Crossbred
A crossbred Congo peafowl would refer to an Afropavo congensis recorded as having mixed or uncertain parentage, but the term is rarely appropriate. The Congo peafowl is the only African peafowl, native to dense rainforest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Males are dark blue-green with a short crest and no long train; females are chestnut and greenish brown. Captive birds are expected to be wild-type and managed at the species level, not as ornamental breeds.
Because this is a threatened, specialist galliform, responsible care is usually institutional: zoos, conservation breeders, and permitted private facilities track individual ancestry and avoid undocumented breeding. They require quiet, well-planted aviaries with sheltered roosts, privacy for pairs, and a diet based on gamebird pellets supplemented with fruit, greens, and invertebrates. Any bird labeled crossbred should be documented carefully and normally kept out of conservation breeding plans until its identity is resolved.
Colors: Wild‑Type