Gamebirds have been domesticated for food production and for ornamental aviculture for centuries, yet they remain a mostly underappreciated group of birds. This might be because they can be seen along roadsides, in open farmlands, urban fringes and even within towns and gardens. The gamebirds have rep resentatives on all continents except Antarctica and, together with the ducks and geese, form the basal group among the Neoaves. The Galliformes comprise nine major groups of terrestrial game birds: megapodes, cracids, guineafowls, grouse, turkeys, pheasants, partridges (including francolins and spurfowls), and Old World and New World quails.
Studies combining the genetics and anatomy of living species and fossils suggested that pheasants, partridges, quails, spurfowls and francolins are not natural evolutionary groups, but rather mosaics of evolutionarily unrelated species. Even the bestknown gamebird and the wild ancestor of the domestic chicken, the Junglefowl Gallus gallus, was moved on the gamebird evolution ary tree from being with the pheasants to a branch that includes a mix of ‘fran colins’ and ‘partridges’.
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EXPLORING NEW HORIZONS
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