Can Peacocks Fly?

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Though you may never have seen it happen, peacocks are able to take to the skies and flap their wings, the bountiful tails flowing behind them. The only catch is, of course, that they aren’t able to fly particularly far at any one time, nor very high.

If you’ve ever been to the zoo, the bird exhibit may not be your first choice, lacking the grandeur of the elephant enclosure or the big cats, but when it comes to beautiful animals, few can compete with the legendary peacock. With full-grown males boasting a spectacular tail display of nearly 200 feathers, the remarkable coloring and patterning on their oversized tail feathers have mesmerized people for thousands of years.

Indian Male Peacock - Image(Kandarp)s
An Indian male peacock. (Photo Credit : Kandarp/ Shutterstock)

Peacocks look almost normal while walking on the ground, trailing their impressive feathers behind them. In fact, if they weren’t moving, you might mistake them for any other bird, poised to leap into flight if you got any closer. However, in the case of peacocks, given their nearly 6-foot train of feathers and penchant for the ground… can they fly?


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Peacocks In Flight

On one of those trips to the zoo mentioned above, once you were enthralled beside the peacock exhibit, you probably didn’t see the peacocks flying about the enclosure, diving and darting between the branches. Generally, you will see peacocks strutting about on the ground, or lounging in the shadows, which has led many people to believe that they are flightless birds.

The concept isn’t so strange, after all, since ostriches, emus, penguins, moas, cassowaries and numerous other birds are unable to take to the skies. In many of those cases, natural selection decided that other attributes were more vital to survival and reproduction, eventually leaving the creatures without the ability to fly.

too busy making these babies to worry about flying

This is not, however, the case with peacocks! Though you may never have seen it happen, peacocks are able to take to the skies and flap their wings, the bountiful tails flowing behind them. The only catch is, of course, that they aren’t able to fly particularly far at any one time, nor very high. If you have been lucky enough to see a peacock leap from the ground and flap its way into a branch, you may have noticed that they aren’t especially graceful in the act; the entire process looks much clunkier than it does in other birds.

Given how apparently vulnerable these birds are, not to mention their brightly colored tails making it difficult for them to blend in, why haven’t peacocks been completely wiped out by now? Are their massive tails to blame for their struggles to get airborne?

Well, while their tails don’t help the situation, they are far from the only reason why these beautiful beasts are usually earthbound.

Also Read: Why Do Peacocks Dance In The Rain?

Peacocks On The Ground

Peacocks are a member of the pheasant family, meaning that they are also closely related to turkey, grouse and partridges. If you’re up to date on your bird knowledge, you know that these birds are not known to be exceptional flyers either. They are often referred to as “ground birds” and have adapted to a life generally spent out of the air.

In the case of such birds, the wings that are typically evolved for flight will become more rounded, rather than streamlined and pointed. These birds are also quite large, and can hold a good amount of body weight, posing an additional obstacle to easy flight.

Most of the food that pheasants consume can be found on the ground, so instead of flying and diving or hunting from the air, these birds adapted the ability to move quickly and hunt at the same level. These birds are often natively found in forested or wooded areas, where they may be closed in with dense foliage.

The ability to fly isn’t very helpful in evading predators when you also have to dodge branches to make an escape. Their large size also makes them less maneuverable in the air.

See, these types of ground birds aren’t flightless, but they have a number of anatomical elements that makes it inconvenient for them to fly. If you haven’t noticed, we haven’t even mentioned the peacock’s tail as the impediment to their flight!

So What About That Tail?

It’s hard to ignore a peacock’s tail, but remember that the peahens (females) of the species don’t have such massive tails, because they are not competing for the males’ attention; rather, the males are competing for theirs. As is true in many different species around the world, the males are the sex that put on grand mating displays to allure a potential mate.

The peacock tail is a remarkable example of runaway sexual selection, in which a trait that is deemed notable for a good mate is selected for over and over again, causing a certain evolutionary element of a species to continue out of control. The outlandishly large tail feathers of male peacocks are not advantageous for survival, but they are considered advantageous for reproduction, and thus the survival of their genes. This continues on in subsequent generations, thus pushing an entire species in a given physiological direction.

you're saying they value reproducing over surviving

Some other classic examples of runaway sexual selection include certain species of warblers who have incredibly complex and lengthy mating calls, lasting for minutes or even hours, as they will more likely be chosen by a mate if their song is longest. Other species of birds, such as African widowbirds, also boast ridiculously long tails that attract potential mates.

So, now that we understand why peacocks have such elaborate tails, we can ask the final question—do their tails contribute to their struggles with flying?

The simple answer to this question is “yes”, because the added weight of the mighty tails will physically make flight more of a challenge, but in an experiment in which the tail feathers were removed from an adult peacock, the birds still struggled to take off, but were able to do so. On the other hand, let’s not forget that female peacocks do not have such elaborate tail displays, and yet they’re also not known as the keenest flyers in the avian kingdom.

Also Read: Why Do Flightless Birds Go Extinct So Often?

A Final Word

Peacocks are a wonderful example of not judging a biological book by its cover. You may see an animal and make assumptions about why it behaves in a certain way, or why evolution has guided it to look a certain way, but those assumptions may be completely incorrect! The natural world continues to impress and surprise researchers in every corner of science, particularly with our knowledge of genetics and evolutionary history progressing at such a breakneck pace!

References (click to expand)
  1. Watch a peacock get a female's attention—by making her .... sciencemag.org
  2. Runaway selection hypothesis | biology | Britannica. britannica.com
  3. Burgess, S. (2001). The beauty of the peacock tail and the problems with the theory of sexual selection. TJ Magazine, 15(2), 94-102. - Semantic Scholar
  4. Adaptations for Flight. Stanford University
  5. Why Fly? Flightless Bird Mystery Solved, Say Evolutionary .... National Geographic
About the Author

John Staughton is a traveling writer, editor, publisher and photographer who earned his English and Integrative Biology degrees from the University of Illinois. He is the co-founder of a literary journal, Sheriff Nottingham, and the Content Director for Stain’d Arts, an arts nonprofit based in Denver. On a perpetual journey towards the idea of home, he uses words to educate, inspire, uplift and evolve.

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