plumage
plumage, collective feathered covering of a bird. It provides protection, insulation, and adornment and also helps streamline and soften body contours, reducing friction in air and water. Plumage of the newborn chick is downy, called neossoptile; that which follows is termed teleoptile. Juvenal plumage, frequently distinct from that of the adult bird, is often drab, streaked, or spotted and thus camouflages the young.
- Related Topics:
- feather
- teleoptile plumage
- nuptial plumage
- pteryla
- apterium
Sexual differences are common, the plumage of the male characteristically showing more brilliance and pattern than that of the female. Feathers are normally lost and replaced at least once a year through molt and regrowth. Eclipse plumage, typical of ducks but found in other birds as well, is dull, female-like plumage worn by the male for a month or more in summer after breeding. It “eclipses” his usual bright plumage. He soon molts and is flightless until he grows new wing feathers. Compare pelage.