There are two species of peafowl. The Indian blue, which is not endangered, and the green, which is endangered, found from Burma to Java.
Because its hunted for it's meat and feathers and its chicks and eggs are taken by people who will sell them to breeders.
They get hunted for the feathers.
The Indian peafowl is not an endangered species. Listed as "Least Concern".
Since about 1960The Indian peafowl is not an endangered species, listed as "Least Concern" by the IUCN. The green peafowl of southeast Asia is however, endangered.
Peahens are simply the female peafowl, so no, peahens are not endangered. Of the three types of peafowl, the Green Peafowl is an endangered species while the Congo Peafowl is listed as Vulnerable. Indian Peafowl, which are the bird most people think of when the term "peacock" is mentioned, have a conservation status of Least Concern.
yes
There are two species of peacocks*. The Indian peacock is considered Least Concern (which means it is not endangered whatsoever). The other species, the Green peacock (or Javan), is endangered. In general, endangered species are protected, however I can't find any information on conservation programs for the green peacock. *The real name for peacock if peafowl. Scientifically, "peacock" is used only for males, peahen for females, and peafowl for both.
The Indian peafowl is not endangered, but listed rather as Least Concern, meaning the species has a viable population still. The correct term is "peafowl", peacock is the male. Females are called "peahens."
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indian,green,and congo
A peacock is a male peafowl. There are two different species in the genus Pavo: Indian Peafowl & Green Peafowl. There is also a different peafowl called the Congo peafowl which is in a separate genus Afropavo. If you want to know the relatives of peafowl, look it up in a book or on the internet and not just by asking a question.
Genus & species of Peafowl are Pavo cristus. They are of the family Phasiandae of the order Galiformes.
There are 2 speciesThe two species are:Indian Peafowl, Pavo cristatus (Asiatic)Green Peafowl, Pavo muticus (Asiatic)
There are two species of peafowl. There is the Pavo cristatus commonly known as the Indian or Blue Peafowl, and there is the Pavo muticus commonly known as the Green Peafowl. The species that most people are familiar with is the Indian Peafowl (Pavo cristatus.)
Yes, the Indian Peafowl is endangered and the Green Peafowl is nearly, if not absolutely, extinct.The peacock population is dwindling fast due to habitat loss, contamination of food sources and poaching. Ironically, until today no census has been conducted of the peacock. Non-feasibility has been cited as the only reason. The sole stock-taking of the peacock population in India was done by WWF India in 1991. It revealed that India was left with only 50 per cent of the total peacock population that existed at the time of Partition in 1947. While the green peacock is already believed to be extinct, the peacock may soon end up on the critically endangered list.The green peafowl is endangered in its native habitats.Peafowl - a species of pheasant native to southern Asia - come in many colours and varieties, and are frequently raised by humans. They do well in captivation, and adapt to man's environment very well.