The island nation of Tonga has a megapode bird (the Malau) that buries its eggs in volcanically heated soil rather than incubating them with body heat.
On the Tongan island of Niuafo'ou, a megapode bird known locally as the Malau, scientifically Megapodius pritchardii, buries its eggs in volcanic soil where geothermal heat from the island's active volcanic system maintains incubation temperatures without any expenditure of the parents' body heat. The island sits over an active volcanic zone, and the ground in certain areas remains warm year-round through a combination of residual volcanic heating and fermentation of organic material. The Malau deposits eggs in these thermally active zones and leaves them to develop, relying entirely on the landscape's thermal energy rather than brooding behavior. This makes the Niuafo'ou megapode one of the most extreme examples of non-contact incubation in the bird world.
## Megapode Thermal Strategy Diversity
The Malau's use of geothermal soil is one of at least four distinct external heat sources exploited by different megapode species across their range. Australian malleefowl use compost heat from decomposing vegetation mounds they actively build and manage. The orange-footed scrubfowl of northern Australia and New Guinea uses solar-heated sandy soil in beach or open woodland environments. Some Pacific island megapodes use the warm sand adjacent to geothermally active areas. The Niuafo'ou megapode represents the most direct use of volcanic heat, made possible by the unusual geology of its island habitat.
The common thread across all megapode species is the complete or near-complete absence of contact incubation. Megapode chicks are the most precocial birds known: they hatch fully feathered, eyes open, and in many species are capable of flight within 24 hours of emerging from the nest substrate. They receive no parental care after hatching. The chick's first experience of the world is digging itself out of several tens of centimeters of soil or sand, a process that can take hours and requires substantial physical effort for a newly hatched bird.
## The Niuafo'ou Island Habitat
Niuafo'ou is a remote volcanic island in the northern Tonga archipelago, approximately 500 km north of the main island group. It has a caldera lake and a history of significant eruptions, the most destructive in 1946. The island's human population was temporarily evacuated following that eruption. The Malau is endemic to this island and is listed as Vulnerable by the IUCN due to its extremely limited range. The entire global population is confined to a single island of roughly 52 square kilometers.
The volcanic activity that enables the Malau's incubation strategy also poses an existential risk to the species. A major eruption capable of covering nesting areas with lava or ash, or a significant change in the thermal profile of the island's soil through geological shifts, could eliminate viable nesting habitat. The species has also suffered from introduced predators, particularly pigs and cats, which have historically been significant threats to megapode nesting populations across the Pacific.
## Conservation and Translocation Efforts
Conservation programs for the Niuafo'ou megapode have included translocation of eggs and individuals to the island of Late, also in Tonga, as a hedge against the catastrophic extinction risk posed by a major volcanic event. The translocation program, begun in the 1990s, has established a small secondary population. The success of using geothermal or other external heat sources on the recipient island is a logistical constraint in translocation planning: not all suitable Pacific islands offer the thermal conditions the Malau depends on, limiting the number of viable candidate sites for establishing backup populations.