Australian bustard - meaning and definition. What is Australian bustard
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What (who) is Australian bustard - definition

SPECIES OF BIRD
Ardeotis australis; Kere artewe; Kipara; Plains turkey; Australian Bustard
  • Illustration of egg by [[Harriet Morgan]]
  • In flight
  • Bustard at Kingfisher Park in Queensland
  • Mount Carbine, Australia
  • Male in mating display
  • bushfire]]
  • Hunters with a bustard in Arnhemland, circa 1920

Buff-crested bustard         
The buff-crested bustard (Lophotis gindiana) is a medium-sized bird of East Africa belonging to the family Otididae. The populations are stable and the species is of least concern.
Frank Bustard         
SHIPPING PIONEER
Bustard, Frank
Colonel Frank Bustard OBE (1886 – 22 January 1974) was a British shipping pioneer who established the commercial use of ro-ro ships using converted tank landing craft.
William Bustard         
  • Jesus disputing in the Temple (left), Christ summoning his disciples (right), featuring Jesus disputing in the Temple (left), Christ summoning his disciples (right)
  • William Bustard at his first solo exhibition in Brisbane, October 1931
  • The Canberra, by William Bustard, 1935
ENGLISH-BORN AUSTRALIAN ARTIST
Bustard, William
William Bustard (1894–1973) was an artist in Queensland, Australia. His stained glass work features in many heritage-listed buildings.

Wikipedia

Australian bustard

The Australian bustard (Ardeotis australis) is a large ground dwelling bird which is common in grassland, woodland and open agricultural country across northern Australia and southern New Guinea. It stands at about one metre (3 ft 3 in) high, and its wingspan is around twice that length. The species is nomadic, flying to areas when food becomes plentiful, and capable of travelling long distances. They were once widespread and common to the open plains of Australia, but became rare in regions that were populated by Europeans during the colonisation of Australia. The bustard is omnivorous, mostly consuming the fruit or seed of plants, but also eating invertebrates such as crickets, grasshoppers, smaller mammals, birds and reptiles.

The species is also commonly referred to as the plains turkey, and in Central Australia as the bush turkey, particularly by Aboriginal people, who hunt it, although the latter name may also be used for the Australian brushturkey, as well as the orange-footed scrubfowl.