The Great Argus Pheasant observation at his mating place. Part I

Үй жануарлары мен аңдар

We observed a Great Argus Pheasant at this courtship place in the Sri Phang Nga National Park South Thailand at February 2022 . All the recordings we have taking from a hide because this species is very shy in the wilderness. We started with the recordings in the early morning hours until 11°° in the morning. At afternoon it is not allowed to be there. His courtship is one of the most spectacular in the birds world.

Пікірлер: 51

  • @arinko994
    @arinko9947 ай бұрын

    本当に美しく、素晴らしい映像です。日本の動物園にもセイランはいますが、狭い檻の中で飼われているため、このような自然のままのダイナミックな動きは見る事ができません。 私はセイランの羽根を広げた時の目玉模様が、魅力的で大好きです。これからも美しい鳥たちの映像を楽しみにしております❤

  • @FriedrichEsser

    @FriedrichEsser

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you

  • @user-xx2vu6xl3s
    @user-xx2vu6xl3s2 жыл бұрын

    Outstanding Friedrich! Thank you for sharing!

  • @Blokewood3
    @Blokewood32 жыл бұрын

    I once went to the bird house at the zoo, and the Argus pheasant had escaped from his enclosure and was wandering around the bird house! Mostly we just tried to keep our distance, but every so often it would let out a loud call and startle us.

  • @kangaroomambo
    @kangaroomambo2 жыл бұрын

    Wow! We just saw one of these at the National Aviary in Pennsylvania USA. Loved it's call but had no idea about the mating dance! Incredible!

  • @artandcraft7283
    @artandcraft7283 Жыл бұрын

    so beautiful and colourful birds

  • @bjoybeads
    @bjoybeads Жыл бұрын

    4:30 he starts, and she responds! in the wild- this is great! I've seen them do this in an aviary right around my feet - what a treat! Woaw- whoa!

  • @vladimirnovak9820
    @vladimirnovak98205 ай бұрын

    nádherná podívaná, příroda je skutečný skvost pro oči....

  • @jacobcox4565
    @jacobcox4565Ай бұрын

    I can see why they're called Argus Pheasants. They got a bunch of spots that look kinda like closed eyes.

  • @iceblocks2811
    @iceblocks28112 жыл бұрын

    Amazing!!!, Can you get a video of it flying

  • @FriedrichEsser

    @FriedrichEsser

    2 жыл бұрын

    no it's a ground bird. He prefer to run before he fly

  • @keza3250
    @keza3250 Жыл бұрын

    That bird is incredible,doing his dance is impressive,I've watched Australian lyre birds doing very similar behaviour at dorrigo NSW Australia while at a friend's house out in the east coast rain forest there tail plumes are spectacular an they also make a display area too,cool footage you filmed awesome

  • @amisaefudinami4073
    @amisaefudinami4073 Жыл бұрын

    Asalamualaikum,🙏bos luar biasa satwa stw, nya masih terlihat komplit jenis burung burung nya aman,bos saya salut,kalau di daerah saya jawabarat dah hampir musnah semua nya satwa liar jenis burung,karena di jawa bata banyak sekali yang merusak nya satwa stw,dibunuh mati jg di pulut dan di pikat,yang kini dihutan jd sepi jarang kelihatan satwa burung burung nya,

  • @a0701248
    @a0701248 Жыл бұрын

    marvelous

  • @leonjohnson9625
    @leonjohnson9625 Жыл бұрын

    Hello Friedrich, I am a Master's student writing a thesis about bird behavior. I wanted to ask you if I could use a frame of this video to include as an image in my Master's thesis. The thesis will be published online, and you will be acknowledged ownership of the photograph. It would be clearly stated in the thesis that the photo has been published under your permission. Thank you in advance for your reply. Best wishes

  • @FriedrichEsser

    @FriedrichEsser

    Жыл бұрын

    Hello Leon send me a Message over Facebook Friedrich Esser Chiang Mai

  • @rizwanaparveen6521
    @rizwanaparveen6521 Жыл бұрын

    So beautiful 💗

  • @samipillaijv7237
    @samipillaijv7237 Жыл бұрын

    How it is Beautiful 😍.

  • @myvillagebirds
    @myvillagebirds8 ай бұрын

    So beautiful

  • @alain.10b95
    @alain.10b959 ай бұрын

    Magnifique !!!!

  • @jayantasen390
    @jayantasen390 Жыл бұрын

    Majestic.

  • @geraldofabianoartes3074
    @geraldofabianoartes30742 жыл бұрын

    Magnífica parabéns. Grande abraço Brasil

  • @KevinVang1000
    @KevinVang1000 Жыл бұрын

    If dinosaurs are birds, does that mean that the male dinosaurs are prettier than the females? If that is the case, the male velociraptors are prettier than the females.

  • @FriedrichEsser

    @FriedrichEsser

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe I not have seen one I can't comment it. For me it is important as they looks now.

  • @tacitozetticci9308

    @tacitozetticci9308

    8 ай бұрын

    Many birds have even less sexual dimorphism than us: like most parrots for example. So yeah dinosaurs could be both ways.

  • @KevinVang1000

    @KevinVang1000

    8 ай бұрын

    @@tacitozetticci9308I see them as birds when it comes to therapods. If most of them are birds that rule the land, that would complete Genesis in the Bible as birds and fish rule the planet.

  • @beepst

    @beepst

    4 ай бұрын

    Most male animals are more beautiful than their female counterparts.

  • @bandorojayafarm6996
    @bandorojayafarm69962 жыл бұрын

    The most amazing video of "Kuau Raja", the dancing female show how deep her love to the male.

  • @joep6017

    @joep6017

    Жыл бұрын

    In this footage it looks like he got rejected? She's not being loving, she's being selective (during the display). The female will only mate with the males that have the best and most showing display. It's called sexual selection, as opposed to natural selection.

  • @diosundoro5019

    @diosundoro5019

    Жыл бұрын

    Actually the dancing 'male'

  • @user-wx1yu9ox5k

    @user-wx1yu9ox5k

    Жыл бұрын

    Vg

  • @nautilus2612

    @nautilus2612

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@joep6017there's no indication that the male was rejected

  • @joep6017

    @joep6017

    6 ай бұрын

    @@nautilus2612 I'd say there was, I'm no expert. One big clue is they didn't mate lol also most males are rejected by the females so it's a safe assumption either way.

  • @nadaaa748
    @nadaaa748 Жыл бұрын

    Great ARGUS PHEASANT

  • @Schmidty030
    @Schmidty030 Жыл бұрын

    What camera setup are you running???

  • @FriedrichEsser

    @FriedrichEsser

    Жыл бұрын

    Gitzo tripod Sachtler Fluid head Nikon Z 9 Nikon 400mm F 2.8 Lens

  • @user-co8zn2sq4r
    @user-co8zn2sq4r Жыл бұрын

    3:55 ジャンプ 4:46 求愛開始 8:34 鳴き声

  • @FriedrichEsser

    @FriedrichEsser

    Жыл бұрын

    Please write in english

  • @user-co8zn2sq4r

    @user-co8zn2sq4r

    Жыл бұрын

    3:55 jump 👟 4:46 start of courtship 💝 8:34 chirping voice 📣 I used machine translation, so there may be something wrong.🙇

  • @bonbonS1969

    @bonbonS1969

    Жыл бұрын

    @@FriedrichEsser rude

  • @galleryteneuesartnouveau9353
    @galleryteneuesartnouveau9353 Жыл бұрын

    Thier calls are fascinating one could be mistakenly unaware first thought humans are doing it lol the lady doesn't really cares

  • @mjamil867
    @mjamil8679 ай бұрын

    Allah,Allah,o,Akbar,❤

  • @indyreno2933
    @indyreno2933 Жыл бұрын

    This bird is just called a great argus as it is not a pheasant at all, arguses are gamebirds that belong to the subtribe Argusianina within the tribe Pavonini of the subfamily Pavoninae, which belongs to the family Gallidae, in fact, the arguses (subtribe Argusianina) are the closest living relatives of the peafowl (subtribe Pavonina).

  • @Eriorguez

    @Eriorguez

    Жыл бұрын

    Gallidae is a junior synonym of Phasianidae; I mean, you could use it (you'd need to account for Rollulinae partridges, which are the earliest branch, with both Phasianus-allied and Gallus-allied species closer to each other than to them), but, NOBODY uses Gallidae. Phasianidae is agreed upon for all of those.

  • @indyreno2933

    @indyreno2933

    Жыл бұрын

    @Eriorguez, actually, there are now nine recognized extant families of gamebirds: Megapodiidae (Megapodes), Cracidae (Curassows, Guans, Chachalacas, and Pollopavo), Numididae (Guineafowl), Rollulidae (Jungle Partridges), Phasianidae (Pheasants, Monals, Monal Partridges, and Tragopans), Odontophoridae (New World Partridges and Quails), Perdicidae (Old World Partridges and Quails), Tetraonidae (Grouse, Turkeys, and Koklass Pheasants), and Gallidae (Chickens, Bamboo Partridges, Francolins, Spurfowl, Peafowl, Arguses, Peacock Pheasants, Crimson-Headed Patridge, Indochinese Forest Partridges, Snowcocks, Dwarf Quails, Malagasy Partridge, and Desert Partridges), this classification completely seems Phasianidae polyphyletic, while the jungle partridges (family Rollulidae) are allied with the heavily reduced Phasianidae family, the old world partridges & quails, grouse, turkeys, koklass pheasants, chickens, bamboo partridges, francolins, spurfowl, peafowl, arguses, peacock pheasants, crimson-headed partridge, indochinese forest partridges, snowcocks, dwarf quails, malagasy partridge, and desert partridges of the respective families Perdicidae, Tetraonidae, and Gallidae are all more closely related to the Odontophoridae family, with Perdicidae being the official sister taxon to Odontophoridae, in addition to the families Tetraonidae and Gallidae being each other's closest relatives, in fact, this classification helps completely validate the Galliformes name of the order instead of changing it to Phasianiformes.

  • @Eriorguez

    @Eriorguez

    Жыл бұрын

    @@indyreno2933 Those are major clades, yes, but the Rollulus+Phasianus+Gallus clade is refered to as Phasianidae by pretty much every single paper on galliform taxonomy, as well as every single ornithology book and association.

  • @indyreno2933

    @indyreno2933

    Жыл бұрын

    @Eriorguez, actually, Gallus has priority over Phasianus, which is why the name of the order is Galliformes, therefore, the order is actually now divided into nine extant families: Megapodiidae (Megapodes), Cracidae (Curassows, Guans, Chachalacas, and Pollopavo), Numididae (Guineafowl), Rollulidae (Jungle Partridges), Phasianidae (Pheasants, Monals, Monal Partridges, and Tragopans), Odontophoridae (New World Partridges and Quails), Perdicidae (Old World Partridges and Quails), Tetraonidae (Grouse, Turkeys, and Koklass Pheasants), and Gallidae (Chickens, Bamboo Partridges, Francolins, Spurfowl, Peafowl, Arguses, Peacock Pheasants, Crimson-Headed Partridge, Indochinese Forest Partridges, Snowcocks, Dwarf Quails, Malagasy Partridge, and Desert Partridges), while also being divided into nine extant families, they are now divided into six superfamilies and two suborders, the suborders being Numides (Gondwanan Gamebirds) with the superfamilies Megapodioidea (contains 1 family: Megapodiidae), Cracoidea (contains 1 family: Cracidae), and Numidoidea (contains 1 family: Numididae) and Galli (Laurasian Gamebirds) with the superfamilies Phasianoidea (contains 2 families: Rollulidae and Phasianidae), Perdicoidea (contains 2 families: Odontophoridae and Perdicidae), and Galloidea (contains 2 families: Tetraonidae and Gallidae), the split between the superfamilies Perdicoidea and Galloidea is more derived than the superfamily Phasianoidea, to keep the Galliformes name, there are redivisions into so far nine extant families, so the order wouldn't be renamed Phasianiformes.

  • @Eriorguez

    @Eriorguez

    Жыл бұрын

    @@indyreno2933 Phasianus Linnaeus, 1758 has priority over Gallus Brisson, 1760. And copypasting a listing of taxa is not giving strenght to your argument.

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