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RE: Albino toms?
Funny funny...... I seen one last weekend!! and heard of one in a different area. I was wondering if they were leagal to shoot, and just what the heck they are!!
Canada eehh! LOL |
RE: Albino toms?
No way eh! It's the Great White North not the Great White Turkey!
Just a colour phase of feathers found in wild birds sometimes. Last year I think there was an article on this in T&TH by Lovett Willimas. Basically said it's not that big of a deal, it is just not common but they are the same wild bird. You would see more if the obvious lack of concealment didn't expose them to predators so much. |
RE: Albino toms?
I've got a white hen in the flock where I hunt. She looks like the photo. We have no "either-sex" season, here......so she can never be legally harvested.
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RE: Albino toms?
For more information do a search on the site for a number of posts like this one
That picture isn't an albino turkey, which would be completely white with pink feet and pink eyes. It appears to be the white color phase, a recessive genetic trait/mutation some refer to as the smoke phase or piebald. Lovett Williams has described this in detail elsewhere. Here is a nice description I found on a Mississippiwildlife website: Color Phases The wild turkey has three distinct color variations from normal plumage coloration: melanistic (black), erythritic (red) and albinotic (white). These color variations occur infrequently with the white or smoky grey phase being the most common. Recessive genes or mutations account for the color abnormalities. Partially white turkeys are reported annually in Mississippi. Most people incorrectly assume these birds have a domestic strain in their ancestry. These smoke gray phase birds are native wild turkeys and are capable of producing offspring that are partially white, normal colored, or a mix of partially white and normal colored birds within the same brood. More 95% of the reported observations of white turkeys are hens |
RE: Albino toms?
i have got two hens that i have been watching here in mississippi. they aren't tame birds. i have been seeing them for three years now. no toms yet but hoping one day for a white tom
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