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THE BEAUTY OF WILD TURKEYS NOW

Mayan Ruins Of Tikal by eyecool.
by eyecool. Mayan Ruins Of Tikal.

WILD TURKEY

No other birds inspire gratitude as much as turkeys do.  

Native Americans were thankful that wild turkeys fed them well. And when the Wampanoags introduced the Pilgrims to turkeys, in 1621, they were so thankful, it inspired an annual holiday.

Wild turkeys are indigenous to North America, and not found in most other places. There are 6 known species:

Eastern Wild Turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo silvestris) - Over 5 million live in pockets across the entire eastern half of the United States and Canada.

Osceola or Florida Turkey (Meleagris gallopavo osceola) - Found only on the Florida peninsula, they number only 80,000 to 100,000 birds.

Gould's Wild Turkey (Meleagris gallopavo mexicana) - Northern Mexico and southern Southwest. Heavily protected and regulated.

Merriam's Wild Turkeys: (Meleagris gallopavo merriami) - over 300,000 live, exclusively throughout the Rocky Mountains, Wyoming, Montana, South Dakota, and New Mexico.

Rio Grande Wild Turkey (Meleagris gallopavo intermedia) - Just over 1 million of these turkeys live in the US, primarily in the west and midwest.

Ocellated Wild Turkey (Agriocharis ocellata) - This species is only found on the Yucatan Peninsula.

Indigenous people, across the continent, have hunted wild turkeys for thousands of years. From Aztecs, Mayans, and Navajo in Mexico and the Southwest, to Algonquins in the Northeast.

European settlers joined them, not only for personal consumption, but as a major export product, feeding this New World delicacy to the folks back home in the old world.

In fact, turkeys got their name, when the Spanish began exporting turkeys from New World to England, routing their supply ships by way of Turkey.

Demand outstripped supply and wild turkeys were almost rendered extinct by the early 1900s. Protections and other conservation efforts have restored the wild turkey population in United States to about 7 million.

Wild turkey taste quite different from domesticated ones, with more complex flavors. D’Artagnan is one good place where you can purchase sustainably sourced wild turkeys.

Read more about Beautiful Thanksgiving this week.

And check out more beautiful things happening now in BN Arts/Design, Nature/Science, Food/Drink, Place/Time, Mind/Body, and Soul/Impact Daily Fix posts.

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IMAGE CREDITS:

  1. Image: by eyecool. Mayan Ruins Of Tikal.
  2. Image: by Gale. All Puffed Up.
  3. Image: by Sue, of Backyard Biology. I’m Much Too Pretty To Eat.
  4. Image: by Rodney Campbell. Wild Turkeys Displaying For the Hens.
  5. Image: by Sue, of Backyard Biology. How Many Colors Do You See?
  6. Image: by Larry Smith. Flying Turkeys.
  7. Image: by Olin Gilbert. “Tom Turkey" ...As Named By Jill…
  8. Image: by Don McCullough. Turkey Family Close Up.
  9. Image: by Sue, of Backyard Biology. There Were No Hens Present, So He Didn’t Do The Full Tail Up, Wings Down Display.
  10. Image: by BN App - Download now!
  11. Image: by Doug Greenberg. Kish Meer En Toukhes.
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