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Morning, E.S. (Feel free to hate me: got autumn sunshine pouring golden all around).

I truly do understand that the ‘sub-species thing’ is of next-to-no importance to you guys; but it intrigues me. As usual, the available data sucks; but what I see is that the skinny northern woodwardi’s have much lighter ‘suits,’ while the rothschildi’s around here – whom I see sitting contentedly in the open in pouring mid-winter rain – certainly have thicker coats.

The tail feathers and the ‘fringe’ warrant mention. When I observed Boy Emu on the last day of his ‘hatch-week,’ I realised that, as he sat on his belly, his feathers created a ‘curtain’ around him. Through the binos (great observations! through binos from twenty feet!), it was apparent that the five chicks under him at that point – wait, here’s a photo, and . . . it's at the top of the page?!

‘Kay, the chicks sit either in the ‘room’ under the male’s vent, which the presence of the tail feathers makes a cosy little place, or they sit snuggled in against his body at the sides, between his body and the ‘curtain.’ My point is that ‘desert birds’ don’t need this – and gee! they don’t have it!

(I wish I were well enough to make one trip up north, to spend some time observing woodwardis!)

Supreme Emu
 


Morning, E.S. (Feel free to hate me: got autumn sunshine pouring golden all around).

I truly do understand that the ‘sub-species thing’ is of next-to-no importance to you guys; but it intrigues me. As usual, the available data sucks; but what I see is that the skinny northern woodwardi’s have much lighter ‘suits,’ while the rothschildi’s around here – whom I see sitting contentedly in the open in pouring mid-winter rain – certainly have thicker coats.

The tail feathers and the ‘fringe’ warrant mention. When I observed Boy Emu on the last day of his ‘hatch-week,’ I realised that, as he sat on his belly, his feathers created a ‘curtain’ around him. Through the binos (great observations! through binos from twenty feet!), it was apparent that the five chicks under him at that point – wait, here’s a photo, and . . . it's at the top of the page?!

‘Kay, the chicks sit either in the ‘room’ under the male’s vent, which the presence of the tail feathers makes a cosy little place, or they sit snuggled in against his body at the sides, between his body and the ‘curtain.’ My point is that ‘desert birds’ don’t need this – and gee! they don’t have it!

(I wish I were well enough to make one trip up north, to spend some time observing woodwardis!)

Supreme Emu
 
I think Australia banned the export of live emus somewhere around 1960, so the USA population is all supposedly descended from zoo stocks prior to the ban. Because of this, I think that if it was possible and practical to do a DNA analysis, you would find that most, if not all of the emus currently in the US are probably related at some point with all of the interbreeding and exchange of eggs, chicks, etc over the last fifty plus years. Any distinct sub-species over here have probably been lost to interbreeding, just my guess...
 
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