors - including, overhunting, habitat loss, climate change, disease, predation, etc.

Habitat: Mixed forest. I have not provided the exact location because we have a hunting problem in our area where hunters will even trespass on protected lands in order to hunt turkeys.

Wild Turkey - Meleagris gallopavo I was hiking in the woods when I heard a cacophony of drumming, gobbling, and clucking from off in the distance. I followed the noise, in addition to tracks and scat, and came upon a flock of turkeys dusting and sunning themselves in a small clearing in the woods. I tried to sneak up on them, but there were a lot of big rocks to scramble over and I was not as stealth as I thought I could be. They saw me, and headed up a hill. I thought I could overtake them, but I underestimated their speed when being pursued. They were practically sprinting up a steep hill, while I ate their dust. So, I only got a couple blurry photos! <br />
<br />
Wild Turkeys are very large, plump birds. They have long legs, wide tails, and small heads on long, thin necks. They have dark plumage with a bronze-green iridescence. The bare skin of their heads and necks varies from red to blue to gray. <br />
<br />
Wild turkeys were nearly wiped out by hunters and habitat loss by the early 1900s, but they made a comeback due to conservation efforts. However, for the past decade or so, turkey populations have again started to fall across much of the United States. This current decline is due to many factors - including, overhunting, habitat loss, climate change, disease, predation, etc. <br />
<br />
Habitat: Mixed forest. I have not provided the exact location because we have a hunting problem in our area where hunters will even trespass on protected lands in order to hunt turkeys.<br />
https://www.jungledragon.com/image/57991/wild_turkey_-_meleagris_gallopavo.html Fall,Geotagged,Meleagris gallopavo,United States,Wild turkey,turkey

    comments (2)

  1. Nice story on the chase :) Still surprises me how fowl-like birds can survive in the wild, being so meaty and easy to discover. Posted 7 years ago
    1. Thanks. Yep, these birds were so loud and obvious! And, There are plenty of predators in the area including coyotes, fox, and bobcats. But, turkey populations don't seem that phased by the larger predators. They counteract the threat of predation well by roosting in trees at night, having large clutches, and hanging out in large-ish flocks. Their populations are more adversely affected by smaller nest predators, like raccoons, skunks, and snakes. They can damage population density by eating the eggs and poults. Posted 7 years ago

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The wild turkey is an upland game bird native to North America, one of two extant species of turkey and the heaviest member of the order Galliformes. It is the ancestor to the domestic turkey , which was originally derived from a southern Mexican subspecies of wild turkey .

Similar species: Landfowl
Species identified by Christine Young
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By Christine Young

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Uploaded Mar 8, 2018. Captured Dec 2, 2017 14:08 in 622 Buckingham St, Watertown, CT 06779, USA.
  • Canon EOS 60D
  • f/5.0
  • 1/197s
  • ISO400
  • 100mm