leipoa ocellata
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Definition
Noun: * Leipoa ocellata: A large, ground-dwelling bird native to Australia, also commonly known as the malleefowl. It is notable for its unique reproductive behavior of building large nesting mounds of sand and leaf litter to incubate its eggs.
Usage
- The term Leipoa ocellata is the formal, scientific (binomial) name for the species. It is used primarily in academic, zoological, and conservation contexts.
- In general English, the common name "malleefowl" is used far more frequently.
Examples
- Scientific/Formal Context:
- The conservation status of Leipoa ocellata is listed as vulnerable.
- The study focused on the incubation mounds constructed by Leipoa ocellata.
- General Context (using the common name):
- The malleefowl is a fascinating bird that doesn't sit on its eggs but buries them in a giant compost heap.
Advanced Usage
- The name Leipoa ocellata can be used metonymically to represent specialized Australian wildlife or unique avian reproductive strategies.
- The chapter on thermal regulation in eggs featured Leipoa ocellata as a prime case study.
Variants and Related Words
- Malleefowl (n): The standard common name for .
- Mallee bird (n): A regional or informal name for the same species.
- Incubator bird (n): A descriptive name highlighting its mound-building behavior.
- Leipoa (n): The genus name, sometimes used informally to refer to the bird.
Synonyms
- Malleefowl
- Mallee bird
- Incubator bird
Related Phrases/Idioms
- To build a malleefowl mound: This phrase is sometimes used metaphorically to describe creating a complex, self-sustaining system or a large, labor-intensive project.
- Preparing the company's annual report is like building a malleefowl mound—it takes months of careful layering.
Noun
- Australian mound bird; incubates eggs naturally in sandy mounds