The bright red thing under the turkey's chin is the gobbler, that just gives aura of importance. (I think)
it is a snood
A gobble.
waddel
the gobble
the fleshy type thing hanging from a turkeys chin is a wattle.your welcome!
This flap of loose skin, found on roosters, turkeys, some dog and goat varieties, and even some humans, is called a wattle.
The male turkey has a red fleshy gobble hanging from its neck. It also has a red-pink growth on its head called a carbuncle and a long fleshy growth called a snood at the base of its bill.
Wattles! =P
The red skin hanging off their beak is called a wattle. And you probably already know that the top is called a comb. They are used in courtship and other displays of the like. It is also a sign of maturity. Thanks, DavidJr
The red ornament on a turkey's head is called a wattle.
It is called a wattle, and is only present on male turkeys.
I am assuming you mean the red things hanging under the "chin" of the hen. Yes, they are called wattles, the puffy red things on the top of the head are called combs. Both these features can be single or double.
It is the red thing on it's neck, also called a "gobbler" by some people who don't know what to call it.
The fleshy part that hangs from a turkey's neck is called a wattle.
A cockscomb, cock's-comb, or (less commonly) coxcomb is a fleshy growth, caruncle, or crest on the top of the head of many gallinaceous birds, notably turkeys, pheasants, and domestic chickens. It is generally larger on males than on females.The crest is a prominent feature exhibited by several bird and dinosaur species on their heads.
The fleshy, wrinkled, often brightly red colored fold of skin hanging from the neck or throat of turkeys is called a wattle. It is used for sexual display and is larger in males than females. In life it can be engorged with blood to make it larger and more brightly colored.