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    • Home
    • Imported Green Peafowl
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    • Hybrid/Spalding Peafowl
    • Videos (New vids)
    • Green peafowl gallery
    • Our pen designs
    • Our perch designs
    • How we hatch peafowl
    • Our redwood incubators
    • Chaco Chachalaca
    • Plain Chachalaca
  • Home
  • Imported Green Peafowl
  • Composite Green Peafowl
  • Bob’s American Greens
  • Hybrid/Spalding Peafowl
  • Videos (New vids)
  • Green peafowl gallery
  • Our pen designs
  • Our perch designs
  • How we hatch peafowl
  • Our redwood incubators
  • Chaco Chachalaca
  • Plain Chachalaca

Chaco Chachalaca

Ortalis canicollis

Chachalaca are the smallest of the three species of Cracids with the others being, Guan and Currosaw. The Chaco Chachalaca are indigenous to the Gran Chaco Region of South America this includes Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, Argentina and Brazil. They are very curious, will readily eat almost anything you can give them, they especially like 

Chachalaca are the smallest of the three species of Cracids with the others being, Guan and Currosaw. The Chaco Chachalaca are indigenous to the Gran Chaco Region of South America this includes Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, Argentina and Brazil. They are very curious, will readily eat almost anything you can give them, they especially like fruits. Chacos spend a large amount of time on the ground and will hurriedly run for cover when they feel threatened. They are obnoxiously loud as are most all Chachalaca birds with the male being the loudest of the genders. This is due to an evolutionary adaptation called a “tracheal loop”, the male chachalaca have an elongated trachea that hangs outside the breast and keel and curls similar to that of a trombone. Older males can have tracheal loops that extend from the breast to the vent. This adaptation gives the males a deeper and much louder call.  The hens are just as vocal but not as loud and much higher in pitch. Both genders are very similar in color and markings with the males being slightly larger and at 10-12 months expect the males to have a noticeable tracheal loop developing. You must catch and feel for the loop, it is not visible or if you’re experienced in chachalaca, the vocals will let you know. Chacos are similar in size to Red Golden Pheasants.

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