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Wali
Kukula

Local Name : The Ceylon Junglefowl
Scientific Name : Gallus lafayettii Lesson
Identification:
Size
of a small, but not bantam, breed of domestic fowl.
Behaviour:
Haban
Kukula is a fairly common bird. It spends its life in forest
or its outskirts, never venturing far from cover, though,
especially in wet weather, it likes to frequent open places,
such as roadsides or glades.The food of the Haban Kukula consists
of grain, weed seeds, berries, various succulent leaves and
buds, and a large proportion of small animals, such as crickets,
centipedes and termites. When nillu flowers and seeds in up-country
jungles, junglefowl migrate to these areas in large numbers
to fatten on the abundant seed.
The
main breeding season is in the first quarter of the year,
but often a second clutch is laid in August-September, and
breeding may go on throughout the year. The nest is often
a shallow scrape in the ground, concealded by herbage, at
the foot of a tree or beside a dead log. The eggs number two
to four; they are creamy-white, some very finely peppered,
other more boldly but sparingly speckled with brown. They
measure about 48 × 35 mm.
Locations:
The Junglefowl is distributed throughout the Island, whenever
jungle or dense scrub of any extent is to be found, but it
is nowadays common only in the wilder parts of the dry zone
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