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The Zoo is
CLOSED
for the winter season.
Visit us when we
reopen in April 2010.

 
Frogmouth (Tawny)   Tawny Frogmouth






Scientific Name: Podargus strigoides
Range: Australia, Tasmania, and New Guinea
Habitat: Tropical forest and woodland
Natural Diet: Insects, amphibians, and rodents
Zoo Diet: Mice and bird of prey diet
Physical 
Characteristics:
Tawny frogmouths are covered in grey feathers with black streaks. Females have brown feathers mixed in with the grey. Their wide, flat beak has a hook at the tip. Tawny frogmouths have short, weak legs and a long, pointed tail.
Behavior: These birds are active at night. Tawny frogmouths hunt by searching the ground for food. During the day, you can see them sleeping on tree branches near the tree trunk. When in trees, tawny frogmouths hide from predators by raising their beaks up in the air and keeping their bodies completely still. This makes them look just like a broken tree branch instead of like a bird.
Reproduction: Young tawny frogmouths are born in flimsy stick nests where they are raised by both mother and father.
Notes:   At the Fort Wayne Children's Zoo, you can see a tawny frogmouth in the Australia Welcome Center.
 

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