Meleagris

Query URLs

https://term.museum-digital.de/md-de/tag/51543

JSON SKOS Navigator Tree
Note
The turkey is a large bird in the genus Meleagris, native to North America. There are two extant turkey species: the wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) of eastern and central North America and the ocellated turkey (Meleagris ocellata) of the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico. Males of both turkey species have a distinctive fleshy wattle, called a snood, that hangs from the top of the beak. They are among the largest birds in their ranges. As with many large ground-feeding birds (order Galliformes), the male is bigger and much more colorful than the female.

Native to North America, the wild species was bred as domesticated turkey by indigenous peoples. It was this domesticated turkey that later reached Eurasia, during the Columbian exchange. In English, "turkey" probably got its name from the domesticated variety being imported to Britain in ships coming from the Turkish Levant via Spain. The British at the time therefore associated the bird with the country Turkey and the name prevailed. An alternative theory posits that another bird, a guinea fowl native to Madagascar introduced to England by merchants trading to Turkey, was the original source, and that the term was then transferred to the New World bird by English colonizers with knowledge of the previous species.
Search for this on museum-digital
  • KÖZÉRT reklámlap

    KÖZÉRT reklámlap

    KÖZÉRT Vállalat által...

    Object information
    Image: Magyar Kereskedelmi és Vendéglátóipari Múzeum - CC BY-NC-SA

References

[]

Broader (Generic)