Today I bring you the Cassowary

Bretrick

Well-known Member
The cassowary is usually considered to be the world’s most dangerous bird, at least where humans are concerned, although ostriches and emus can also be dangerous.

Cassowaries are shy and they are usually hard to spot, at least in their natural rain forest habitats. They are not overly aggressive, and attacks are rare. But they can do a lot of damage if they are provoked or angered.
Cassowaries have three-toed feet with sharp claws. The inner (first) toe has a dagger-like claw that may be 125 mm (5 in) long.
This claw is particularly fearsome, since cassowaries sometimes kick humans and other animals with their powerful legs. Cassowaries can run at up to 50 km/h (30 mph) through the dense forest and can jump up to 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in). They are good swimmers, crossing wide rivers and swimming in the sea.

Cassowaries are ratites, or birds that have flat breastbones and are unable to fly, just like their cousin, the emu. The cassowary habitat extends from the dense rainforests of northeastern Australia to New Guinea and the surrounding islands.
Size varies from one cassowary species to another. The most common cassowaries, the southern cassowaries, can be 5 to 6 feet(1.5 to 1.8 metres) tall and weigh nearly 170 pounds (77 kilograms)
"Cassowaries are the heaviest bird in Australia, and the southern cassowary is the second-heaviest in the world (the world's heaviest bird is the ostrich),"
"With that in mind, they also have very small wings. When stretched out, their wings extend less than a foot (0.3 meters) from their body."

There are three different species of cassowaries: the northern cassowary, southern cassowary and dwarf cassowary. The southern cassowary, often found in Northern Queensland and New Guinea, is known for its striking appearance, with bristly feathers, a vivid blue face, two red wattles and a prominent helmet, or casque.

Cassowaries are frugivores, meaning they feed on fruits. Their claws help them dig deep in the leaf litter for fallen fruit that other species might miss.
Male cassowaries play a more prominent role than female cassowaries do in rearing their young. After the female lays her eggs, the male participates in incubation and then is the primary caretaker for the young cassowary chicks after they hatch.

The female returns to her solitary life, and does not participate in incubating the eggs or caring for the young. This may be a way to allow her to have several clutches of eggs in one breeding season with different males, thus diversifying her genetics into the next generation.
Each egg weighs about 500 grams, half a kilogram.


 

We first seen a cassowary at Kuranda bird park 1998 when DH rode his BMW motor bike from Adelaide to Cairns 3.000 km each way ……
Birdworld Kuranda - Rainforest Habitat To Over 350 Birds - Open 10am to 3pm
He rode up to cairns to attend a Ulysses club AGM ( he was away for 6 weeks )

I flew up and back to meet dh and spent a week with him before he stated his journey home on his bike

I believe the bird park is quite a tourist attraction now days but it was just low farming type fences and the cassowary was not so pleased to see humans up close …it was scratching the ground and stepping towards us
so I’d hate to encounter one in the wild …they are quite a large bird and have stunning colours

@Bretrick

Thanks for posting
 
Last edited:

Back
Top