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Emu
Body contour feather (semiplume characteristics)

Emu

Kingdom: Animalia, Phylum: Chordata, Class: Aves, Order: Casuariiformes, Family: Dromaiidae, Genus: Dromaius, Species: Dromaius novaehollandiae

Family: Dromaiidae (Emus)

Shape
Symmetrical, elongated, and hair-like with a characteristically thin, flexible rachis and loose vanes.
Size
Approximately 4 to 8 inches (10-20 cm) in length, consistent with mid-sized body feathers of an adult emu.
Rarity
Common (Abundant in its mainland range; also widely farmed globally).
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Description

The Emu is Australia's largest native bird, a flightless ratite standing up to 1.9 meters tall. Its feathers are unique among birds; they are long, drooping, and hair-like to help regulate temperature. Because they don't fly, they don't need aerodynamic, interlocking barbs.

Colour & Pattern

Gradated bicoloration: the base is a creamy white or pale grey, transitioning into a sandy brown or dark sepia toward the tip. This 'dirt-mottled' look provides camouflage in arid environments.

Barb Structure

Plumulaceous and loose. Emu feathers lack the microscopic hooklets (barbicels) that zip barbs together, resulting in a floppy, hair-like appearance rather than a solid vane.

Texture & Surface

Dry, soft, and hairlike. It lacks the glossy, stiff, or oily surface found in flighted birds, appearing matte and fibrous.

Key Features

Absence of interlocking barbicels (hair-like), distinctive bifurcated (double) appearance if the quill is intact, and a tan-to-white gradient.

Habitat

Savannas, grasslands, and sclerophyll forests; adaptable to most habitats except dense rainforest or extreme desert.

Geographic Range

Endemic to mainland Australia. Found across most of the continent, following water and food sources nomadically.

Ecological Role

Large-scale seed disperser; they consume vast amounts of fruit and seeds, carrying them over long distances in their gut before depositing them.

Similar Species

Ostrich (larger, fluffier, usually black/white/grey) and Cassowary (usually coarser and darker black).

Interesting Facts

Emus are the only birds with a 'double feather' that grows from a single follicle. They are also incredibly fast, capable of sprinting at 31 mph (50 km/h).

Condition Notes

Good; showing some separation of barbs. Typical of naturally molted feathers where the distal ends are slightly weathered.