Robert W,Gnoenler Bequest 1935 Re sPiaaaasias ie: Ne a Fae batthlihe i seats t ay A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS FRONTISPIECE. PLATE XLY., THE COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT ae the. em: ¥ore Axadeny 25911 i 2te0or vdsissvni doisg othuovel tisd? 09 adgin iis jie 0} nuged esd olemet ¥ oe FRONTISPIECE, PLATE XLV THE COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia macrolopha macrolopha (Lesson) Tuts Koklass is shy and rather solitary, adverse to gathering in large flocks even to feed. It is pre-eminently monogamous, and the pairs remain together throughout the year. It invariably roosts in trees. I have found them well up in deep conifers, and they return night after night to their favourite perch. In spring, at least, they roost in pairs, or the male alone when the female has begun to sit. A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS WILLIAM BEEBE Curator of Birds of the New York Zoological Park; Fellow of the New York Zoological Society and Director of the Tropical Research Station in British Guiana; Fellow of the American Ornithologists’ Union and of the New York Academy of Sciences; Member of the British Ornithologists’ Union ; Corresponding Member of the Zoological Society of London, etc. IN FOUR VOLUMES VOLUME Iil PUBLISHED UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE NEW YORK ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY BY H. F. & G. WITHERBY, 326 HIGH HOLBORN, LONDON, ENGLAND 1922 tomes are ee CONTENTS KOKLASS PHEASANTS ‘ : ; : : : : ’ 5 : ; I Common Koxtass (Pucrasia macrolopha macrolopha) . 3 : ' 3 S 8 Kasumir Koxiass (Pucrasia macrolopha biddulpht) ; : : : ‘ 24 WESTERN Koktass (Pucrasia macrolopha castanea) : : : Plies : 26 -Nepar Koxtass (Pucrasia macrolopha nipalensis) . : 3 : d ‘ : 28 YELLOW-NECKED KOoKLAss (Pucrasia xanthospila xanthospila) é : : : 32 ORANGE-COLLARED Kox.ass (Pucrasia xanthospila ruficollis) ; : : ; 37 MEYER’S KoKLass (Pucrasia xanthospila meyert) . : : : : ; : 38 JoreT’s Koxiass (Pucrasia xanthospila joretiana) . A : : 2 : . 40 DarwWIn’s KOKLASS (Pucrasia darwint darwini) . : : F ; : : 42 Styan’s Koxwass (Pucrasia darwini styant) . : : : ; i C : 45 SPIER ee LIEV NG AN Remeeemee ee erie ees ge CHEER PHEASANT (Catreus wallichit) . 6 ; : ; ; : : 4 50 TRUE PHEASANTS é : 2 3 , : ‘ : : : : 3 67 Caucasian (Phasianus colchicus) . s ‘ ; 5 : : : : é 76 Rion Caucasian (Phasianus colchicus colchicus) . : ; : 7 é 3 81 NORTHERN CAUCASIAN (Phastanus colchicus septentrionalis) . 5 : : : 82 TALISCH CAUCASIAN (Phasianus colchicus talischensis) . : : : : : 83 PERSIAN (Phasianus colchicus persicus) . : : : : : : p : 85 PRINCE OF WALES'S (Phasianus colchicus principalis) . : . : ; ; 87 ZARUDNY’S (Phastanus colchicus zarudnyt) A : : : : : : : ele) ZERAFSHAN (Phasianus colchicus zerafshanicus) : : : : : : c 92 BIANcHI’S (Phasianus colchicus bianchtt) . : é : ; - : : : 93 KHIVAN (Phasianus colchicus chrysomelas) ; : 2 7 : ¢ 2 ; 94 Syr-Daria RING-NECKED (Phasianus colchicus turcestanicus) . ; 0 g é 95 Kireuiz (Phasianus colchicus mongolicus) * ¢ - 5 : 5 6 é 96 YARKAND (Phastanus colchicus shawt) . 3 ‘ : : : : : we LOZ Tarim (Phasianus colchicus tarimensis) . ; : : : : : : 5 | HOR Satcuu Oasis (Phasianus colchicus satscheuensis) . : : j é : LOZ: TsaiDAM (Phastanus colchicus vlangalit) . : , . : . : : LOS Straucnu’s (Phastanus colchicus strauchz) " : , ¢ : : : LOO STONE’S (Phasianus colchicus elegans). : : 2 : ; : : ues Kweicuow (Phasianus colchicus decollatus) . ; 5 ’ . : “ A PA Vv Vi CONTENTS TRUE PHEASANTS — continued. FORMOSAN RING-NECKED (Phasianus colchicus formosanus) ° MANCHURIAN RING-NECKED (Phasianus colchicus pallast) Kospo (Phasianus colchicus hagenbecki) . ° ° . e CorEAN (Phasianus colchicus karpowt) i i EASTERN CHINESE RING-NECKED (Phastanus colchicus torquatus) . GREEN JAPANESE (Phasianus versicolor) . LONG-TAILED PHEASANTS 5 ‘ : . REEVES’S (Syrmaticus reevest). SOEMMERRING’S COPPER (Syrmaticus Soemmerringt soemmerring?) . SCINTILLATING COPPER (Syrmaticus soemmeringi scintillans) . Ijima’s COPPER (Syrmaticus soemmerringt yimae) . Hume’s BARRED-BACKED (Syrmaticus humiae humiae) . BURMESE BARRED-BACKED (Syrmaticus humiae burmanicus) . ELLiot’s BARRED-BACKED (Syrmaticus elliotz) MiKapo (Syrmaticus mtkado) , ‘ : : : ° : LIST OF COLOURED PLATES, PHOTOGRAVURES AND MAPS CGOLOURED PLATES Prate XLV. THE COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia macrolopha macrolopha (Lesson) Frontispiece Painted by G. E. Lodge. This Koklass is shy and rather solitary, adverse to gathering in large flocks even to feed. It is pre-eminently monogamous, and the pairs remain together throughout the year. It invariably roosts in trees. I have found them well up in deep conifers, and they return night after night to their favourite perch. In spring, at least, they roost in pairs, or the male alone when the female has begun to sit. Prate XLVI. KASHMIR KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia ees dae brddulpht Marshall ‘ : : : . Facing page fiinper left: hand sgn, WESTERN KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia macrolopha castanea Gould (Lower figure) NEPAL KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia macrolopha nipalensis Gould (Right-hand figure) Painted by G. E. Lodge. The sides and flanks are grey in the Kashmir bird, chestnut in the Western Koklass, and nearly black in the Nepal form. Their habits are similar, and in all parts of their mountainous range we find conifers over- head, and, as in the painting, beds of tall saxifrage pushing up through the fallen needles and cones, their filmy heads nodding in the dim forest light. Prate XLVII. YELLOW-NECKED KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia xanthospila avanthospila Gray . ‘ ‘ ; . Facing page Painted by G. E. Lodge. On a bitterly cold, rainy day, near the Great Wall of China I heard the crow of one of these pheasants, and although I had no dog I stalked the bird. Through the mist the stunted vegetation showed dull brownish, dripping, saturated, while the rocks had no healthy covering of moss and lichens, but a dark, shining slime which made walking very difficult. Across a small open space I saw the Koklass run swiftly, the white neck patch and tail-tips flashing conspicuously as it went. PrateE XLVIII. DARWIN'S KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia darwint darwint Swinhoe . . : . Facing page aus: left- fend tenes STYAN’S KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia darwini styani Grant (Upper right-hand figure) Painted by G. E, Lodge, The lower plumage is a warm chestnut in Darwin’s Koklass, but clear black and grey in Styan’s Pheasant. These birds live in the uplands of the coastal provinces of east-central China, where they range through the bamboo groves on the open hillsides. They are everywhere rare and seldom seen or shot. vii 24 32 42 Vili LIST OF COLOURED PLATES Pratre XLIX. CHEER PHEASANT Catreus wallichit (Hardwicke) . . Facing page 0 Painted by L. A, Fuertes. Leaving my camp in a deep Garhwal valley, and working up through the soft-needled forest of deodars and spruces, I came suddenly, without warning, upon bare open ground. I pass over a low ridge, and instead of the shaded, densely-wooded slopes, I find rocky, grass- covered ledges dropping down in jagged terraces, and, on the other hand, rising steeply to where the stern profile of the summit is silhouetted against the fleecy clouds. This is the home of the Cheer. Although protectively coloured when crouched in the half- dead grass, they are conspicuous when in full flight. The golden and green sheen of the back and rump at the time of their headlong rush sometimes catches the glint of the sun, and in sudden turns the tail flares out into a streaming cross-barred train, forming a marvellous spot of pattern and colour. Prate L. RION CAUCASIAN PHEASANT Phaszanus colchicus Linné Facing page 80 Painted by H. Jones. This pheasant, living between the Black and the Caspian Seas, is the type of its entire group, and probably the same bird which was brought by the Romans to England, known commonly as the English or Black-necked Pheasant. It has since been introduced into many parts of Europe, Asia and America, and thrives in almost any temperate climate. In many places it has satisfactorily replaced the indigenous game-birds, which have been driven out by advancing civilization. PratTe LI. PRINCE OF WALES’S PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus principalts Sclater . : : : i : . Facing page 88 Painted by H. Jones. This splendid bird lives in southern Turkestan in the great Mero Oasis. In north-western Afghanistan it has been found in tamarisk and grass jungle growing in the bed of the river. It wades and even swims in the water of these marshes, but feeds in the more open, dry country. This form has been successfully introduced into England and elsewhere. PuaTe LI]. KIRGHIZ MONGOLIAN PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus mongolicus Brandt / ’ : , . Facing page 96 Painted by H. Jones. This splendid northern Ring-neck ranges over an amazing diversity of country in the heart of Asia. They are fast runners and high-flyers and afford magnificent sport on the steppes and sand dunes where they make their home. In the winter the Kirghiz practice falconry with enthusiasm, and their favourite sport is flying goshawks at pheasants. Puate LIII. TARIM PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus tarimensts Pleske . acing page 102 Painted by FH, Jones. In the poplar forests along the Tarim River these birds live in covies, depending on berries for food during the hard winters and often compelled to roost on the slight branches of the poplars to avoid their enemies on the ground. Besides the foxes and smaller vermin, they look down from their perch upon troops of wild pig and wild camels, which pad softly over the sand, while overhead flocks of wild geese drive northward almost before the ice breaks from the river and pools. Puate LIV. STRAUCH’S PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus straucht Prjewalski Painted by H. Jones. Facing page 106 On the wooded slopes of the Kansu Mountains, up to the height of a mile and a half above the sea, Strauch’s Pheasant makes its home. It varies widely in character of plumage and on the limits of its range approaches the neighbouring forms. From six to twelve eggs are laid, and in these tumbled mountains the pheasants seem to be more strictly monogamous, the cock aiding in the care of the young, than in the great flat plains to the east, where food is more abundant and the birds are so much more numerous. LISD Or COLOURED PLATES Prats LV, KWEICHOW PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus decollatus Swinhoe Painted by H. Jones. Facing page Occurring as far south as Tongking, this pheasant ranges higher than the more northern forms, and has been observed at an elevation of nine thousand fect. It seems to prefer bushy slopes to the dense forest. It differs from the pheasants to the east and north chiefly by the lack of a white collar, although traces of this are sometimes present. Prate LVI. FORMOSAN RING-NECKED PHEASANT Phaszanus colchicus Jormosanus Elliot . 7 ; ‘ . Facing page Painted by H. Jones. As the island of Formosa is over one hundred miles from shore, and as this pheasant differs from those on the neighbouring mainland only by the usually paler plumage, it is probable that it is more or less of a recent introduction. The cocks show considerable variation among themselves and the females are quite indistinguishable from the birds of the eastern Chinese Provinces, Prate LVII. MANCHURIAN RING-NECKED PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus pallast Rothschild ; ; : ; : : . Facing page Painted by Ff. Jones. This pheasant, from the far north-east of China, possesses the widest and most complete white collar. It is never found high up on the mountains, but usually on the more sheltered lower slopes or on the flat bushy plains, Puate LVIII. KOBDO PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus hagenbecki Rothschild Painted by H. Jones. facing page Little is known of this form from the Kobdo valley. It very closely resembles pallasz, fifteen hundred miles to the east, while to the west it is separated from mongolicus by only a single range of mountains, yet it differs radically in colour from that form. Pirate LIX. EASTERN CHINESE RING-NECKED PHEASANT Phaszanus colchicus torguatus Gmelin : . " : j . Facing page Painted by H. Jones. This is the Ring-necked Pheasant which has been introduced so widely into America and, especially in the west, has increased so that it has to be kept down to prevent damage to crops. Its habits in general throughout the east of China, from Pekin to Canton, differ not at all from those of the birds in our own country. They feed morning and evening, rest during the middle of the day, roost on the ground, lay six to twelve eggs on débris in grassy or shrubby places. The young birds acquire the adult plumage the first autumn. As many as eighteen hundred and one have been shot in twenty-three days on the Yangtse. Pirate LX. GREEN JAPANESE PHEASANT Phastanus versicolor Vieillot Painted by H. Jones. Facing page This is the second full species of its genus, found only in Japan, and showing remarkable little variation. As it prefers lowlands to the slopes of mountains, it is seldom found far away from the coast, and it chooses to visit the gardens of the farms rather frequently. The last view I had of Kiji in their native home was on a perfect day in Kagoghima. I was returning from along day’s tramp after Ijima’s Copper Pheasants, when for a few minutes a splendid cock Gieen Pheasant stood outlined at the summit of a gentle rise. The setting was: the deep blue waters of the bay, the pale blue of the sky, the clear green of graceful, aged pines, while over all towered the majestic, purpled cone of Sakuragima, b 110 114 116 120 130 x EIS! OF COLOURED SEL yrs Prate LXI. REEVES’S PHEASANT Syrmaticus reevest (Gray) - . Facing page Painted by C. R. Knight. Many years before it was seen alive this gorgeous, long-tailed pheasant was known from Chinese paintings, and was thought to be as unreal as the phcenix or dragon. Marco Polo was the first to describe the bird in life. It lives in the very heart of China among the gnarled oaks and pines, and nests among the grass and azalea bushes. In spite of the long tail, sometimes six feet-long, the Reeves is one of the swiftest and strongest flyers among the pheasants. Pirate LXII. PLUMAGES OF REEVES’S AND ELLIOT’S PHEASANTS Painted by H. Gronvold. Facing page Fic. 1. Syrmaticus elliot’ (Swinhoe), Chick in down, one week old. Fic. 2. Syrmaticus ellioti (Swinhoe), Juvenile plumage, white-throated phase, two and a half months old. Fic. 3. Syrmaticus reevest (Gray), Juvenile plumage, five weeks old. PratE LXIT]. SOEMMERRING'S COPPER PHEASANT res soemmerringe soemmerringt (Temminck) : : . Facing page Painted by E. Megargee. Like the architecture of the Japanese, the solitary majesty of Fuji, the beauty of the cherry-blossoms, the delicacy of line of the tori—this pheasant seems a thing of unusual beauty. As we see it beside a stream, or silhouetted against the misty grey slopes of the snow- covered mountain, it fairly glows as a mass of purplish carmine, changing at every turn to fiery gold. Its vitality is tremendous, and when a half-dozen cocks bouquet with a roar of wings from a plot of dry grass, the other beauties of Nippon are eclipsed. Pirate LXIV. SCINTILLATING COPPER PHEASANT Syrmaticus soemmerringt scintillans (Gould) (Left-hand figure) IJIMA’S COPPER PHEASANT Pee ee aimae (Dresser) . : . Facing page (Right. fad eeu) Painted by G. E. Lodge. As the northern Copper Pheasants are seldom out of sight of the cloud-swept snows of Fuji, so the southern satin-backed birds, by raising their heads, can always watch the billowing blue smoke from the waistcoat-pocket crater of Kirishima-yama. Foxes, weasels and especially half-wild house cats are among the enemies which force these birds to roost in trees. In spite of their brilliancy of colouring, Copper Pheasants are able to keep concealed, and a pair or two may inhabit a tiny grove of trees or shrubs on the rocky summit of a hill, and remain quite unknown to the Japanese farmers whose fields surround them on every side. Prate LXV. HUME’S BARRED-BACKED PHEASANT EES humiae humiae (Hume) ; . Facing page Painted by G. E. Lodge. The first hint of the existence of this pheasant—as in the case of the Mikado—was the presence of its long, purple-grey tail-feathers in the head-dress of honour proudly worn by a native chief. The first specimens were obtained by some natives going into enemy territory and setting traps at the risk of their lives. They are not rare, but live in dense forests in the neighbour- hood of streams, and only the isolation of their haunts makes their habits so little known. 146 154 158 162 176 LIST OF PHOTOGRAVURES xl Pirate LXVI. BURMESE BARRED-BACKED PHEASANT 2 toe humiae burmanicus (Oates) : ; : . Facing page 184 Painted by G. E. Lodge. It is seldom that these pheasants make their way down to the low plains, but even in their mountain home few specimens are trapped, as they have the habit of flying over the deadly bamboo fence of the natives, instead of attempting to walk through the dead-fall guarded openings. I found them feeding on seeds and berries, and associated in pairs. They are shy, and a fleeting glimpse of a blue-headed, wine-coloured bird, splashed with white, was the usual result of a long and patient stalk, Prats LXVIT ELLIOTS PHEASANT Syrmaticus elliott (Swinhoe) . Facing page 188 Painted by L. A. Fuertes. While not rare in captivity and breeding rather freely, Elliot’s Pheasants are uncommon in all their wild haunts. Added to this, they are timid and unusually silent birds, and prefer to run than fly whenever danger threatens. Their patterns and colours form a complex design, which in brilliant sunlight is a very beautiful mosaic, quite unlike that of any other pheasant. Prate LXVIN. MIKADO PHEASANT Syrmaticus mikado (Grant) . Facing page 196 Painted by G. E. Lodge. This bird received its name from two long, black, central tail-feathers taken from the head- dress of a Formosan savage. Later the same collector who obtained them was fortunate enough to secure living specimens of this splendid purple and black pheasant. The birds appear to be confined to the region of Mount Arizan, in the centre of Formosa, at an elevation of six thousand feet and up. Among the oaks, pines and scrub bamboo clinging to the more or less precipitous sides of the great mountain the Mikado Pheasants make their home. PHOTOGRAVURES PHOTOGRAVURE 40. GARHWAL HOME OF THE KOKLASS PHEASANT Photographs by William Beebe. Facing page 14 In May I found Koklass in pairs among the great forests of deodar, fir and oak in native Garhwal. On the steep upper slopes the trunks of these splendid trees all spring diagonally from the ground and at once make a sharp curve upward, standing straight as plummets— living guides to the angle of the slope. The park-like spaces between the trees, thick with generations of needles, purple and white anemones and the abundant long-stemmed strawberry, are favourite feeding-grounds of the Koklass. Here they scratch deep holes in the débris of the forest floor in search of grubs and other insects. PHOTOGRAVURE 41. WESTERN HIMALAYAN HOME OF THE. CHEER PHEASANT ; p ‘ é : . Facing page 56 Photographs by W illiam Beebe. Where the spires of tens of thousands of deodars and spruce climb the mountains, and close around the out-jutting boulders, the hardy Cheer Pheasants spend their days, feeding, sunning themselves, or dusting their plumage at the very brink of the precipices. The open slopes and cliffs are steep, and as I climbed them in search of the Cheer, I had to cling to the shrubs, bright with clusters of scarlet rhododendron blooms, and to the rocks to aid my unsteady, shifting footing. For yards I trampled on edelweiss and myriads of tiny, pale blue forget-me-nots, while on the shady sides of the rocks begonias carpeted the bare surface, their dainty pink blossoms waving on long, curved stalks with every breath of the mountain breeze. Xii LIST OF PHOTOGRAVURES PHorocravurE 42. NEST AND EGGS OF THE CHEER PHEASANT Photographs by William Beebe. Facing page High up among the tumbled mountains a slight depression is scratched among the ferns and spruce needles, It is usually close to the trunk of a tree, or beneath the protecting fronds of a deodar branch, and here the eggs are laid. The little dull-coloured hen sits closely, for the eyes of crows and monkeys are sharp and her plumage is much less conspicuous against the grass than the eggs PHOTOGRAVURE 43. ORIGINAL HOME OF THE ENGLISH PHEASANT, LOWER VALLEY OF THE SAFED RUD, BETWEEN THE CASPIAN AND TEE BLEAGK SEAS © : : . Lacing page Upper Photograph by General A. C. Bailward. This particular spot is inhabited by the Talisch Caucasian Pheasant, Phastanus colchicus talischensis Lorenz, one of the three closely related forms living in the region between these two great inland seas. It was from this area that the Romans brought the first birds to Britain. The land is not fertile and is broken up by rivers, small during the seasons of dryness, but swelling into great torrents in the rains. The people are little changed from the times of old when the waves of emigrants swept first in one direction, then in another, and left this hinter- land of Asia, the northernmost edge of Persia, wild and semi-civilized. Here the pheasants still lay their eggs and rear their broods, just as their transported fellows do in the coverts of England and America, PHoTOGRAVURE 44. HOME OF THE PERSIAN PHEASANT IN SOUTHERN TRANSCASPIA . : : : , . Facing page Photographs by Dwight Huntington. These birds live in vast plains either covered with reeds, or else bare, with the appearance of steppes, where also are found troops of wild boars, hyzenas and great bustards. They feed on the juniper berries, and many fly at night for safety to the islands in the sluggish rivers to avoid their enemies, the cheetahs and leopards. HOME OF THE PRINCE OF WALES'S PHEASANT, SOUTH TURKESTAN The Murghab River is muddy and turgid, of the colour of poor coffee, flowing in a channel of brown clay, between high banks which are ever crumbling. In the spring the river becomes a terrible torrent, tearing through the desert with irresistible force, forcing all living creatures far from their normal haunts along its banks. Here this pheasant makes its home. Puorocravure 45. HOME OF THE MONGOLIAN PHEASANT, FEEDING- GROUND IN THE TIAN SHAN MOUNTAINS, BREEDING HAUNTS IN CHINESE TURKESTAN . Facing page Photographs by Dwight Huntington. These hardy Ring-necks are found on tamarisk-covered sand dunes, where the birds can never even know what a tree is, or they inhabit half-floating reedy islands, or they haunt culti- vated areas, while on the slopes of the mountains they range upward as high as four thousand feet, living, feeding and nesting among the conifers and poplar forests. In the summer and autumn they wander far, but in winter the birds are compelled to search for the yellow berries of the thorn scrub, and are strictly confined to the areas where this edible grows. 62 76 86 98 LIST OF PHOTOGRAVURES X1ll PHoTocRaAvurE 46. HAUNTS OF THE TURKESTAN MONGOLIAN PHEASANT OR SYR-DARIA RING-NECK ‘ ‘ ; . Facing page 100 Photographs by Dwight Huntington, Over the great, but little known region of Turkestan known as Syr-Daria, with its rugged gorges and snow-capped mountains, its scattered villages, fields of grain and herds of goats, the most western of all the Ring-necks is found. It drinks at tiny meandering streams, which in spring become raging torrents, it gleans from the grain in autumn or scratches in the frozen ground in winter. Among the wind-blown sturdy shrubs or the long waving reeds it roosts at night, ever seeking to avoid the hosts of enemies which threaten it on every side. PHoToGRAVURE 47. MONGOLIAN PHEASANT . ; ; . Facing page 104 ZARAFSHAN PHEASANT TARIM PHEASANT Photographs by Douglas Carruthers. The wildest and bleakest river basins of central Asia are inhabited by pheasants. Now and then a ragged caravan passes, hastening across the deserts, from one source of water supply to the next, a line of camels bearing tea or grain. When the rivers are in flood and spread out across the deserts, the birds wander far, and roost at night among the ruins of half-buried and wholly forgotten cities. Rarely an explorer makes his way through, mapping the valleys, shooting a few specimens, and passing on forever. PHOTOGRAVURE 48. YUNNAN BLACK-NECKED OR STONE’S PHEASANT Photographs by William Beebe. Facing page 108 This is the only member of the entire genus which occurs within the boundaries of British India. In Yunnan the bird is found in the same general environment as the silver kaleege pheasants. A hunter I knew drove a cock bird out of cover into a ploughed field, and a golden eagle made a swoop at it but missed. Stone’s Pheasant roams over the wooded heights of the maze of mountains along the Burma-Chinese frontier, and finds its food by scratching among the dead leaves and ferns of the forest undergrowth. PHoTOGRAVURE 49. RING-NECKED PHEASANTS IN EASTERN CHINA Photographs by Wilham Beebe. Facing page 118 The pheasants of north-eastern China come down once a day to the rivers or creeks to drink, and then make their way back to the rolling grassy slopes where they nest and roost. There were two nests of Ring-necked Pheasants in the grassy tangle foreground of the central photograph. A full-grown cock pheasant is hidden in the centre of the lower photograph, the beak, white collar, back and upward-pointing tail feathers distinguishable. Although so brilliantly coloured, yet when partially hidden by the grass its patterns and hues merged perfectly with the lights and shadows of the vegetation. The bird did not flush until approached within a few yards, when it rose with a roar of wings, shot almost straight upward for thirty feet, and then off along the hill in the central photograph. Two hens were sitting on eggs close by. PHotTocRavurRE 50. THE BLEAK LAND OF CHILI, NORTH-EAST CHINA, HOME OF THE RING-NECKED PHEASANT . Facing page 124 Photographs by William Beebe. The common Ring-necks inhabit three general types of country, dense reeds, along river banks, low rolling hills covered with scrub oak, chestnut and pine, or dense grass growing in irregular patches, and the flat paddy-fields. Double broods are sometimes reared, the great majority of the chicks falling victims to rats, civet cats, foxes and weasels, XIV LIST OF PHOTOGRAVURES PHOTOGRAVURE 51. HAUNTS OF THE COREAN RING-NECKED PHEASANT Photographs by Roy C. Andrews. ~ Facing page Typical pheasant country in Corea consists of hills fifty to five hundred feet high, with warm and deep valleys between. The hills are of red and yellow clay with little rock, and are covered on the side with bush firs two to four feet high, while the summits are sparsely wooded with larger trees. In some localities fifty birds may be shot in a day. In the rice districts the pheasants feed to a large extent on this grain and on millet and small red berries, PHOTOGRAVURE 52. HOME OF THE JAPANESE GREEN PHEASANT Photographs by William Beebe. Facing page The shores of the myriad lakes which surround Mount Fuji are often tracked up by small parties of pheasants which come down to drink. They wander only a short distance up the slopes and hide their eggs beneath some dense-foliaged pine, or close to a fallen tree or boulder. The breeding begins in March and extends through Oey and May, and only a single brood is reared in a season. JAPANESE PHEASANT BY HOKASAI Hokasai, who was born in 1760 and died in 1849, was the greatest of Japanese painters. He lived Sianeli worked diligently and painted EMD subjects, bridges, waterfalls, Mount Fuji, portraits and objects of natural history. PHOTOGRAVURE 53. NEST AND EGGS OF THE JAPANESE GREEN PHEASANT Photographs by William Beebe. Facing page The nest is placed on the ground, without a special lining except for dead leaves and other debris which may have been in the depression when first occupied by the hen, The eggs are the smallest of all this group of pheasants, and vary in colour from pale stone-colour to dark brown. The hawks, kites, crows, magepies, weasels and snakes are enemies both of eggs and newly hatched young birds. PHorocRavurE 54. HOME OF REEVES’S PHEASANT IN CENTRAL CHINA Photographs by William Beebe. Facing page The favourite haunt of the Reeves is in certain mid-reaches of the Y angtse where black, frowning cliffs rise sheer hundreds of feet above either bank, covered with gnarled, stunted vegetation which is deformed by the elements and scanty nourishment. Once when a line of beaters was trying to locate a young tiger which had made a kill, two cock Reeves flushed suddenly, one of which rose straight ahead, high up over the pines, while the other bird doubled back suddenly and shot past with terrific speed, dodging the beaters and the trunks of the trees with such sharp turns that the long, flowing tail-feathers seemed fairly to curl around the trunks as the bird veered past. Puorocravure 55. JAPANESE HOME OF THE COPPER PHEASANT Photographs by William Beebe. Facing page These beautiful birds like the shelter of low grass and bamboo, and come into the open to feed upon grubs and insects and acorns. They haunt the same places throughout the heat of summer and the bitter winds of winter, often roosting in trees and feeding along the margin of streams, almost always within sight of the splendour of Fuji. 128 134 138 150 160 LIST OF PHOTOGRAVURES XV PHotocRavure 56. HOME OF IJIMA’S COPPER PHEASANT IN SOUTHERN JAPAN : ‘ : : : . , . . Lacing page 170 Photographs by William Beebe. The most beautiful spots beloved by Ijima’s white-backed Copper Pheasant are carefully preserved because of regard for some ancestral shade whose body lies buried near by. Such a place has a carpet of ferns, bracken and soft bamboo grass, and a mid-growth of graceful camellias—the tsubaki of the Japanese—-whose myriad scarlet bell flowers sway in the wind, their clapper stamens muffled with knobs of yellow pollen. High above all rises the great, evergreen expanse of camphor trees, in grace and size rivalling any grove of English oaks. A single leaf plucked from the mighty branches perfumes the whole glade with the aromatic camphor incense. The upper photograph shows open Copper Pheasant country near the southern coast of Kiusiu, facing the great island volcano of Sakuragima. The lower photograph is a grove of camphor trees where several pairs of pheasants lived and roosted. PHOTOGRAVURE 57. NEST AND EGGS OF IJIMA’S COPPER PHEASANT Photographs by Welham Beebe. Facing page 174 This nest of five eggs was a late one, and possibly the second attempt of a hen whose earlier effort had come to naught through a marauding fox or raven. The nest was a mere depression near the base of a tall tree, and protected only by a few stalks of grass. The hen was not seen, although the eggs were warm when I first discovered them. She had slipped off and away while I was still at a distance, PuHotrocravure 58. HOME OF THE BURMESE BARRED-BACKED PHEASANT Photographs by William Beebe. facing page 186 My first view of this bird came when I was waiting for some silver kaleege pheasants to appear at their usual drinking place on the banks of a rushing stream. I was rather hopeless of any result, for I had been discovered and was being abused by a pair of squirrels and a mob of laughing thrushes, when a new voice was added to the general hubbub—a series of rapidly uttered chucks of alarm and suspicion from a low tree. A moment later, with a loud beating of wings, a Burmese Barred-back swung into view. It alighted on a stump, gave one glance in my direction, uttered a single loud chack/ and dashed off at full speed. The home of these birds consists principally of dense mountain-side forests, cut by tumbling brooks and streams. Puorocravure so. HAUNTS OF ELLIOT’S PHEASANT .. ._.. Facing page 192 Photographs by Willtam Beebe. High up on the semi-bare mountain sides, most elaborate and ancient Chinese graves are occasionally seen, beautifully carven, yet fitting harmoniously into their setting. One evening I saw a cock Elliot Pheasant make his way to the top stone of a graceful grave balustrade. After preening his plumage in the failing light, the bird hopped down and settled for the night between two carven blocks. Curiously enough, he roosted head inward, tail hanging down outside facing the slope, and, to my way of thinking, this was a great mistake, for any marten or other marauder could cut off the bird’s only way of escape. However, the pheasant doubtless had his own good reasons for his reversed position. As I slipped away, the grave was beginning to be silvered by the moon, and I left the living bird and the carven phoenix side by side, Puorocravure 60. MOUNT ARIZAN: HOME OF THE MIKADO PHEASANT. Photograph by W. R. Price. Facing page 198 The Mikado Pheasant lives among the wild fastnesses of Mount Arizan, Formosa. Dense forests clothe the steep slopes to the very summit, clinging to sheer cliffs, overhanging breathless gorges. Here, from a mile and a half to two miles above the sea, in gloomy cypress jungles and among bamboo and rhododendron thickets, these magnificent velvety-black birds feed, and call, and mate, and rear their chicks. Where man can only cling, and creep with snail-like pace, the intimate life and habits of these pheasants must long remain a mystery. XVi Mar XI. Mar. XII. Map XIII. Map XIV. SHOWING THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE KOKLASS PHEASANTS LIST OF -MAPS MAPS CHEER] PEASANT TRUE PHEASANDES THE - LONG TAILED aU a ieUSvsUNTIES) facing page 4. ” »” 52 70 144 ‘, PHEASANTS PUCRASIA KOKLASS PHEASANTS Order GALLIFORMES | Family PHASIANIDAE Subfamily PHASIANINAE Genus PUCRASIA Tue Koklass Pheasants are birds of medium size, and impossible to place with any certainty in a linear scheme of classification. They show traces of resemblance to several groups, and in spite of the moderate length of tail of the cocks, perhaps come as close to the genus Syvmaticus as I have defined it, as to any other. The syrinx is extremely close to that of Praszanus. The head in both sexes is entirely feathered. The male has an elongated crest, and, owing to the posterior portion being of a different colour and sprouting rather densely behind the ear-coverts, this portion has been considered to be more of the nature of ear-tufts than a crest. This posterior. crest, however, on examination is seen to extend clear across the occiput. The crest in the female is shorter. Most of the body feathers are lanceolate. The tail consists of sixteen feathers, and is extremely graduated and wedge-shaped ; the middle pair are slightly the longest, and about twice as long as the outer pair. The tail-coverts simulate the tail itself in their colour, great length and gradation. The wings appear exceedingly long and anes for a pheasant, owing to the fact that the primaries extend well beyond the secondaries when the wing is closed. The ist primary is considerably longer than the 2nd, which is about equal to the 8th; the Ath is slightly the longest of the series. The tarsus is slightly longer than the middle toe and claw. The sexes are unlike, but with not nearly so great a difference as exists in the case of many other pheasants. The male shows more solid, concentrated areas of colour, such as the bicoloured crest, the green head, and the solid chestnut ventral line. The male is armed with a moderately long and stout pair of spurs. PUCRASIA | Type Eulophus Less. (nec Geoffr., Hym. 1764) Comp. Buffon, 1836, VII. p. 354 . . P. nipalensis. Pucrasia Gray, List Gen. Birds 1841, p.79 . : . P. macrolopha. Gallophasis Hodgs. J. As. Soc. Beng. 1843, XII. xe 1% 3 313 3 ; F . LP. nipalensis. Lophotetrax Cab. Ersch u. Grub. Encycl. sec. 3, 1846, XXII. p.144 . : . P. macrolopha. Lochmophasis Heine, Nomencl. Mus. Hein. 1890, p. 298 é : : . BP, nipalensis. 3 4 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS The Koklass Pheasants seem to present many difficult problems. The intricate colours and patterns of their plumage, the considerable variation and the wide and irregular distribution, all make toward confusion at first thought. In reality, however, when we eliminate the useless characters and right the errors due to hasty species diagnosis, the genus proves to be one of the most interesting of all the Phasianinae. Its various forms reveal one of the rarest phenomena in nature—a widespread series, showing delicately graduated and increasing complexity within a single, closely related group of living creatures. There seems no room for doubt but that we can trace almost the exact route which these birds have taken in past time, starting in Garhwal in the western Himalayas, and after a long trek northward, eastward and southward, reaching the sea-coast in south-eastern China. I recognize the following three species, comprising ten subspecies of Koklass Pheasants. Common Koklass Pheasant . : ; “ . Pucrasia macrolopha macrolopha (Lesson). Kashmir Koklass Pheasant . , : é . Pucrasia macrolopha biddulphi Marshall. Western Koklass Pheasant —. i : : . Pucrasia macrolopha castanea Gould. Nepal Koklass Pheasant ; : 1 : . Pucrasia macrolopha nipalensis Gould. Yellow-necked Koklass Pheasant . 5 ; . Pucrasia xanthospila xanthospila Gray. Orange-collared Koklass Pheasant : ; . Pucrasia xanthospila ruficollis David and Oustalet. Meyer’s Koklass Pheasant . : ; ; . Pucrasia xanthospila meyert Madarasz. Joret’s Koklass Pheasant : ; : : . Pucrasia xanthospila joretiana Heude. Darwin’s Koklass Pheasant . : : “ . Pucrasia darwint darwint Swinhoe. Styan’s Koklass Pheasant . : : : . Pucrasia darwini styant Grant. The character which seems of greatest convenience in the definition of full species in the genus Pucrasia is the mantle pattern, with its increasing complexity (extending also to the other parts of the plumage) in the males. In macrolopha, xanthospila and darwinit this pattern may correctly be described as single, double and quadruple respectively. In macrolopha the mantle feathers are cold, ashy grey, with a wide black shaft-stripe extending almost to the tip. Careful examination of the base of the feathers reveals the fact that a white wedge has been driven some distance up the shaft, but this axlage of a splitting of the black stripe is not visible when the feathers are in place. In xanthospila and its congeners the central wedge of light colour has spread up the entire vane, and there are two lines of black instead of one. In darvwini the third and most complex development of the pattern is found. Two additional lateral white wedges have appeared, splitting the two longitudinal black lines into four—the quadruple pattern. Thus the apparent development and route of geographical distribution must have been from macrolopha, through xanthospila to darwin. The colour of the outer tail-feathers is unsatisfactory as a diagnostic character, although it is as strongly marked in the females as in the males. While showing great variation in the different species of Pucrasia, these rectrices also present equally wide extremes of colour and pattern within subspecific bounds, as in macrolopha and castanea, where the dominant colour is rufous and dark brown respectively. 80° 100° 120° LAKE BALKASH . ee OS ac N G 0 L Ai Ws FORMOSA + : (f) Bombay® : ; PHILIPPINE SV cess (E Ae ARABIAN SEA oc} EQUATOR INDIAN OCEAN JAVA $ EA’ : LCS lest | 80° East of Greenwich 100° pil 120° H.E.& G.Witherby, Publishers. Stanford's Greens Estab®. MAP SHOWING THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE KOKLASS PHEASANTS. Region la. Pucrasia macrolopha castanea Region 2b. Puerasia xanthospila ruficollis -, Ib. ‘3 soy biddulphi we 2G: i n meyeri r Ie. e Le macrolopha = 2d. rr , joretiana p Id. $y nipalensis 5 3a. 5p darwini darwini nf 2a. if xanthospila xanthospila is 3b Py s styani KOKLASS PHEASANTS KEY TO THE FORMS OF PUCRASIA I. A pair of spurs present (males). a Mantle with a single black shaft streak. , @ Sides and flanks principally grey. a’ No chestnut nuchal collar 6” Chestnut collar on nape . 6’ Sides and flanks black, edged alte Bey c’ Sides and flanks chestnut b Mantle with two black streaks. a’ A distinct nuchal collar. ce’ Nuchal collar yellow. a Basal portion of outer rectrices dominately grey . 6 Basal portion of outer rectrices dominately rufous a” Nuchal collar orange e’ No distinct nuchal collar c Mantle with four black streaks. jf’ Ventral plumage more or less chestnut g Ventral plumage not chestnut II. No spurs present (females). a Base of outer rectrices black or rufous. a’ Outer pairs of rectrices with black contour markings . : 6’ All but outer pair of rectrices with bar-like black markings ¢ All but outer pair of rectrices chestnut on outer web . a2’ Both webs of all outer rectrices chestnut b_ Base of outer rectrices grey. UJ e’ Black bars across tail complete J’ Black tail-bars broken or incomplete . macrolopha macrolopha. macrolopha biddulpht, macrolopha nipalensts. macrolopha castanea. szanthospila xanthospila. xanthospila meyer, azanthospila ruficollis, azanthospila joretiana. darwint darwint. darwint styant, macrolopha macrolopha. macrolopha brddulphe. macrolopha nipalensis. santhospila meyert. xanthospila xanthospila. xanthospila ruficollcs. aanthospila joretiana. darwint darwint. THE COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT AND ITS ALLIES THE Koklass Pheasants of the Himalayas present a rather unique state of affairs. There is apparently little or no break in their distribution from Afghanistan or Kafiristan in the far north-west to central Nepal in the east. The Koklass inhabiting this area have been segregated under some fournames. These have been taken to indicate distinct species, since, so far as I know, none has ever received a trinomial name, or subspecific denomination. After an exhaustive study of the living and freshly shot birds in their native haunts in the north-western Himalayas, and of the collections of Koklass Pheasants in many museums, both in America, Europe and Asia, it seems to me more logical to designate these forms as follows, giving them in order from west to east: Pucrasia macrolopha castanea . : t ; 2 : ; : . Kafiristan. Pucrasia macrolopha biddulphi . : : : : : ! é . Kashmir. Pucrasia macrolopha macrolopha . : F ; ‘ j ; . . Chamba to Kumaon. Pucrasia macrolopha nipalensis . k : . : ‘ : : . Western Nepal. My reasons, outlined in brief, are as follows. There seems little doubt but that macrolopha forms the centre of radius of all the adjacent forms of Himalayan and other Pucrasia. Ina large series of skins from Kumaon and Garhwal are found very con- siderable variations from the more normal type, which are tri-radiate, pointing in these three directions : Chestnut darkening ventrally and encroaching on mantle; pale back. Westward, toward diddulphi and castanea. Chestnut darkening ventrally and encroaching on mantle; dark back. Eastward toward uzpalensts. Yellowing of the mantle. Northward toward xanthospila. The typical macrolopha from Kumaon and Garhwal are undoubtedly the most generalized of the entire genus. Going westward and eastward from this region we find the birds becoming more and more specialized in colour, but not in pattern, until in Kafiristan in the one direction and central Nepal in the other the two extremes are reached. In many specimens even from central Garhwal—the centre of distribution of typical macrolopha—we find distinct shaft-streaks of chestnut not only on the hind neck, but even low down on the mantle, and as we go westward the birds merge into diddulpli. In many pheasants from Koteguhr the ventral chestnut is very widespread and fully as dark as in castanea. The more extreme castanea forms vary much among themselves in this character, two which I have seen being exactly intermediate between castanea and biddulphi. Gould’s statement that cas¢anea is “ altogether a stouter and larger bird than Pucrasia macrolopha,’ is wholly without foundation, and was probably based on 6 THE COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT AND ITS ALLIES U the superficial appearance of his very much overstuffed type specimens. Careful com- parison shows practically no difference in size, and where there is some distinction, the slight increase is in favour of macrolopha. There is no alternative but to give subspecific rank to these forms, although in this case even trinomials do not tell the whole truth, as biddulphi lies, geographically, between castanea and macrolopha. East of Kumaon we find the Koklass Pheasants becoming more and more dark over the entire plumage, while the chestnut appears on and spreads over the mantle. Many of the so-called specimens of wzpalensis from Jerulali, western Nepal and the vicinity are indistinguishable from dark-mantled macrolopha from Kumaon. No description has | hitherto been given of the extreme xifalensis type; all relate to intermediate specimens. But even in this extreme there is not a single character which is not found in all conditions of gradation between the Nepal birds and the palest of Garhwal macrolopha. Nipalensis differs from the castanea off-shoot in combining intense melanism with increased general erythrism, while cas¢anea exhibits the latter phenomenon only on the mantle and the ventral surface. COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia macrolopha macrolopha (Lesson) NAMES.—Generic: Pucrasia, the Latinized vernacular onomatopoetic name. Specific: “macrolopha, Gk. paxpos, long, Addos, crest, long-crested. English: Common Koklass or Pucras Pheasant; Garhwal Koklass; both names are onomatopoetic from the cry of the bird. French: Pucrasia macrolophe. German: Schopffasan. Native: Phocrass (Bhote Parganas of Kumaon and Garhwal); Koklass, Kokla (Almorato Simla) ; Koak (Pahari, Hindi, Kullu, Mandi) ; Plas, Kukrola (Garhwal). BRIEF DESCRIPTION.—Male: Long crest buff and dark green ; head and neck glossy dark green except for a large patch of white on the side neck; upper plumage and sides grey, the wings brownish, most of the feathers, with a single black shaft-stripe ; centre of the breast and of the under plumage dark chestnut ; outer tail-feathers black shading into rufous on the outer web, and tipped with white. Female: Short crest and upper parts dark, mottled with sandy buff, with a pale, reddish-buff shaft-stripe on most of the feathers; chin, throat and side neck whitish ; below pale rufous, edged and mottled with black ; outer tail-feathers mostly black, chestnut toward the base, and tipped with white. RANGE.—Western Himalayas, from Chamba to Kumaon. THE BIRD IN ITS HAUNTS I REACHED out from my sleeping-bag and flashed the electric light at my watch. The hands marked three o'clock. It was early morning of the middle day of May. Then I shouted to my native boy, getting in reply a sleepy, “ Yes, Sahib,” and a deep- drawn sigh of despair expressing his soul’s sorrow that such long hours of comfortable sleep should be sacrificed to merely watching—not even shooting—the pheasants of these Garhwalese highlands. After I opened the flaps of the tent and had a look at the splendour of the sky, I decided to go alone on this night’s ramble, and accordingly brought joy to my servant’s heart by sending him back to his blanket after he had brought me water and cocoa. But Hadzia the hillman loomed up in the darkness and without comment followed quietly after me. In my sweater and khaki I seemed to be a part of the cool darkness about me, and my leather moccasins made not a sound on the turf of the valley. Steadily I climbed up, up, to the saddle of the ridge and there squatted, Indian fashion, to get my bearings and decide upon my route. Day after day I had penetrated farther and farther into this Himalayan wilderness, with no halts for observation, and now that I had reached the haunts of not one, but three or four pheasants—the Koklass, the kaleege, the impeyan, the cheer—I gave up every particle of my being to absorbing the very atmosphere—their haunts, habits, life, that was what I wished to sense. To all intents and purposes I became a pheasant myself. I seemed to rest upon the very summit of the world, a shrubby slope dropping away behind, and the deodar forest in front sloping downward, its file upon file of tall ghostly forms showing dimly through the translucent darkness. The stars were brilliant and the Milky Way showed like a luminous cloud. In the East the great train of 8 COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT 9 Halley’s comet was drawn across the sky like a second Milky Way. At the apex the head glowed with a dull, pale green glare. It was the comet more than the stars which etched into the blackness of night, and when my eyes slowly readjusted themselves, brought many silhouetted details into view. For a while no sound came to me from the night world all about, not a breath of air stirred the branches below me, and I watched the comet with an abstracted fascina- tion which was almost hypnotic. Here was I in the twentieth century, gazing on this splendour of the heavens—a solitary scientist in the heart of this great wilderness of tumbled mountains. There came vividly to mind the changes which had taken place in the affairs of men on the globe since last its splendid train swept past our earth. This Asiatic continent was then all but unknown—as indeed its heart is at present—Africa was but a mystery; Japan a mere hermit nation of Mongolian islanders; Italy and Germany were not then kingdom and empire; the flag of Mexico flew over Texas and California; not a mile of railroad had been built in Europe; the telegraph and the “Origin of Species” were unheard of. Then my momentary dream passed, for an insistent call, a mysterious metallic double-note, came to my ear from the deodars, the low note or call of some creature—whether bird or batrachian I know not—which never ceased during this and other following nights, becoming an unnoticed background of soft insistent sound, from dusk until dawn. I rose abruptly, and padded softly down into the forest of deodars and silver firs, the mighty columns rising from the steep slope out of a dense carpet of needles. The overhead foliage was scanty where I seated myself, and the branches and trunks stood out dimly in the diluted comet- and starlight. Fifteen minutes elapsed and the eternal, mournful, four-toned call of the hawk cuckoo came from a distance. It was now four o’clock in the morning. I was startled by a sudden rush of some creature up the trunk of a tree close by. It ascended by starts, each movement sending down a rain of twigs and bark almost upon me. Then another animal climbed after it, this one steadily and more slowly. Their silhouettes against the sky enabled me to see that both had long tails. I watched silently. The second creature gained on the first and, suddenly, a dark form hurtled through the air towards me. It swooped between my head and the nearest tree, a claw brushing my cap as it went past. It crashed into a low shrub and clambered nimbly to the top. The second animal ran down the trunk a short distance, and also leaped or fell with even a harder crash on the other side of where I sat, tense with excitement. It ran to my very feet, when I flashed the electric light full upon it, and with a snarl it drew back, showing the sinuous body and flashing, cruel teeth of a pine marten. It slunk off into the blackness behind, but not before other actors had made their presence known. A third animal ran along a branch overhead and awakened pandemonium in the shape of a pair of Koklass Pheasants, which blundered off through the trees, squawking at the top of their lungs. Reaching the end of the branch, the great flying squirrel, for such it was, sprang into the air. In the dim night light its widespread parachute looked as large as a blanket, and I involuntarily dodged as, with a resounding thump, it struck the tree nearest flying squirrel number one. Then it called—a sudden, sharp, loud squawl, ending with a clear metallic note, repeated again and again. ‘The other squirrel answered with an infantile whine, and I read the whole story—the almost tragedy which had been VOL. III Cc 10 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS enacted in the gloom of the forest; the murderous pursuit of the marten; the awkward attempt of the young flying squirrel to sail to another tree; the daring but unsuccessful leap of the marten. Then the mother coming, not to the rescue, for these gentle _ creatures have no weapons of offence, but at least, relying on her activity, to scream her fury at the terrible pursuer. Her flight had been made between two trees at least a hundred feet apart. Passing against the stars I had seen her skilful twist and break as she steered unerringly for the trunk ahead. Such was my first meeting with the Koklass Pheasant, although at the time, in the exciting onrush of the other creatures, the flight of the birds was momentarily forgotten. On succeeding days I had many more chances of studying these pheasants, at times keeping them under observation for an hour, but though such opportunities yielded manyfold more actual facts of their life history, yet never did I feel a more intimate appreciation of the terrible dangers with which these and all the game-birds have to contend. Fast asleep on a high fir branch, amid the quiet in the dead of night, think of being stealthily approached by such a terrible enemy as a pine marten—a weasel many times exaggerated in strength if not in cruelty and cunning. Well is it for birds that nature has denied them the scent glands which makes it possible for beasts of prey to stalk their furry victims. How much more hopeless had the marten come upon the roosting pheasants in its wanderings than the more or less uncertain pursuit of the nocturnal, volant squirrels. When all had become quiet again in the deodar forest, the dawn for a long time seemed stationary—only the ghostly, eerie comet-light sifting in and around the trees. I crouched down, with my back to the base of a giant spruce, and watched and listened. Unless, from such a position, one has observed the tiny moth millers in their nocturnal life, it is impossible to realize how different it is from their diurnal life during the hours of sunlight. In the day, if we see them at all, it is only a glimpse as they scuttle beneath a leaf or into a crevice. Now a score or more flew about me, their wings humming loudly as they passed my ear. I thought at first large beetles were flying about, but when a beetle really appeared the metallic twang of his bass-viol flight revealed the difference at once. The millers pursued each other, and flitted in and out © among the twigs like the ghosts of butterflies. Now and then they alighted on the dead leaves and made remarkably loud rustlings as they walked about. At five o’clock the first buzz of a fly was heard; utterly unlike the subdued hummings of the nocturnal creatures ; and at this tiny trumpet of daybreak, three or four species of birds broke into song, led by the double-phrase ballad of a tiny green warbler. : A Koklass Pheasant crowed from far up the mountainside, and two white-crested kaleege began to challenge one another below me. Then a chukor joined in, calling twice. ‘The comet vanished; the East became a blaze of glory, blue and gold streaming over the mountains of Kashmir—and my first night with the Koklass was at an end. GENERAL DISTRIBUTION The centre of distribution of the Common Koklass Pheasant is Garhwal. Here the palest specimens seem to be found in greater abundance. Eastward it keeps more or less within subspecific descriptive bounds, until, about the Kumaon—Nepal frontier, it COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT II darkens into mzpalensis. Westward, true macrolopha have been found as far as Chamba, but d¢ddulphi characters also begin to present themselves strongly in this region. GENERAL ACCOUNT _ Within the area of the north-western Himalayas, inhabited by the Common Koklass Pheasant, the bird may be found from about four thousand feet elevation up nearly to the limit of the forest. This higher altitude is only occasionally attained, and by far the greater number of individuals live and breed nearer the lower level. This is, of course, especially true in the cold season, when the upper slopes are deserted and the Koklass wander downward, while those below go still further down in the valleys. At this time, owing both to the increase of numbers due to the young broods and the greater con- centration of the old birds into a restricted area, Koklass are found in greater abundance than at any other time of the year. At the lesser altitudes the birds delight in densely wooded valleys and ravines, but seldom are they found at the extreme bottom, unless transiently for the purpose of drinking, but usually halfway up the slopes. On these steeps, where the forest of deodar, oak and chestnut is mingled with yew and box, with occasional ringal bamboo, the Koklass feed and spend much of the day. If the ground is much broken up and rocky, so much the better. They seem to be fond of bold, outjutting terraces or boulders, and will sometimes spend days feeding in the vicinity of such a place. In May, I found Koklass in pairs among the great forests of deodar, fir and oak in native Garhwal. On the steep, upper slopes the trunks of these splendid trees all spring diagonally from the ground, and at once make a sharp curve upwards, standing straight as plummets—living guides to the angle of the slope. Beneath them the ground is thickly carpeted with generations of needles, while here and there one comes upon a park-like vista clear of trees. In these open spaces, green lawn-like grass appears, dotted sometimes with large white anemones, with now and then one of deep purple. The dominant May blossom of these park-like spaces in Garhwal is a long- stemmed strawberry, of which untold myriads cover the turf so thickly that one cannot walk without treading many underfoot. Here at ten thousand feet elevation beds of tall saxifrage push up through the fallen needles and cones, their filmy heads nodding in the dim forest light. Here come the Koklass in pairs at this season, or the cock. alone, if his mate be sitting, and scratch among the needles for grubs and other insects, and here in early morning one hears their loud, hoarse challenging, 4%! croaak ! croaak-croaak ! crok! the last note much lower and inaudible at a distance. Titmice, nuthatches and tiny grass-warblers twitter and sing among the needle- foliage overhead, yellow grosbeaks follow the drifting fir-seeds to the ground, while in all the more open spaces flocks of Indian wood-pigeons glean—now and then rising with loud sudden smack of wing and a flashing white of tail-tip. The flowering vines are beautiful at this season, whorled clusters of chaste snow- balls climbing over the delicate maroon-coloured young oak leaves, and five-petalled clematis draping shrubs with masses of shining white stars, and mingling its sweetness with the rich aroma of the deodars. As one walks slowly along the steep, slippery slope, a family, or rather mob of 12 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS white-throated laughing thrushes may fly up from the ground. They hiss and seceep/ and at last pour forth their hysterical, irritating chorus of guffaws, until one gladly hastens out of hearing. When a pair of these birds, nest-building, is encountered, they utter not a sound as they fling themselves quickly out of sight. Another common ground-feeder in these haunts of the Koklass is the great Himalayan grosbeak. The males in gay yellow and black, the females in sombre grey, fly up from their feast of conifer-seeds, and then from the tree-tops comes their loud, hollow che-che-ult ! Through the forest aisles there flashes now and then the scarlet gleam of a male minivet, and in a momentary cessation of his lofty fly-catching we hear his musical, whistling trill. Until one sits down in the probable path of Koklass and waits patiently, one does not notice the strong undertone of sound—the hum of a myriad flying things. It is impossible at this season to find a spot at midday either in sunshine or shadow free from insect pests. They search one’s face and eyes with fiendish persistence. Little yellow diptera are very bad biters and their punctures give trouble for days. Then there is a tiny villain whose attack you do not notice until he is almost ready to depart, when a sudden sharp shooting pain may make you flinch at a critical moment of observation, perhaps alarming a pheasant whose approach you have long awaited. There are no mosquitoes, and the mornings and late afternoons among the deodars are perfect. When we have concealed ourselves amid the saxifrage and star-flowers and judged our position well, we may be fortunate enough to see a pair of dark objects some distance down the slope, through a vista of trunks. Resting the glasses in a chink of branch and trunk and focussed on the pair of Koklass, we settle for a long period of watching. Every movement shows how wary they are. Were we to raise but a finger in air they would be off like shots. The cock scratches with one foot, and with a low chuckle calls his mate. They feed busily for a few minutes and then a fir-cone falls with a thud near them. They spring two feet into the air, but recover themselves instantly, so keen and quick is their discrimination between real and seeming danger. Later a faint crash reaches our ears and both birds stand at full height on tiptoe, their half-raised crest making them the very personification of concentrated attention. Another and another crash and swaying of branches announce the approach of a troop of langur monkeys, and as they pass close on one side, the pheasants stand motionless until the last youngster has swung himself from sight. Then the birds move slowly to one side and out of my line of vision. Ordinarily the Koklass is shy and rather solitary, in the sense that it is adverse to gathering in large flocks even to feed like the impeyan. On the other hand, it is pre-eminently monogamous, and the pairs remain together throughout the year, so that there is no doubt but that the birds pair for life, which unfortunately in the majority of cases means probably for only one or two years. In the cold season, when concentrated as I have described, numbers of old birds may sometimes be flushed within a short distance of one another, but even here there is obviously no true flock attraction, the birds going off in different directions and seldom giving the flock call, which is so common an utterance with such birds as blood COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT 13 pheasants. The broods of young birds do seem to remain in more or less close association until early spring, when they separate and pair. At other than the cold season, more than two Koklass are hardly ever found together, while a solitary bird is almost certain to be an unmated bird of the year. The voice of this pheasant is very characteristic, and in spring the first morning after one pitches camp in some new region, the presence or absence of Koklass is indicated by the early morning crow or corresponding silence. In places where there has not been much shooting, the voice of the cock is always at hair-trigger poise. After the report of a gun, every bird within a half-mile, or anywhere within hearing, will instantly crow, and the same is true of a clap of thunder. They keep this up with great persistence, and after even half-a-dozen peals of thunder, or ten or twelve reports of a shot-gun, the crows are as numerous and vigorous as ever. I have heard dozens of Koklass crowing, and after many attempts I find that the best translation I can make is that which I have already given, 4%! croaak ! croaak-croaak ! crok! the last note being uttered very low and apparently with the last of the exhaled breath. On the conifer and oak-covered slopes the Koklass feed slowly upward from the water at the bottom, often passing up narrow, deep-sided ravines. At such times the birds are almost always in pairs, and the male usually feeds in advance of the female. When engaged in feeding the birds are very quiet, only now and then uttering a low cluck or chuckle. Once at a low elevation I came upon a hen Koklass with her partly grown young, while the cock was some hundred feet farther up the slope. The moment my dog appeared the male flew into a tree, crying loudly, kwk! kuk! kuk! kuk! ko-ka! ko-ka! ko-ka! for a minute or two, the utterance then gradually dying away into kok! kok! kok! ko! ko! ka! This was evidently a warning, as the female and chicks squatted at once and did not move until the dog blundered upon them. When Koklass are flushed suddenly they usually, but not always, give utterance to considerable * outcry, unlike the kaleege pheasants. The crow of these birds has much the same quality of tone as the croak of a raven, but the tempo is always the same, the broken note, when heard indistinctly a long distance away, recalling the crow of a junglefowl. Koklass have a slow, dignified gait, dainty and cautious when on their uphill feeding journey, more rapid when making their way down to water. When running, as they often will from a dog or other danger which they perceive in time, they stretch out the neck and tail and make great speed. I have seen them swerve from their path in rather open places to run along behind a fallen log. When they think they can escape unseen, both cock and hen will crouch close to the ground, but when the dog is near enough to be dangerous, they fly up into the tree overhead, either silently or with a burst of chuckles. But when a man appears, especially if the region has been shot over, they waste no time, but leap to wing at once. They fly downward if possible, beating rapidly and dodging skilfully if tree-trunks are numerous. On a long, steep, sheer open shute or valley, the Koklass half shuts its wings and literally drops like a stone, so rapidly that the eye can scarcely follow. In such a place, they give a few whirrs at the start, but after that gravitation is their sole motive power. The food of the Koklass is varied, but those which I observed seemed to prefer insect food to all else and spent much of their time in search of it. But no edible 14 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS vegetation is refused, whether roots, acorns, seeds, berries, leaves, buds, flowers or moss. It seems to eat less grain than the other pheasants, and is never found in the grain plots of the natives. Indeed it shuns human habitations of all kinds, and, unlike the kaleege, soon becomes scarce wherever mankind makes a permanent settlement. ‘In Garhwal I found that it was not an uncommon habit for Koklass to go out on the open rocky slopes in pairs and scratch deep holes in the turf. This was in impeyan country, and in one case an impeyan scratching ground was located within a quarter- mile of the isolated grubbings of a pair of Koklass. . I think that this pheasant invariably roosts in trees.. I have found them well up in dense conifers, and they return night after night to their favourite perch. In the spring at least they roost in pairs, or the male alone when the female has begun to sit. He crows usually before descending to the ground. Out of five birds which crowed regularly within hearing of one of my camps, I found that at least four gave utterance from their roosting-perch. This was easy to prove by creeping very carefully up behind the tree in which, from the sign, I already knew the roost to be located, and ultimately flushing the crowing bird. These birds began as early as 5 am. and isolated crows sometimes were given up to 7 o'clock. But by 6 a.m. most of the croaaking \was usually over. Several times I have seen laughing thrushes closely associated with Koklass, once with a pair and again with four birds apparently of one family. When going down to drink in the afternoon the pheasants move slowly but quite steadily, feeding here and there in their path, but seldom turning far to one side except to pursue a flying moth or other insect. The thrushes work downhill close to the pheasants and share the disturbed insects. Now and then they mount a bush and look about, getting a wider horizon than the terrestrial pheasants. The efficacy of this association was more than once apparent, when the smaller birds discovered me and shouted their discovery at the top of their lungs, flying off along the hillside. Whether by accident or intention, the pheasants both times ran swiftly off in the same direction as the flight of their small companions, although they themselves had no knowledge of my hiding-place except through the alarm of the laughing thrushes. The Koklass suffers from the same enemies as the impeyan and kaleege. My only definite evidence was of a lot of scattered Koklass feathers, surrounded by the fresh tracks of an Indian marten, a killing which had taken place the night before. The Nepal hawk-eagle and the leopard-cat are probably the most dreaded of the animate dangers by which these pheasants are surrounded. HOME LIFE Although the Koklass may be found from three or four thousand feet up to thirteen thousand, the breeding zone is much more restricted. The birds at the lower elevation are those which wander downward in mid-winter, while those which are seen at the upper limits of forest are only strays, perhaps unmated, which have found food abun- dant at such extreme heights. Nests have been found between five and ten thousand feet. All which I discovered were about seven to nine thousand. Nearer the lower elevation the nesting season begins about the third week in April, and from here PHOTOGRAVURE 40 GARHWAL HOME OF THE KOKLASS PHEASANT In May I found Koklass in pairs among the great forests of deodar, fir and oak in native Garhwal. On the steep upper slopes the trunks of these splendid trees all spring diagonally from the ground and at once make a sharp curve upward, standing straight as plummets—living guides to the angle of the slope. The park-like spaces between the trees, thick with generations of needles, purple and white anemones and the abundant long-stemmed strawberry, are favourite feeding-grounds of the Koklass. Here they scratch deep holes in the débris of the forest floor in search of grubs and other insects. bir = ey Re “2Srtormisns “onde bas “yond on " pasltod df PHOTOGRAVURE PLATE 40 GARHWAL HOME OF THE KOKLASS PHEASANT COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT 15 upward we find a gradually retarded period until the middle of June sees the last laying on the upper slopes. The second and third weeks of May mark the height of the season when the great majority of Koklass begin to sit. As we have observed, Koklass are strictly monogamous, and the cock apparently does not go far from the vicinity of the nest during the weeks of incubation. At least in several instances, I found them morning, noon and evening always within a hundred yards, and frequently closer to their patient mates. One would never know from their actions that a nest and mate were near. They are very wary, and when disturbed invariably give utterance to some sound, either of suspicion or fear, apparently for the benefit of the sitting bird. At other times of the year this is not always the case, and they may be flushed without uttering a note. The cock joins the hen and her chicks when these are hatched, and assumes his full share of duty in caring for them. The choice of a site is rather varied. It may be in the very heart of a patch of low undergrowth, or in the shelter of a mossy boulder or close to a tree-trunk. I have seen them with only fifteen-inch grass to shelter them from the open sky, although the grasses were somewhat arched over the sitting bird. I have never seen any evidence of an actual hole scratched in the ground, as is mentioned by several observers. The nests I have seen were depressions in the turf made only by the weight and constant shifting of the bird’s body. In one instance where the nest was on a slope, the depres- sion was so shallow that one of the eggs had rolled a foot away, and the embryo was ‘dead. The only lining appears to be the grass, leaves or moss which were on the spot . when the bird began to lay. These soon die and become pressed down into the form. I have found two, six and seven eggs, the former an unfinished set. Nine is the largest recorded number, and seven seems to be the average. The eggs are of a regular oval and quite glossy. The ground-colour is a rich creamy buff and does not exhibit very much variation, sometimes being a little darker than usual. The markings, how- ever, vary to a very great degree, although I do not find any division into the two general types of which Hume writes. Between the two extremes all intermediate phases of marking are to be found. The eggs from any one bird are usually quite similar, however, and it has been observed in captive birds of another species kept in China that this correlation between an individual and a certain pattern of egg persists year after year, even in spite of changed food and aviary. Against the creamy buff background are handsome dots and blotches of a deep reddish or chocolate brown, which in the centre of the larger spots is almost black. One extreme of marking occurs where the reddish pigment is in the form of small dots no larger than the head of a pin, and so thickly and evenly covering the whole surface of the shell that the spaces between the dots are no larger than the dots themselves. This is rather rare. The other extreme is where the pigment has run together into a few irregular spots and blotches, with the remainder of the shell almost unmarked. The finer-marked shells look like diminutive turkey or impeyan eggs. There is a good deal of variation in size, the length varying from 47 to 57 mm., and the breadth from 35 tog4o mm. The average egg is about 52 x 37 mm. The Chinese species of Koklass have been more often kept in captivity than the Himalayan ones, but all are very rarely brought out of Asia alive, and it is seldom that a living specimen can be secured. No living Koklass has ever been brought to 16 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS America, and of macrolopha only three individuals are recorded as having been kept in the London Zoo, the last over forty years ago, one of which lived three months. KOKLASS SHOOTING Advice to which I can heartily subscribe is given to sportsmen by Hume when he says, ‘‘Unless you are a man of iron, able to walk 4o or 50 miles up and down without fatigue, and able to go uphill just as well as downhill, it is all nonsense going pheasant-shooting in the pales without the necessary aids and in the proper manner. “You must have good dogs (small cockers are best), thoroughly under control, who will work exactly to command, and obey the whistle, and you must have a number of intelligent hillmen, something of sportsmen themselves, to search out the shooting- grounds, and when you are shooting, mark the birds that get away from well-chosen posts. I used to have four dogs and over a dozen men. “Lastly, you must go in for small game as your object, and not humbug after big game. If a kakur jumps up in the grass before you, roll him over with shot. Have a rifle along with you, and if in beating a gloomy ravine for hill partridges an old sarrow or a precipitous dang or cliff for cheer a gooral or two break, do your best with them, and if when high up after moonal or tragopan or snow cock, a tahr or burrel gives a chance, by all means take it. But if you really want to make bags of pheasants and the like, you must make them your object. Of course, too, you must get right away from hill stations and avoid lines on which other people have been recently shooting; but the hills are so vast, and so very few men, even to this day, go in earnest for small game, or can get leave in the ee part of October and November, which is the real time for pheasants, that this is easy.” Owing to the shyness of the Koklass pheasants id their solitary nature, combined with the difficulty of pursuing them in many of their steep haunts, these birds will probably be able to hold their own for many years. Many sportsmen have written of the great difficulty of shooting more than a brace in a day, but occasionally one may have better luck. An anonymous writer has given an excellent account (Jour. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. XIX., p. 797) of such an experience which is well worthy of reproduction, as a sidelight upon the Koklass from the English sportsman’s point of view. ‘There is a tremendous amount of luck in the sort of shooting I am about to describe, and a lot of hard work. About 4.30 a.m. I hear a voice which says: ‘Save char bajee, and it seldom has to be repeated for me at this time of the year, which is October, as previous shooting and prospecting seems to have sharpened my senses; possibly exercise has made my liver a few sizes smaller, hence I am less somnolent. It will not be light until 6 a.m., but I like to have plenty of time over a light breakfast, as I shall not eat again until 12 noon ; also there is a long tramp before the shooting-ground is reached; 5.15, and I am ready for the khud side. My two companions for the day are a sturdy hill native and a little brown-and-white spaniel, the sort so common among the men in the British regiments in the Punjab. She was selected when six weeks old, and commenced her training shortly afterwards, and is now almost perfect asa gun-dog. The brilliant moon which now lights our way COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT 17 as we scramble up a narrow hill-path was not in evidence when I retired to bed at 10.30 last evening, but now it is so bright that even under the trees we are not quite at a loss to follow the narrow path. The hillman goes first, as in spite of numerous tramps of this kind, I know the native of the soil will follow the main path much better than I can, and will lead me to our destination in spite of various cattle-tracks that criss-cross our road, which is, after all, only a rather larger cattle-track. The average hill native has an eye for hilly country that the British-born ruler of the land will seldom equal in spite of much practice. It is not surprising, as most of us are brought up under widely different circumstances. “In the meantime, we have travelled a long way, and the stars in the East are paling and the moon begins to have a wash-out appearance ; however, we can take it easy now, as we are quite high up enough for the Koklass. A few minutes later the small birds begin to chirp, and along the crest of the hill we are on comes a fresh breeze in fitful gusts, the usual harbinger of dawn at these altitudes. It will die away soon, and in fine weather the leaves hardly stir again until the evening. The breeze brings down a few brown and curled silver birch leaves, making one think of autumn, and I could wish many more of other kinds were down as well. “We push on a bit and reach a small plateau, the head of three nullahs, and now, as the light grows stronger every moment, we sit down to listen, hoping to hear the prate, prate of the Koklass somewhere below us, and shortly after the wail of the last maraud- ing jackal has died away, far down in the valley below, we hear the longed-for sound, something like, only far softer than that emitted by the bazaar moorghi, when she is looking for a place to deposit her egg, not like the cackle she makes when it is laid. “Now we must be as quick as possible, or this will be the only brood we shall hear calling. We hastily look round for the easiest way to them, and then the native beckons me and we make off. He well knows I wish him to keep wide of them until well beneath them, and then work up towards them. In ten minutes we are below them, and then we proceed more cautiously down into the bed of the now dry torrent. Here I halt, and turning round, meet the bright, questioning eyes of my little spaniel; no need to speak ; a wave of the hand and she is off, going at full speed. She makes a cast one hundred yards in front of us, and a little above, and then returns going at top speed all the time until reaching a ledge in the middle of the water-course, she suddenly stops and turns. A two seconds’ examination of the ground with her nose, and she goes straight up the nullah bed and is soon lost to sight amidst boulders and overhanging foliage. “TJ hear nothing for a minute, and then yap, yap, with a peculiar intonation that I know means ‘ pheasant running ahead of me,’ as well as if she spoke. The next second there is a whirr of rushing wings, and out dash two birds almost simultaneously. They are straight above us, and must see us immediately they clear the tree-tops, but not a jot do they care, their object is the khud below us, and down they come, straight as a die, with outspread, motionless wings. I shoot at the first far in front, as I know from experience I shall have to turn my quickest to get a shot at the other. As I turn, the first bird hits a rock by my feet, the second bird was still clear of trees when I fired, but he disappears, but, greatly to our surprise, we see him again for a second as he tops the trees, moving straight upwards, and then turns over and falls with a crash. This is a bit of luck, for had he not towered we should have lost him. VOL. III 3 18 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS “The spaniel has meantime rushed down to us, noses the bird near my feet, and then her eyes follow me. She hears the crash below and is off. I tell the native to follow, as it is far down, and the bird is large for her to carry; but she appears again in a few minutes and lays the bird at my feet, and then lies panting and wagging her tail. I whistle for the native and he returns, and picking up the birds makes his way after me, scrambling up the torrent bed. On reaching the place where the birds rose, I again wave the spaniel forward; she dashes hither and thither for a minute and is then off again towards the crest, and very soon there is another yap, yap, and I get a glimpse of a bird topping the trees and then just time for a snap as he swishes past me, this time between the trees. I cannot hear or see any result, but will look later, as the spaniel, instead of returning to me, remains above, giving a harsh woof every few seconds. “IT know what that means well enough. One of the birds is sitting on the lower branches of a tree, probably wondering why this funny-looking new sort of jackal is behaving in such an unusual manner, and thinking everything is not as it should be, makes up his mind to join his companions below. I am warned by a flutter and the change in the dog’s voice, but before I can get myself into position to shoot, the bird is past me and goes on its way rejoicing. “Now, although it is a long way back, I do not like leaving the bird I shot at without having a look round where he might have fallen, as I was pretty certain I was on him when I pulled the trigger; so down we go again, but all we find are two or three feathers, so we conclude that probably, if he fell at all, it was far down in the valley below, and I console myself by thinking if he is badly wounded he will make a good meal for some jackal to-night, and not be left long to linger in pain. The sun must be up by this time, but we cannot tell for certain here, as the nullah is on the north side of the ridge. We make our way over a ridge, intending to enter the next small nullah, scarcely hoping now to hear birds calling, as the time for this is nearly over. However, we are pleasantly surprised, and are soon off after another ‘snide,’ fortunately in a splendid place—a small plateau covered with bushes, overhung by an almost perpendicular piece of khud. “On coming below the plateau, I rest a minute for breath, and then push on, waving the little dog forward. These birds have evidently been running about all over the place, feeding, and the spaniel clearly shows by her flashing stern and eager movements that scent is abundant, but she finds a difficulty in hitting off the line. The next second she stops dead before a bush, looking over her shoulder at me, and at my nod dashes in, and out bundles a young Koklass, which, rising ten yards from me, makes off, but gets no further than the edge of the plateau, probably as easy a shot as one ever gets at a Koklass. “The faithful spaniel retrieves the bird and then returns to the bushes, and after some feathering around, strikes a line for the steep khud side. Up and up she bounds, never missing her footing and never faltering. Now she is lost from view, but a second or two later her voice is heard, and almost at once out hurry three birds; the first shot crumples up one as he comes towards me, the second is nearly overhead as I fire, and he goes on apparently unscathed. We clamber up by a circuitous route and arrive at the top of the ridge again, and sit there for a minute wondering which will be the best way to go now, as the sun is well up, and there is no chance of hearing any more birds calling. COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT 19 In the distance we hear the tap, tap of the woodman’s axe, and soon a mighty crash denotes that some stately Paluda will no longer grace these mighty forests ; but, what is of more immediate interest, following on the crash there rings out the cry of several male Koklass far down in the valley below. The cry is far different to that of the bird found in English coverts. All the same, they respond to the same stimulus as their distant cousins in their western home; for who has not heard the cock pheasants in a home covert set crowing by a sudden noise, such as the first clap of thunder of a storm? ‘This determines our way, so down we start until we come to a path my man knows of. The spaniel is encouraged to range chiefly above the path, as if she flushes any birds below they will most certainly escape unshot at. We work along round the valley, but although we know there must be birds somewhere, the little lady cannot find a scrap of scent until after a long search. On rounding a bend, she suddenly makes upwards, and I lose sight of her. A long wait, and then a distant yap; a minute later and a dark form is seen gliding downwards between the trees and curving away towards the side of the nullah. I fire as he comes, but the intervening branches are the only things at all injured, so I swing well ahead and fire again, but only realize as I press the trigger that the bird is putting on the brake hard, with the intention of alighting on the side of the nullah. Down rushes the spaniel, panting and exhausted. I show her a pool of water, in which she wallows for a moment and then jumps out refreshed and ready for anything, so I put her on the place where I last saw the pheasant, and without hesitation she dashes up and over a ridge dividing this from the next small nullah. I follow round below her hastily; three, four, five minutes pass, and I have visions of her lying beside a dead pheasant that she is too exhausted to carry; but not so; she again gives tongue, and again the wily old bird dashes down. I swing on to him, and continuing the swing, catch him in the open space between two trees, although at the moment of pulling the trigger I could not see him. What a handsome bird and what spurs! Even a game cock might have envied them. ‘On retracing our steps (this bird had gone back) I notice the rotting trunk of a tree with small pieces of rotted wood scattered underneath it. I pause to examine it, and the hillman says that is what the pheasant was feeding on, and went further to explain that large insects bore holes in the rotten wood, and the pheasants dig them out and eat them. A further walk along the path and a stiff climb up to the ridge and another cock pheasant is added to our bag, and yet another got away unshot at; there did not seem to be anything but solitary old cocks here. ‘Now for some light refreshment and a rest for a couple of hours in the shade, then I wake my slumbering companion, and we proceed, plunging downwards through the jungle, reaching a well-worn path after an hour’s tramp.” DETAILED DESCRIPTION ApvuLT MaLe.—Mid-crown ashy brown, becoming buff on the rear crown where the feathers are elongated in a rather stiff, long and slender crest. Immediately behind these sprouts a series of still longer, narrow, black feathers, glossed with shiny green, which form the posterior and greater part of the crest. Some of these plumes are 100 mm. in length, growing directly across the occiput, from one patch of ear-coverts 20 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS to the other. On the side of the neck is an elongated broad patch of pure white, and the under eyelid is of the same colour. All the rest of the head, chin and throat is black, richly glossed with dark green. On the hind neck beneath the crest the glossy green feathers change abruptly into the typical dorsal pattern. This is a cold ashy grey, with a fairly wide black shaft-stripe extending almost to the tip. The feathers of the entire body plumage are quite lanceolate and acutely pointed. The grey of the lower back, rump and sides takes on a pinkish-white hue, and on the back a fine, narrow white shaft-stripe partly splits the black of the feather. On the rump, which in typical specimens is predominately ashy grey, a single line of peculiar feathers extends down the centre. These have a shaft- stripe of buff or rufous with a broad black line on either side. It is seldom that they appear in perfect alignment. The wing-coverts and scapulars are distinct in shade from the mantle, being of a more olive or brownish hue on the exposed portions, with considerable rufous on the inner webs. The scapulars show a great extent of black, the olive being confined to the margins. On the inner margin of the wing a rufous shaft-stripe appears, and on the innermost secondaries only the terminal portion of the feather is ashy, with a large elongated black spot or ocellus on the outer web, all the remaining part of the feather being rufous, irregularly mottled with black. As we proceed outward along the line of secondaries, the black increases and solidifies, until the pattern alters to a regular dark-brown feather, a narrow, pale rufous shaft-stripe, and a very distinct ashy-buff margin to the outer web. The inner four primaries are almost monochrome dark brown, but on the outer six the entire outer web is ashy pink, the outermost showing it rather less distinctly than the others. The shorter upper tail-coverts are like the rump, but on the longer ones rufous obliterates the black, and we finally have a rufous feather with an indefinite tinge of grey on the margins and tip and two faint lines of dotted mottlings down the centre of the web, indicating the last of the black pigment. There are eight pairs of strongly graduated rectrices, the central pair being almost twice the length of the outer one. This central pair closely resembles the longest upper tail-coverts, except that the rufous is still stronger and the grey correspondingly fainter. The succeeding seven pairs are rich chestnut on the outer web, with the inner web and a large distal area black. Each feather is tipped with a narrow band of pure white. The green gloss of the throat shows on its posterior area a narrow fringe of dark chestnut, and on the lower throat this colour increases abruptly. In many adults this hue covers much of the ventral surface. In such individuals it extends dorsally on the neck as a semi-collar as far around as the posterior portion of the white patch. On the side breast, sides and belly it passes at once into the dark-centred, ashy, dorsal pattern, the transition feathers being chestnut on the inner web and black and ashy grey on the outer. On the lower belly the chestnut colour area narrows to a constricted line, which extends as far back as the under tail-coverts, which are dominantly chestnut, with slight lateral black mottlings, and often with more or less white near the tip. On the lower belly the place of the chestnut is taken by the typical black-centred grey feathers. This ventral chestnut area is extremely variable, measuring in width from 40 to 90 mm. COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT 21 The mandibles are solid black, or dusky black, the legs and feet uniform dark brownish in dried skins. In living and freshly killed birds there is considerable diversity in the colouring of the hind limbs, varying from dark bluish or greyish horny to a dull ash colour, sometimes with a faint pinkish tinge. Irides dark hazel. Weight, 2 lbs. 2 ozs. to 2 Ibs. 14 ozs. Bill from nostril, 15 mm.; length 580 to 640; expanse, 730 to 760; wing, .235 to 255; tail, 235 to 285; tarsus, 70; middle toe and claw, 60. VARIATIONS.—A typical individual of szacrolopha (typical solely because farthest from both castanea and nipalensis) has very narrow shaft-streaks on the mantle feathers, which diminish posteriorly on the plumage and disappear entirely on the lower back and rump, the feathers of these parts being uniform grey. In fact, the central black is narrow everywhere, and the chestnut of the lower plumage is confined to a broad line down the centre of the ventral surface, while all the sandy areas, especially on the lower surface, are clearer and whiter. This is not the commonest type of individual, but may be considered as the most generalized and typical of macrolopha macrolopha. Elliot's plate of acvolopha shows a bird much too dark for a typical representation. The splitting of the black lines is also atypical, and the upright segregation of the green portion of the crest is an error, the bird not being able to manipulate its occipital plumage in this fashion. Gould’s plate is excellent. ADULT FEMALE.—Crown and occiput black, with a single cross-bar and a broad terminal band rufous buff. In worn specimens the buff tips disappear, leaving these parts quite black. A short, but well-marked occipital crest, varying from brown to warm rufous, the feathers margined or slightly mottled with black. Forehead, broad superciliary extending back to the crest, and the face pinkish or yellowish buff, most of the feathers with a dark band half-way to the tip. Full-plumaged birds have a broad band of feathers starting just behind the eye and extending back, including the ~ ear-coverts and a nuchal zone posterior to the crest, glossy green, with one or more cross-bars of buff. Chin and throat white, with an irregular line of brown dots down each side from the base of the mandibles. These dots coalesce and become solid black margins on the side throat and extend in a band across the posterior margin of the white gular area. The white zone above the two dotted lines extends across the lower cheeks and back over the side neck as an elongated patch of white, ending beyond and just below the ear-coverts. The upper neck is pinkish buff with irregular bands of black. Posteriorly the black increases in extent and reduces the buff area, which has become more rufous, to a barbed-arrow shape, while a grey tip appears at the extremity of the feather. The lower back and rump are pinkish buff, finely mottled with black, with two wide longitudinal lines of black, separated by a narrow buff shaft-streak. The scapulars are black with chestnut spots and mottling on the inner web, and a pale buff shaft-streak. The wing-coverts are mottled and the inner secondaries continue the pattern of the scapulars with the black gradually diminishing to an irregular, sub-terminal blotch on the outer web. The secondaries are dark brown with 22 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS fairly regular chestnut cross-bars, dying out on the outer flight-feathers, which are unmarked except for a wide outer margin of pale buff. The shorter tail-coverts are mottled sandy and black, with pale buff cross-bars. On the longer ones there is an increase of rufous, and an emphasizing of the pale bars, which on the central rectrices are proximally outlined in black. With the exception of this central pair, the tail-feathers are rich chestnut, except for the inner web and a broad zone near the tip. The terminal margin is pure white. The breast, sides and flanks are in general like the mantle, with dark brown outlining the rufous or buffy central barbed-arrow, and a border and tip of grey. Posteriorly on the sides, the definiteness of the pattern is destroyed by mottling. The black is much reduced on the lower breast and belly, the colour of these parts being in some individuals almost solid pinkish buff, paling into whitish at the extremity of the feathers. The under tail-coverts are rich chestnut with a broad tip of pure white, the two colours being separated by a more or less broken cross-bar of black. The upper mandible is dark horn; the lower yellowish. The legs and feet are pale plumbeous or horny grey, dark brown in dried skins. Irides hazel. Weight 1 Ib. 10 ozs. to 2 Ibs. Bill from nostril, 15 mm.; length, 525 to 560; expanse, 700 to 725; wing, 215; tail, 200; tarsus, 65; middle toe and claw, 58. JUVENILE PLumace.—The crown is dull brown with no crest apparent. Chin and throat white, the lower throat and neck with broad, dark-brown tips. Lores and face whitish, with a broad brown border; posteriorly on the ear-coverts the white is reduced to a terminal shaft-streak. Nape white, with three round dark spots down each web. On the hind neck the white becomes buff and the spots form transverse bands. | Mantle, scapulars, back and wing-coverts yellow or olive-brown, with a long, narrow, pale buff shaft-streak, and the inner webs mottled, or solid black, or with a terminal spot of this colour. In the feathers down the median line of the back the black is equal on each web and extensive, limiting the yellow brown to a narrow margin and to the basal portion. The ventral surface, from breast to under tail-coverts, shows an almost uniform pattern of chestnut, with two large tapering lines of black down each web. In a young male which is well on in the moult into the first year plumage the inner eight primaries are all new, No. 8 being only 25 mm. out of its sheath, while Nos. 9 and to have not yet completed their delayed growth. The secondaries are all new, although the three or four innermost ones are still in active growth. No. 1 shows its very long delay by being only half-grown at this late period. This is unquestionably the last flight-feather to be shed. The sixteen tail-feathers are all new and growing actively, but the appearance on the whole is of a double tail. This is due to the fact of the extreme precocial development of the upper tail-coverts, five pairs of which are actually longer than the true tail, reaching a length of 145 mm. as compared with the 125 mm. of the tail itself. In colour and pattern this pseudo tail exactly corresponds to the central pair of rectrices, COMMON KOKLASS PHEASANT 23 and during this transitory period it must function with more effect than the growing tail-feathers. Owing to the extreme gradation of the feathers and their simultaneous growth it is rather difficult to prove the Phastanine method of moult of the rectrices in succession, from the outer to the inner pairs, in such an individual as this. Careful measurements, however, and comparison with the full-grown tail-feathers of adults, shows a most beautiful gradation. At the moment when this young male was shot the rectrices had completed the following percentages of growth: Inner pair . : ‘ : ; : 2 é ‘ : . , . 45 per cent. 2nd pair. t : ; : : ; ‘ : ; ‘ ¢ . 60 per cent. 3rd pair. ; 3 : : : , ; : : : ' . 65 per cent. 4th pair. “ : 3 ; ; : : : ‘ : : . 70 per cent. 5th pair. 4 3 ; ; ; ; ; ; : : ; . 74 per cent. 6th pair. : » é : : : : “ ; “ : . 75 per cent. 7th pair , : ‘ : ; : é : : : : . 80 per cent. Outer pair . ; : : ‘ ; ; : 5 d : . . 83 per cent. Other individuals showed that this was the uniform method of moult, by the presence of old central rectrices, but in this young bird the evanescent stage of active growth of all the tail-feathers gives an unusual opportunity to depict how delicately graduated and exact is the phenomenon. First YEAR PLuMAGE.—Except for the frequent hints of juvenile pigment which occasionally stain and tinge the new feathers in early moulting birds, there is little or no difference in the first-year plumage and that of succeeding years. The statement that the greater width of the black shaft-stripes on the mantle feathers and their unusual abundance on other parts of the plumage is an indication of immaturity is an error. The extremes of variation in these respects may characterize both birds of the year and very old adults. SYNONYMY Satyra macrolopha Less., Dict. Sci. Nat., LIX. 1829, p. 196; id. Traité d’Orn. 1831, p. 493. Phasianus pucrasse Gray, in Griff. ed. Cuv., III. 1829, p. 26 [Almorah Hills]. Phastanus pucrasia Gray, III. Ind. Zool., I. 1830-32, pl. 40; Gould, Cent. B. Himal. 1832, pls. 69, 70; Vigne, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1841, p. 6 [Alpine Punjab]. Euplocomus pucrasia Jard. Nat. Lib., Orn., IV. 1834, p. 216, pl. XXI. Tragopan pucrasta Temm. Pl. Col., V. 1834, text to pl. 15 [No. 545]. Eulophus macrolophus Lesson, Comp. Buff., VII. 1836, p. 354. Pucrasia macrolopha Gray, List of Birds, 1844, pt. III. Gall. p. 31 [part]; id. Gen. Birds, III. 1844, p. 503; Hutton, J. As. Soc. Beng., XVII. 1848, pt. II, p. 694; Gould, Birds Asia, VII. 1854, pl. 26; Adams, Proc. Zool Soc. 1858, p. 500 [Simla]; Irby, Ibis, 1861, p. 235 [Kumaon]; Jerdon, Birds India, III. 1863, 524; Gray, List Gallinae Brit. Mus. 1867, p. 30; Tytler, Ibis, 1868, p. 203 [Simla to Mussooree]; v. Pelzen, Ibis, 1868, p. 321 [Koteghur]; Beavan, Ibis, 1868, p. 380 [Simla] ; Brooks, Ibis, 1869, p. 60 [Naini Tal, Almorah]; Gray, Hand-list Birds, II. 1870, p. 258; Elliot, Mon. Phas., I. 1872, pl. 28; Elliot, Ibis, 1878, pp. 125-126; Marshall, Ibis, 1879, p. 463; Marshall, Ibis, 1884, p. 422; Anderson, Jour. Bomb, Nat. His. Soc., IV. 1889, p. 59; Grant, Cat, Game- birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 311; Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, I. 1895, p. 281; Blanford, Fauna Brit. India, Birds, IV. 1898, p. 84 ; Oates, Game-birds of India, I. 1898, p. 313 ; Sharpe, Hand-list Birds, I. 1899, p. 36; Styan, Ibis, 1899, p. 298; Oates, Cat. Birds’ Eggs Brit. Mus., I. 1901, p. 56; “Pine Marten,” Jour. Bomb. Nat. His. Soc. XIX. 1910, p. 797; Finn, Game-birds India and Asia, 1911, p. 63; Mitchell, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1911, p. 521. Phasianus macrolopha Blyth, Cat. Mus. As. Soc. 1849, p. 245 [part]. Pucrasia macrolopha macrolopha Beebe, Zoologica, I. No. 15, 1914, p. 278; Baker, Jour. Bomb. Nat. His. Soc. XXV. 1918, p. 524. KASHMIR KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia macrolopha biddulphi Marshall NAMES.—Specific : dzddulphz, after the discoverer of the form, Major John Biddulph. English: Kashmir or Biddulph’s Koklass. Native: Plas (Kashmir). BRIEF DESCRIPTION.—Male: Similar to the Common Koklass (P. macrolopha macrolopha), but with the chestnut of the fore neck continued more or less completely over the hind neck, forming a nearly or quite complete collar. The chestnut of the lower plumage is usually darker, and mixed with black. Female: Similar to the female of the Common Koklass. RANGE.—Kashmir. : GENERAL DISTRIBUTION Tuts form has been found in suitable localities quite widely distributed in Kashmir, as far in the north-west as Gilgit. Specimens from that locality approach castanea, while toward the east it grades evenly into macrolopha. GENERAL ACCOUNT This form would seem hardly deserving of even subspecific distinction, were it not that there does seem to be a node of static radiation in Kashmir, where one finds many individuals of fairly close resemblance. There is, however, a complete gradation from macrolopha on the east, to castanea on the west. The distinguishing characters are found only in the males, and in the extreme phase of development they show the chestnut of the ventral surface decidedly darker, more maroon, while there is a distinct black margin to all these feathers, and the black encroaches from the base, and thus limits the maroon. In some individuals, indeed, the maroon on the lower breast becomes reduced to a very inconspicuous terminal shaft-streak. In these birds the chestnut on the tail is replaced by rufous buff. In addition, this maroon colour (still holding its darkened hue) extends clear around the back of the neck in the form of a narrow, but irregularly pointed (owing to the lanceolate shape of the feathers) collar of dark red. No other constant characters are apparent, and the females are identical. These individuals are variable to the highest degree. In some, almost the entire lower surface is maroon and black, the grey feathers being confined to a narrow strip along the sides. In such birds the maroon on the dorsal surface occurs irregularly over the entire mantle. This forms a direct link with P. castanea. This western line of d¢ddulphi leading from macrolopha, while it shows an increase and darkening of the chestnut, yet has the dorsal surface, including the lower mantle, back, rump, scapulars and wing-coverts, as light as in macvolopha. In fact, these parts are identical in the two forms, except that the concealed rufous on the secondaries and 24 PLATE XLVI KASHMIR KOKLASS PHEASANT—Pucrasia macrolopha biddulphi Marshall (Upper left-hand figure) WESTERN KOKLASS PHEASANT—Pucrasia macrolopha castanea Gould (Lower figure) NEPAL KOKLASS PHEASANT—Pucrasia macrolopha nipalensis Gould (Right-hand figure) Tue sides and flanks are grey in the Kashmir bird, chestnut in the Western Koklass, and nearly black in the Nepal form. Their habits are similar, and in all parts of their mountainous range we find conifers overhead, and, as in the painting, beds of tall saxifrage pushing up through the fallen needles and cones, their filmy heads nodding in the dim forest light. Paar NEPAL KOKLASS PHEASANT. eas 5 x ea) E t 1 ou YELLOW-NECKED KOKLASS PHEASANT 33 One author speaks of being certain that these birds are found in the Tung-lin or eastern woods, some one hundred miles north of Pekin, near the tombs of the recent emperors. Here in the foothills of the mountains these pheasants are said to be abundant. I spent some time in this region, exploring both outside and inside the Great Wall, but only once caught a glimpse of a Koklass pheasant. This was when I was returning from a long day’s tramp, thoroughly tired out from walking rock-strewn stubble. I had halted at a rivulet to drink, and was sitting on a stone, when a Koklass called some distance away. I had been hearing the broken cackle of true pheasants throughout the day, and had not heard the very distinct croaak ! croaak ! since I left Garhwal a year before. The day was cold and very cloudy, and rain had fallen at intervals, and the whole rolling plain was most desolate, stretching out endlessly in one direction and ascending steeply into the foothills of the mountains to the north. I crept as silently as possible in the direction of the sound, but as I had no dog I had little hopes even of seeing the bird. Through the mist the stunted, dry vegetation showed dull brownish, dripping, saturated, while the rocks had no healthy covering of moss and lichens, but a dark, shining slime which made walking most difficult. Ahead of me, the rocky character of the ground became dominant and the coarse grass consequently thinned out. Across this space I saw the bird as it ran swiftly from the cover of one clump of dried grass to another. The white neck-patch showed conspicuously and the white tail-tips flashed for an instant as one-half of the tail was spread in helping the bird to turn sharply. Although I tramped for another half-hour, until dusk settled down, I could not catch another sight of the pheasant. The two birds which I secured in Pekin and a hen which a Chinaman brought to me a few days after this, had all three been trapped, apparently snared by one leg. The birds are certainly not common in most of the province of Chili, and probably their nearest occurrence in numbers is only to the westward of Shansi. CAM PALIAV AIDS The Yellow-necked has always been about as rare in captivity as the Common Koklass. Several specimens of both sexes have reached England alive, and the record for one showed that it lived in the London Zoological Gardens for four months. Aviculturists in France have had better success, as may be judged from the following abstracts of several instances-of successful breeding of Yellow-necked Koklass. It is a great pity that no detailed notes as to eggs or chicks were kept. ‘““M. Vekemans [‘ Bull. Soc. d’Acclim.” 1872, p. 384], directeur du Jardin Zoologique d’Anvers, écrit qu'il a obtenu cette année pour la premiére fois la reproduction du Pucrasia xanthospila. Cette belle espéce de Faisan chinois, rarement importée jusqu ici, n’avait pu étre encore multipli¢e en Europe.” ‘Je posséde [‘‘ Bull. Soc. d’Acclim.” 1878, p. 663] depuis 1876 un couple de Pucrasia xanthospila. c'est une espéce trés-robuste. Le preuve en est que sur 7 sujets qui mont été envoyées du Thibet a trois reprises différentes, tous sont arrivés en bon état, tandis que la plupart des Tragopans, Crossoptilons, Ithagines succombaient pendant le voyage. VOL, III F 34 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS ‘“Mon unique femelle a donné 7 oeufs, dont 5 fécondés. Je n’ai pu élever que 2 sujets, un cog et une poule; ce n’est qu'un succés relatif, mais un succés que je m’efforcerai de poursuivre, car ces oiseaux sont venus trés vite. Ils ne font qu'une consommation insignifiante:de patée et d’oeufs de fourmi quand ils sont dans un parquet avec de l’herbe a discretion. Le coq a déja revétu son plumage d’adulte. Je pense donc que cette espéce est susceptible de reproduire la premiére année, et si elle s'annongait comme un- peu plus féconde, elle aurait des titres sérieux a étre essayée comme oiseau de chasse. Elle ne craint en effet ni la neige, ni la température si rigoureuse en hiver dans nos contrées.” | The only remaining definite account of the breeding of birds of this species is as follows (‘ Bull. Soc. d’Acclim.” 1881, p. 583): ‘In the month of March 1880 we received five imported birds, two of which did not thrive after their arrival, and by the spring of 1881 there remained but one male and two females. In April one female was killed... On April 23rd the only surviving female laid her first egg in a corner of the cage, and she continued to lay, at intervals of three days, until July ist. She laid twenty-four fertile eggs, from which nineteen young were hatched, which still survive, while two chicks died in the shell, another was crushed by the brooding hen, and a fourth, already well grown, was killed by a neighbouring brooding hen into whose enclosure the chick had strayed. “To sum up, the breeding of young Koklass pheasants does not present more , serious difficulties than the breeding of other species, their diet being the same. They are characterized by their wildness, as, while young tragopans and impeyans will eat from the hand, the Koklass chicks hide themselves as soon as the door of their enclosure . is opened.” DETAILED DESCRIPTION ApuLt MaLz.—The entire crown greyish buff, the elongated crest clear rufous buff, and the still longer occipital crest just behind dull black with shining green edges. A very large patch of white extending from the gape and the ear-coverts down the side neck, The remaining portions of the head and neck shining iridescent green, the chin and throat, however, chiefly dull black. Dorsal part of the neck and upper mantle light yellowish buff with darker, more rufous margins. A narrow line of feathers along the mid line of the neck shows basal black, which creeps up the webs close to the edge, and where the yellow colour dies out on the mid mantle, the black has reached the tip in the shape of two broad tapering lines. This is the typical character of xanthosfila on both dorsal and ventral plumage. As the yellow dies out, a mottled grey takes its place and extends uniformly back- ward to the rump, where it becomes tinged with buff and rufous. The same grey and black pattern and colour characterize the entire under surface except for the mid zone of solid chestnut, which is the same as in macrvolopha. The lower sides and flanks, however, show the nuchal yellow strongly developed. ah, The scapulars and wings are marked by an olive tinge, with the two black lateral lines well developed on all the coverts. On the tertiaries and inner secondaries this black is confined to two large, irregular subterminal spots, the inner of which is marked or replaced with rufous. The secondaries show successively less and less olive-brown YELLOW-NECKED KOKLASS PHEASANT 35 mottling on the outer web, until the outer secondaries and primaries are plain dark brown except for a clean-cut margin of pale buff. The longer three or four pairs of upper tail-coverts and the central pair of rectrices show a new type of pattern. The large centre is clear, pale, greyish white. This is bordered by the two black lines, which are almost obscured, their greater area being taken up by dull chestnut, which pales into light olive at the tip. All the remaining tail-feathers show broad white tips, succeeded by a broad area of black. Most of the remaining portion of the feathers is pale grey, crossed half-way by an irregular black bar, the grey above this being also bordered with black. The feathers are opaque, the pale grey appearing below as dull brown, barely distinct from the black. In several specimens from Szechuan, the tail-feathers vary strongly in the direction of meyert, and hence toward macrolopha. The under tail-coverts are richly tricoloured, bright chestnut basally, succeeded by a black bar and a large round terminal spot of white. Iris brown; bill black; legs and feet blue grey. Bill from nostril, 16 mm.; wing, 223; tail, 190; tarsus, 66; middle toe and claw, 56. . ADULT FEMALE.—The new type of plumage pattern characterizing xauthospila is confined to the male, the female being remarkably like the corresponding sex of macrolopha. \Nith the exception of the few characters noted, they are identical. The head and neck present no distinct characters. The upper parts show a less development of black, and a corresponding emphasis of pinkish buff, especially on the upper neck and mantle. The greatest dorsal mark of distinction is in the greater uniformity of colouring of the back and rump. Instead of carrying out the mantle pattern, there is a rather abrupt change on the back. The black markings and the shaft-stripe vanish, leaving the plumage of an indefinite, finely mottled buffy grey and dark brown. On the rump a curious single line of black feathers extends down the mid line. The wings offer no important marks of distinction from macrolopha, but the tail- feathers, all but the central pair, are very different. They are identical with those of the male, being chiefly grey, crossed by an oblique black bar, with a large subterminal zone of black and a wide white fringe. Most individuals have more or less distinct traces of chestnut, chiefly in the form of irregular marginal spots down the outer webs. The ventral surface is identical in the two species, except that in anthospila the extremities of the feathers are distinctly whiter. Bill from nostril, 15; wing, 208; tail, 152; tarsus, 58; middle toe and claw, 54. REMARKs.—The coloured plate in Gould’s “Birds of Asia” does not represent a typical xanthospila as regards the yellow collar. In fact, I have seen Common Koklass from Garhwal with as strong a yellow-buff tinge as this plate shows. The divided black line on the plumage, however, marks the bird as distinct from the Himalayan species. Elliot’s figure is better as regards the yellow collar and the general bluish cast of the plumage. The crest in both plates is wrongly drawn. 36 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS EARLY HISTORY Two specimens, male and female, of the Yellow-necked Koklass were sent to the British Museum by Sir F. W. A. Bruce in 1864. These were described by G. R. Gray, and figured in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of the same year. Both types are still in the South Kensington Museum. Two years before, this species was mentioned by Dr. Lamprey in the same publication (Proc. Zool. Soc. 1862, p. 221), where he speaks of Koklass as ‘another kind of pheasant found in the Tien Tsin market,” frozen and offered for sale. The imperfect condition of the plumage led him to confuse it with macrolopha. Pére David says elsewhere (Proc. Zool. Soc. 1868, p. 210), ‘‘C’est moi qui ai en et signalé (en 1862) le prémier une nouvelle espéce du Pucrasia que Mons. Gray a nommée. P. xanthospila. Elle a été introduite en France par notre ministre M. Berthemy en 1864.” SYNONYMY Euplocamus pucrasia Lamprey (nec Gray), Proc. Zool. Soc. 1862, p. 221. Pucrasia xanthospila Gray, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1864, p. 259, pl. XX; Milne-Edw. N. Arch. Mus. Bull., I. 1865, p. 14, pl. 1; figs. 3 & 4 [N.E. of Pekin]; Saurin, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1866, p. 437 [Mts. of N. and W. China]; David, N. Arch. Mus. Bull., III. 1867, p. 37 [Ta-Tchio-Chuan, Jéhol, Oulachan]; Gray, List Gallinae Brit. Mus. 1867, p. 31; David, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1868, p. 210; Gould, Birds Asia, VII. 1869, pl. 24; Gray, Hand-list Birds, II. 1870, p. 259; Swinhoe, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1871, p. 399 [N.W. China]; David, N. Arch. Mus. Bull. VII. 1871, p. 11 [Pekin, Mongolia, Sze-chuen]; Swinhoe, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1872, p. §52 [Manchuria to Sze-chuen]; Elliot, Mon. Phas., I. 1872, pl. 30; Vekemans, Bull. Soc. d’Acclim. 1872, p. 384; Sclater, Ibis, 1874, p. 169; David and Oustalet, Ois Chine, 1877, p. 497, pl. 104 [Manchuria to E. Thibet]; Andelle, Bull.:Soc. d’Acclim. 1878, p. 663; Marshall, Ibis, 1879, p. 463; Libsig, Bull. Soc. d’Acclim. 1881, p. 583 ; Seebohm, Ibis, 1891, p. 380 [W. Cze-chuen]; Grant, Cat. Game-birds Brit. Mus. XXII. 1893, p. 315; Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, I. 1895, p. 285 ; Sharpe, Hand- list Birds, I. 1899, p. 36; Walton, Ibis, 1903, p. 32; Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, pt. II. 1903, p. 670; Mitchell, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1911, p. 521; Salvadori, Boll. Mus. Zool. ed. Anat. Torino, XXVII. 1912, No. 647; Courtis, Ibis, I913, p. 15. Pucrasia davidiana Milne-Edw., N. Arch. Mus, Bull., I. 1865, p. 14. Pucrasia meyerit Oustalet, Ann. Sci. Nat. (7), XII. 1892, p. 316 [Ta-tsién-lot]. Pucrasia xanthospila xanthospila Beebe, Zoologica, I. No. 15, 1914, 278; Baker, Jour. Bombay Nat. His. Soc. XXV. 1918, p. 541. ORANGE-COLLARED KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia xanthospila ruficollis David and Oustalet THE Koklass Pheasant of Kansu and western Shensi seem to differ from those to the east and south in having collars of a decided orange rufous instead of a yellow buff. This character is rather variable, and the variation in extent and degree of coloration of the collar in vanthospila, render it improbable that this is more than a subspecific distinction. As such, however, and as correlated with the occurrence of other subspecies of pheasants in Kansu, such as /thaginis sinensis sinensis, it should certainly be recognized. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS The chief character of the cock Orange-collared Koklass is the orange rufous colour of the collar and anterior mantle, each feather with a narrow shaft stripe of golden yellow. In well-marked individuals about half the mantle is included in this zone of colour, the collar extending clear around the neck to the chestnut of the mid-breast. Even where the two colours come in contact they do not blend. The chestnut of the ventral surface is darker than in typical xanthosfila, and there is a corresponding clearing of the mottled grey areas, the black lines standing out very distinctly against their purer pale background. The yellow of the lower sides and flanks is very pro- nounced. Everywhere we find an increase of black at the expense of chestnut or rufous, as on both the. upper and under tail-coverts. A typical male shows the following measurements: bill from nostril, 17 mm.; wing, 223; tail, 228; tarsus, 66; middle toe and claw, 58. The Orange-collared Koklass was first separated by David and Oustalet in ‘Les Oiseaux de la Chine,” their characterization being as follows: “ Pucrasta xanthospila, var. ruficollis (Chensi).—Cétés du cou d’un roux trés-foncé ; tache latérale blanche peu développée et entourée de toutes parts par le noir métallique ; sous-caudales noires, sans bande marron, avec une tache terminale blanche arrondie et non pas anguleuse; banie médiane marron moins étendue sur le ventre que dans le Pucrasta xanthospila vrai; teintes noires plus développées sur le dos et les ailes.” Their type is now in the Paris Museum. SYNONYMY Pucrasia xanthospila, var. ruficollis David et Oustalet, Oiseaux de la Chine, 1877, p. 408. Pucrasia ruficollis Salvadori, Boll. Mus. Zool. ed. Anat. Torino, XXVII. 1912. Pucrasia xanthospila ruficollis Declitus, Jour. fiir Ornith. 1897, p. 62; Courtois, Ibis, 1913, p. 16; Beebe, Zoologica, I., No. 15, 1914, p. 278; Baker, Jour. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc., XXV. 1918, p. 523. 37 MEYER’S KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia xanthospila meyert. Madarasz NAME.—Specific : meyert, named after Dr. A. B. Meyer, Director of the Dresden Museum. GENERAL DISTRIBUTION Tuts form of Koklass has been recorded from Central Tibet, and from Yerkalo, on the Mekong River, almost at the junction of Szechuan, Tibet and Yunnan. GENERAL ACCOUNT I have seen three xanthospila from Szechuan which vary so markedly in the direction of this bird that I do not feel it deserves more than subspecific distinction. Oustalet also classes with this form Koklass Pheasants observed near Tatsienlu, by the Prince of Orleans. The cock may, in a word, be said to be xanthosfila with the tail-feathers of macrolopha. ‘This being the case, I have not figured it. We know nothing of it, beyond the knowledge which the several known skins have given us. The type is in the Hungarian National Museum. DETAILED DESCRIPTION ApuLT Marz.—Centre of crown black, with brown tips increasing in extent until the very long, slender crest of the hind crown is all brown. The still longer posterior feathers springing from the occiput are black, with the margins glossed with steel blue, as are the feathers of the forehead, face and side crown, the ear-coverts, hind neck, chin, and throat being bluish green. A large patch of white begins just below the ear- coverts and extends downward and backward on the side neck, separating the metallic plumage of the side throat from the hind neck. A well-marked wide collar of pale yellow buff extends around the sides and hind neck, the tinge dying out on the mantle. The type of the dorsal plumage is that of xanthospila, but clearer, a wide pinkish- grey shaft-stripe separating two still wider black lateral bands, the remaining narrow margin being grey. This is the pattern of the entire body, above and below, except for the central ventral line, from the iridescent throat to the lower belly, which is rich chestnut. | . The colours of the wing-coverts are less clear and distinct, the grey being mottled and clouded with buff and dark brown. The inner secondaries-are dark brown, mottled on the inner web with rufous, and on the outer web and margin with greyish buff. The 38 u MEYER’S KOKLASS PHEASANT 39 outer secondaries are uniformly dark, save for a narrow, mottled shaft-streak and an outer margin of grey. The primaries have a whitish tip and a pale buff outer web. The tail-feathers are like macrolopha, but with much more black lining and mottling on the central rectrices and upper coverts. The lateral feathers are rich rufous, especially on the outer web, with a very broad, subterminal black band and a generous white tip. The under tail-coverts are black and rufous, with very wide white tips. The male type, which was loaned to me by the Hungarian National Museum, measures: bill from nostril, 15 mm.; wing, 233; tail, 223; tarsus, 68; middle toe and claw, 53. The left spur is 14 mm. in length, while the right is short. ADULT FEMALE.—Like xanthosfila, except for much more rufous tinge on the mantle and breast, and the rufous lateral rectrices, which are like those of the male. Bill from nostril, 15 mm.; wing, 218; tail, 168; tarsus, 64; middle toe and claw, 58. SYNONYMY Pucrasta meyert Madarasz, Ibis 1886, p. 145; Oustalet, Ann. de Sci. Nat., XII. 1891, p. 316; Grant, Cat. Game-birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 315; Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, I. 1895, p. 285; Sharpe, Hand-list Birds, I. 1899, p. 36; Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds., pt. II. 1903, p.671; Finn, Game-birds India and Asia, 1911, p. 66; Baker, Jour. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc., XXV. 1918, p. 540. Pucrasia darwinii Oustalet (nec Swinhoe), Le Naturaliste, 1886, p. 276. Pucrasia xanthospila meyert Beebe, Zoologica, I., No. 15, 1914, p. 278. JORET’S KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasta xanthospila goretiana Heude GENERAL ACCOUNT AND DESCRIPTION In a letter dated January 20, 1883, sent to the “Ibis,” Pere Heude writes: ‘‘ Vous serez peut-étre content d’apprendre que j’ai un nouveau Pucrasia. Je une propose de la publier sous le nom de P. joretiana. Il differe des Pucrasiae décrits en ce qu'il n’a pas de brun ni de roux dans le plumage, soit au cou, soit aux ailes, soit aux sous-caudales. I] est de la taille du P. xanthospila.” No further mention, however, was made of this pheasant until thirty years later, when the bird was figured in the “ Ibis” with a véswmé of its characters. It appears to be a closely related offshoot of the Yellow-necked Koklass with strong leanings in the direction of Darwin’s Koklass; exactly what we should be led to expect from its geographical position. The two characters in which it departs most widely from xanthospila are the shortness of the crest and the absence of the yellow nuchal zone. Both of these characters, however, are strongly hinted at in xanthospila, where in a large series of specimens we find the crest of greatly varying length and compactness, and the yellow cape ranging from a strong bright straw-yellow area to a few faint yellowish streaks on the upper mantle. In jovetiana we have a complete vindication of the assertion that the posterior part of the Koklass crest is a true crest and not ‘feather ears,” which has so often been falsely delineated as two separate erect tufts. The differences between jovetiana and darwimt are much more apparent. Most important is the double, not quadruple, pattern of the mantle and sides, a character which, in the classification I have adopted, throws the form at once into the xanthosfila group. The ventral chestnut is darker and richer than in the more southern Koklass, while the under tail-coverts and central tail-feathers have no wide chestnut margin, but are wholly black and white. The male type now in the British Museum shows the following measurements : wing, 225 mm.; tail, 200; tarsus, 70; middle toe and claw, 68. The characters of this form of Koklass were first observed by the Rev. P. Heude, who named it provisionally after one of his missionary colleagues, the Rev. H. Joret, who procured the first specimen. Joret’s Koklass has been found to inhabit the mountainous region around Hoshan, in the western part of the province of Anhwei. It occurs at an altitude of two to five thousand feet. Thus its range is midway between wxanthospila to the north and darwint in the more southern provinces. SYNONYMY Pucrasia joretiana Heude, Ibis, 1883, p. 225; Sclater, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club., XX XI. 1912, p. 7; Courtois, Ibis, 1913, p. 14. Pucrasia xanthospila joretiana Beebe, Zoologica, I., No. 15, 1914, p. 278. Pucrasia darwini joretiana Baker, Jour. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc., XXV. 1918, p. 523. 40 DARWIN’S KOKLASS PHEASANT AND ITS ALLIES In this group 6f Koklass the pattern on the mantle and much of the body plumage is quadruple, instead of double as in xanthospila, the two black lines of the latter group of birds being split into four. The ventral chestnut becomes reduced in these southern Koklass, there being even in the strongest marked birds a tendency to greater distribution and correlated dilution of the pigment. It disappears entirely in the subspecies s¢yanz. VOL. III 4I G DARWIN’S KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia darwint darwint Swinhoe NAMES.—Specific: darw7nt, dedicated to Mr. Charles Darwin. English: Darwin’s, or Southern Koklass Pheasant. French: Pucrasia darwin. German: Chinesisches Pucrashuhn. Native: Song-by (Pine-fowl, Chinese). BRIEF DESCRIPTION.—Male: Differs from the yellow-collared koklass, in that the mantle pattern is quadruple instead of double; the yellow collar is lacking ; the ventral chestnut is diffuse and faint, and the black cross-bar on the outer tail-feathers is obsolete or reduced to a spot. Female: Like the female of xanthospila, but with tail-feathers as in the male of its own species. RANGE.—East-central China in Southern Anhwei, Chekiang and Fokien. GENERAL DISTRIBUTION Darwtin’s Koxrass has been found in the Province of Chekiang and Fokien, and if the single record from southern Anhwei is correct, its range is rather closely connected with that of Joret’s Koklass in the central part of that province. GENERAL ACCOUNT This Koklass is not uncommon in the mountains of the two provinces within which its centre of distribution seems to lie. Several collectors and naturalists have met with it, but have given us almost nothing concerning its general life history and surroundings, except to say that these are similar to those of other koklass pheasants. It keeps to the mountains and is rather solitary in habit, ranging through the bamboo groves and the open hillsides in search of food. The crop of one bird contained berries and bamboo leaves. Hardly worth mentioning is the record of a white egg said to be of this species, brought in, in a broken condition, by a Chinese collector. DETAILED DESCRIPTION ApuL_t Marz.—The head and neck are like macrolopha, except that the green gloss covers more of the crown, chin and throat, and the occipital crest is rather olivaceous. In xanthospila 1 have described the general pattern as two tapering, submarginal black lines running the entire length of the feather, the margins being clear grey and the central portion mottled grey. This inner mottling is seen on close examination to be 42 PLATE XLVII DARWIN’S KOKLASS PHEASANT—B2ucrasta darwint darwint Swinhoe (Lower left-hand figure) STYAN’S KOKLASS PHEASANT—Pucrasia darwini styant Grant (Upper right-hand figure) THE ventral plumage is warm chestnut in Darwin’s Koklass, but clear black and grey in Styan’s Pheasant. These birds live in the uplands of the coastal provinces of east-central China, where they range through the bamboo groves on the open hillsides. They are everywhere rare and seldom seen or shot. A@AdH -tdgit oqqJU) iv Vi 4 y (swgat basd tT aoe 259. hs vw c}. TIS ba eer B oy eh lar ti SSaztie BRON sa id Tou he 5 nh = —asolo ni i sig bas alosld . SHEHUTY yeE eilw we ns) out ot wi sods a4 Het asyie a WIVIZ ATAIG guoid? 9 2 d machi Treg PLATE XLVIII. STYAN’S KOKLASS PHEASANT. DARWIN’S KOKLASS PHEASANT. DARWIN’S KOKLASS PHEASANT 43 rather linear in its extent in a few individuals, though so faint and broken that one never thinks of it as aught but indefinite mottling. In darw7ni we have a crystallizing of this mottling, and in well-marked males we find, especially on the mantle, four very distinct longitudinal black lines on a more or less clear grey background. On almost all the dorsal plumage this advance step in pattern complexity is evident, and clearly sets apart the birds as a distinct species. A glance at darwin shows the dorsal plumage to be doubly complex over that of xanthosfila, just as the latter in turn doubles that of macrolopha. The upper tail-coverts are much as in xanthospila, but as for the lateral rectrices, while the black border around the central grey has increased, the oblique cross-bar has disappeared, leaving either a faint spot, a short shaft line or no trace at all. The black on the under tail-coverts has usurped almost all the basal part of the feathers, while the white terminal portion has also increased. The chestnut is reduced to a small lateral spot on each web. On the ventral surface we find a most interesting condition of affairs. We see represented the phenomenon of correlated concentration and diffusion. The chestnut mid-zone is in all conditions and states of degeneration, and even where most abundant and pure, the entire under plumage is tinged strongly with the buff which hints of the dissolving of the chestnut. There is no trace of white or even grey, except on the sides of the upper breast. This variation in the chestnut of the lower plumage is individual and wholly independent of age. In the most strongly marked birds the chestnut zone would be called merely a broad line, while we often find an individual with only faint traces on a few feathers, or with the line irregularly broken through below the breast. The extreme is seen in a fully adult individual, typically davw7u¢ in every other way, in which the chestnut is wio//y absent on the fore neck, breast and belly. Iris dark hazel; mandibles black; legs and feet blackish grey. Bill from nostril, 16 mm.; length, 600; wing, 234; tail, 236; tarsus, 72; middle toe and claw, 61; spur, about 15. ADULT FEMALE.—The variation among the females is very considerable, relatively fully as great, although within much more narrow limits than in the males. We find ~ birds which are warmly suffused with rich rufous over the entire under surface, and again through a series of gradations we pass to specimens which might well represent the colour mates of the extreme s¢yanz type, of a colder buff below than any other specimen of xanthospila or macrolopha. The two lateral lines of black throat markings appear on the whole to be denser and of greater extent than in any other female Pucrasia, but it is on the lateral rectrices that the single important diagnostic character is to be found. As in the male, the distinction from «anthospila lies in the absence of the oblique black cross-bar, the grey area being entire except for the shaft-spot or short streak which is all that remains of the bar of xanthospula. Bill blackish brown; iris hazel; legs and feet leaden grey. Bill from nostril, 16; length, 490; wing, 200; tail, 155; tarsus, 66; middle toe and claw, 56. Spur usually a flat scale, occasionally a diminutive spur 3 mm. or more in length. 44 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS SYNONYMY Pucrasia darwini Swinhoe, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1872, p. 552 (Chekiang) ; Elliot, Monograph Phasianidae, I. 1872, pl. 30 bis; Gould, Birds of Asia, VII. 1875, pl. 25 ; David et Oustalet, Oiseaux de la Chine, 1877, p. 409 (Chekiang and Fokien); Garrod, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1879, p. 365; Marshall, Ibis, 1879, p. 463; Styan, Ibis, 1891, pp. 329, 499 (Chekiang and Anhwei); La Touche, Ibis, 1892, p. 410; Grant, Cat. Game-birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 316; Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, I. 1895, p. 286; Rickett and La Touche, Ibis, 1896, p. 490 (Kuatun, Fokien); Sharpe, Hand-list of Birds, I. 1899, p. 36; La Touche, Ibis, 1900, p. 49 (Kuatun, Fokien); La Touche and Rickett, Ibis, 1905, p. 58 (Mountains of Fokien); Martens, Jour. fiir Ornith. 1910, p. 449 (Fokien); Finn, Game-birds of India and Asia, 1911, p. 66; Mitchell, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1911, p. 521; Salvadori, Boll. Mus. Zool. ed. Anat, Torino, XXVII. 1912; Courtois, Ibis, 1913, p. 16. Pucrasia darwint darwini Beebe, Zoologica, I, No. 15, 1914, p. 278; Baker, Jour. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc., XXV. 1918, p. 523. STYAN’S KOKLASS PHEASANT Pucrasia darwint styant Grant NAMES.—Specific : styanz, after Mr. F. W. Styan, an English ornithologist who has done much collecting in eastern China. English: Styan’s Koklass. BRIEF DESCRIPTION.—Male: Like Darwin’s koklass, but with the chestnut almost entirely eliminated from the plumage, leaving it clear black and grey, comparable only with the mantle in the former subspecies. Female; Unknown, probably indistinguishable from the female of Darwin’s koklass, RANGE.—Vicinity of Ichang, Province of Hupeh. GENERAL ACCOUNT AND DESCRIPTION THIS species is known only from two skins collected near Ichang on the Yangtze River in the province of Hupeh. The assertion (Ibis, 1899, p. 298) that the ventral chestnut is absent in the young bird, and that “during the course of the winter the chestnut band gradually appears,” is wholly false. The amount of chestnut on the southern koklass is entirely an individual character. The describer of this form was unfortunate in the individual which he chose as type of the species, as it is absolutely indistinguishable from several specimens of koklass from Fokien, which lack the ventral chestnut, and which come from the same locality as fully typical darwini darwint. The type styanz, for example, corresponds exactly with the British Museum darwzuz specimen labelled, 1905, 12-24, 1000, Kuatun, Ex. Museum, C. B. Rickett. Both are of the same age, the latter being in somewhat worn plumage. A much more extreme form is the individual which is described (Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XXIII. p. 32) as a “second male,” and ‘“‘ which has evidently been in captivity.” The left wing has certainly been pinioned, but not for preventing flight, but where the wing has been almost severed by shot. The plumage of this koklass, its wing, tail and crown are all in too perfect condition for its having been in captivity even a day. This individual represents the extreme in the styand character of loss of chestnut and should stand as typical of this form. The chestnut has not only been eliminated as a solid central ventral marking, but has been extirpated from all the rest of the body plumage, leaving it as a whole of a clean black and grey tone, which in typical darwzuz is seen only on the mantle. Faint buffy edges on the feathers of some of the under parts, and more distinct traces on the decomposed lower belly plumage between the legs, are the only remaining hints of this colour. One other character not noticeable in the styauz type male is a distinct glossing of green over the terminal black markings, such as some of the feathers of the upper mantle; not a conspicuous character, but interesting as hinting of what might result if another step should be taken in evolution. SYNONYMY Pucrasia darwini Styan, Ibis, 1899, p. 298. : Pucrasia styant Grant, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XXIII. 1908, p. 32; Courtois, Ibis, 1913, p. 16, Pucrasia darwini styant Beebe, Zoologica, I., No. 15, 1914, p. 278. 45 CATREUS CHEER PHEASANT Family PHASIANIDAE Subfamily PHASIANINAE Genus CATREUS THE sombre but harmoniously coloured Cheer Pheasant stands quite alone in a number of characters, sufficiently insulated from the nearest related groups to warrant its inclusion within a separate genus. From Phasianus (as I define it) the Cheer is at once distinguished by the firm webbing of the rump feathers and from both this genus and Syrvmaticus by the similarity in colouring of the sexes, and the presence of a crest. In addition to these characters, the general carriage of the Cheer, especially when running at full speed, its notes, and the colour of its egg, all set it apart. On the other hand, we may consider it somewhat intermediate between certain groups, as combining the long, narrow tail of the true pheasants with the pinnated crest and bare facial skin of some of the kaleege pheasants. A narrow-vaned, hairy, occipital crest is present, long and flowing in the cock, shorter in the hen. Both sexes are clad in dull buffy white, with black bars and other markings, relieved only by a dull gold or rust colour on the back and rump of the cock. The short, strong spurs of the cock are represented in the female by low blunt processes. There are eighteen feathers in the tail, which is strongly cross-barred, long, and extremely graduated, the inner pair of rectrices being at least five times as long as the outer pair. The 1st primary is shorter than the roth; the 5th being the longest of this series. CATREUS Type Catreus Cab, Ersch. u. Grub. Encycl. sec. 1, 1851, LIII. p. 221 : - : . C, wallichit. Lophophasianus Reichenb. Nat. Syst. Vég. 1852, p. xxxix . , : - 3 . C, wallichit. The genus Catreus consists of a single species, the Cheer Pheasant, Catveus wallichu (Hardwicke), and is confined to a comparatively small area in the west and central Himalayas. VOL. III 49 HW CHEER PHEASANT Catreus wallichit (Hardwicke) NAMES.—Generic: Catreus, katpevs, a peacock-like bird, the name used by Strabo. Specific: wallichzi, for Dr. Nathaniel Wallich, a Danish botanist, one time Superintendent of the Calcutta Botanical Gardens. English: Cheer, Wallich’s or Golden Pheasant. German: Wallich’s Fasan. Native: Kahir, Chihir (Nepal) ; Cher or Chir (Kumaon and Garhwal) ; Bunchil, Herril (Hills north of Mussooree) ; Chummun, Chaman (Chamba). BRIEF DESCRIPTION.—Male: Top of head, including long, hairy crest, dark brown ; chin, throat and breast dingy white, back and under parts pale buff; lower back, rump and flanks, pale gold or rust colour, all the plumage posterior to the neck and breast cross-barred with dark brown or black; large wing and central tail- feathers irregularly barred and mottled with dark brown and creamy white ; outer tail-feathers with distinct barring of buff, and black, the latter often with chestnut centres. Female: Quite similar to the male, but with shorter crest and tail. The feathers of the head are edged with buff, the upper back is pale chestnut barred with black, and the posterior upper plumage dingy brown, mixed with black and buff; neck and breast black, buff-edged, the posterior ventral plumage rufous chestnut, also edged with buff, and black-mottled ; the primaries are barred, not mottled, and the tail-feathers are in general reddish brown, not buffy white, with wide mottled bars. HABITAT.—West-central Himalayas, in Kumaon, Garhwal, and western Nepal. THE BIRD, EN TTS eAU NES Far up in the hinterland of native Garhwal one finds a land of contrasts. Leaving camp in the deep valley and working up through the soft-needled forest of deodars and spruces, I come suddenly, without warning or forest-thinning transition, upon bare open ground. I pass over a low ridge, and instead of the dense, shady, wooded slopes, I find myself upon a rocky ledge dropping down in jagged terraces, and, on the other hand, rising steeply to where the stern profile of the summit is silhouetted against the fleecy clouds. Here the slope is clothed with thick, dwarfed rhododendrons, there with only a low dense mat of vegetation, or again with the precipitous cliffs too steep to give foothold to aught but the red, scaling boulders themselves. As I push forward, clinging to the shrubs and rocks to aid my unsteady, shifting footing, I find the earth-mat of vegetation of great interest and beauty. For yards I trample upon myriads of tiny, pale-blue forget-me-nots. On the shady sides of the rocks begonias carpet the bare surface, their dainty pink blossoms shading to deep red in the centre of the petals, and waving with every breath on long, curved stalks. Flat against the rock lie the large, round, pubescent leaves, showing rich maroon below where the edges are bent over. Flowers, a dozen unnamed ones, are everywhere, striving to carpet the bare crags; white edelweiss shining like stars and visible from afar off. A sheltered abrupt angle offers a comfortable point of vantage for observation above and below, and here I find the most remarkable plant of all: a dwarf, tree-like growth, almost prostrate, growing downward over the face of the rocks. It bears myriads of the tiniest of white flowers and small, shiny, oval leaves, both growing almost sessile 50 PLATE XLIX CHEER PHEASANT Catreus wallichit (Hardwicke) LEavinc my camp in a deep Garhwal valley, and working up through the soft-needled forest of deodars and spruces, I come suddenly, without warning, upon bare open ground, I pass over a low ridge, and instead of the shaded, densely-wooded slopes, I find rocky, grass-covered ledges dropping down in jagged teraces, and, on the other hand, rising steeply to where the stern profile of the summit is silhouetted against the fleecy clouds. This is the home of the Cheer. Although protectively coloured when crouched in the half-dead grass, they are conspicuous when in full flight. The golden and green sheen of the back and rump at the time of their headlong rush sometimes catches the glint of the sun, and in sudden turns the tail flares out into a streaming cross-barred train, forming a marvellous spot of pattern and colour. ® AM £S.-—t jenerit : 10, ng eatin: a 2 the. thy wok so1sv0 ieee Le tie 1 an THE B RIRD ian ghiait doviiootorg ag ide ‘out bate ied» oA 0 a ight 4 at = 6105 bei ig as set Sey shave sh eG} PLATE XLIX. CHEER “BELA SANIE. CHEER PHEASANT 51 on very thick, tough wooden stems. So strong is this growth that one may walk firmly over its springy foliage, several feet above the actual surface of the rocks beneath. Here I found the most comfortable of seats, and lying outstretched in my weather-worn khaki, I seemed to merge completely with the outcropping reddish-brown rocks on all sides. There was more than one pair of eyes, however, which put my efforts at concealment to scorn. First a white vulture came circling lower and lower to see whether or no I was a suitable victim, and before he had decided that I possessed too much life for any hope of a meal, he was joined by another. Both soon drifted away, after a silent, critical inspection, and my next visitor was a splendid raven, which flapped unconcernedly along the slope before me, wholly unconscious of my presence until he had rounded the angle behind which I was lying. I have seldom seen sudden fear and terror so truly depicted in a bird. Although without mobile mouth or hands to express emotion, yet as the bird veered outward when almost upon me, his feet sprawled out, his feathers ruffled, his wings almost refused to bear him onward, and the raucous sgwawk ! which rang out came from the very depths of his bird soul. Never have I seen a raven make quicker time downhill. His black form fairly melted from view as he shot away, and for the succeeding five minutes I could hear him giving vent to his feelings far, far below me— filling the valley with brave oaths, now that he was at a safe distance. Some jays joined in for a time, and the uproar or the sight of the excited birds caused the vultures to return, but only for a single circling swoop, then they were off for good. I scanned the rocks carefully for some sign of life, and at last was rewarded by finding a big old “baboon,” or, more properly, langur, perched upright, motionless, many yards away. He neither moved nor seemed especially interested in anything, and as it was impossible for a monkey to focus his attention upon any one thing for the many minutes during which I observed him, I made up my mind he was merely taking a sunbath, dozing on the warm stone, before making his way to the deodars a hundred yards away. I myself began to feel the soporific effect of the bright beams, and resting my head on the springy surface I listened idly to the buzzing of flies, and watched little iridescent bees searching every blossom near by. A few minutes had passed when my eye caught a slight movement in a clump of half-dead grass and instantly I was all alert, lying with all my being concentrated on that bit of vegetation. At last my eye seemed to pick out a dim form among the grass stems—something speckled, brownish yellow, compact, stealthy. The creature, whatever it was, took one or two steps forward, and I made up my mind that it was some small feline, perhaps the rare marbled cat. As it approached the edge of the grass clump I began to see details, and I had fully made up my mind to see one of these dainty cats step forth, when a tall thin neck and head shot up and there stepped into view a full-plumaged Cheer Pheasant! Never did I feel more completely nonplussed. Another glance at the grass stems showed me that my cat’s head was a bunch of dead leaves, its legs were the swaying stems, its body and coloration were those of the pheasant which had just stepped forth. I had restraint enough to close my eyes to narrow slits and lie quiet, and for fully five minutes the Cheer and I had a staring match, which the bird almost won. Out of the corner of my eye I saw another brown form emerge from its hiding- place, and the first bird now took two more steps forward and gave a low chuck! 52 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS chuck! It was beyond human endurance to lie perfectly motionless for more than ten minutes under such scrutiny, and some involuntary movement on my part sent the birds back with a rush to shelter. As they showed no signs of emerging again I sat up and slid down towards them. It was as if I had fired some hidden mine. In a twinkling the air was alive with feathered bombs, and Hume's experience came -vividly to mind when a wounded Cheer struck him full in the face and almost knocked him down a precipice. With wide-flaring, streaming tails, the birds whirred past me; several from my very feet shooting out and downward like rockets, others, which, all unknown to me, must have been crouched only a few feet uphill from where I had been lying, sprang into the air and veered past me on either side. I had, in fact, all unwittingly blundered into the very heart of a good-sized covey, and stopping when I did I had only sent them into hiding. So instantaneous was the outburst that it was not until the last bird had vanished that I realized and appreciated what a wonderful sight had been vouchsafed me: a half-score of great birds suddenly springing, like Jason’s dragon warriors, from the very earth and hurling themselves with utter recklessness into the vast space of the great valley. How any strength of quill could ever regain the apparent lost balance and break the force of that bullet-like abandon to gravity was inexplicable. I looked about me with added interest and marked the spot for future visits. As I made my way obliquely downward, the rays of the low sun fired the red boulders, turning them to blazing copper in contrast to the black-green forests below. Not a note came from the distant scattered covey, although I listened long and carefully. The bare upper heights were silent, deserted. Only from the deodars came a vesper duet; now and then the sweet, sibilant tones of a whistling thrush, clear-cut and thrilling, to the low, muffled, running accompaniment of the cooing of doves preparing for the night, somewhere in the heart of the great Himalayan forest. GENERAL DISTRIBUTION The range of the Cheer Pheasant -is a very limited one. It is usually given as the North-western Himalayas, but this is true only in a restricted sense. I know of no record far in Kashmir to the north-west, while from here eastward it is quite abundant in Chamba, Kumaon, Garhwal, and a number of the lesser Hill States. In Nepal it extends farther eastward than Hume thought, and there are records as far as the Gandals River. Even this, however, gives it one of the narrowest areas of pheasant distribution, and when we remember that within this circumscribed habitat the birds are found only between four and ten thousand feet elevation, we realize to how sharply demarcated a zone of the earth’s surface a single isolated species of large, non-migrating bird may be confined. This, too, not upon an island, but in the heart of a great mountainous region most of which would seem to offer suitable haunts for the pheasant. Cheer show a seasonal migration downward from January to March, being forced from the bare heights in winter by the snow. GENERAL ACCOUNT I had the Cheer Pheasant under observation for only a very few weeks, and hence can speak of it at first hand during but a limited portion of its annual life. Hume MAP XII. Ss wo (=) =I > ce {0} PHILIPPINE SV rey ph » vie ARABIAN SEA EQUATOR aL INDIAN OCEAN JAVA SEA’ : 2S CSE East of Greenwich H.E.& G.Witherby, Publishers. Stanford's Geograph! Estab’. MAP SHOWING THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE CHEER PHEASANT. CHEER PHEASANT 53 together with his friend Wilson have given very excellent accounts of this species based on many years’ knowledge as sportsmen, and from such a point of view the details leave little to be desired. “The Cheer is extremely locally distributed, and seems to me very capricious in its choice of habitations: on one side of a river you meet with plenty in suitable spots; on the other side you may search fifty square miles of most likely-looking country and never see one. “From six to seven thousand feet is the elevation at which, in October, they are most common, but in winter and spring they go lower, and some even breed lower, and in summer they may be met with up to at least ten thousand feet (I myself killed a pair of old ones late in June at fully this elevation), and probably higher. Of course they are birds of the outer or wooded hills, and once you cross a high snowy ridge that effect- ually arrests the clouds of the monsoon, into dry, more or less treeless regions, like Lahoul, Spiti and Ladakh, you lose the Cheer and all the pheasants but the snow cocks. They are all more or less birds of the forest, and all belong to the zone of abundant rainfall. “The best places in which to find Cheer are the Dangs or precipitous places, so common in many parts of the interior; not vast bare cliffs, but a whole congeries of little cliffs one above the other, each perhaps from fifteen to thirty feet high, broken up by ledges, on which a man could barely walk, but thickly set with grass and bushes, and out of which grow up stunted trees, and from which hang down curious skeins of grey roots and mighty garlands of creepers. “Tf the hill above be thinly wooded, and on some plateau below there are a good number of millet and princes’-feather fields, you are, in a Cheer district, next to certain in the autumn to find a covey on the upper ledges of such a spot about ten o’clock in the morning. “Then what a morning’s sport you may have. You get on some knoll or spur com- manding the lower portions of such a series of clifflets, where you will be clear of the stones that the dogs and men inevitably dislodge. The dogs are put in at the very top, a few of the men climbing with them on such ledges as are accessible; the stones rattle down fast, a pahari slips, shouts, and saves himself by clinging to a branch; all the dogs bark, every man looking on shouts out a different piece of advice if the slip was serious, or a separate gibe, if it was trivial, for the benefit of the slipper; all this comes down to you three or four hundred feet below, a confused babel; you scream out ‘silence,’ then a sharp yelp, a volley of screeching chuckles, you see a dark object shoot out from the face of the upper cliffs, a moment, and it suddenly contracts in size, and the next hurtles by you, like a falling thunderbolt, and if you do zo¢ miss it, it is quite certain that it is not the first time you have shot Cheer. ‘‘But whether hit or missed, there is no time to inquire now; good men are below to mark every bird that comes down, dead or alive, half-and-half. ‘‘ Another and another of these animated projectiles pass you in their downward rush, some out of shot, some so close that it is impossible to fire, and very often three, four, five in such rapid succession that even with two doubles, in the old muzzle-loading times, it was impossible to fire quick enough. “Twelve or more perhaps have been counted, the dogs and men have worked down to 54 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS the level at which you stand, when you catch a glimpse, scuttling round the base of the knoll, of the old cock, going at railroad pace, with head down and tail straight out, and you arrest his career (if you are sharp enough) then and there. “Then comes the work below; the dogs are called close to heel, and following the shouted directions of the markers, you move about here and there, now finding a dead bird, now having a wounded one brought you by a dog, and now getting nearly knocked down by one whose tail absolutely brushes your face as it rises under your feet from the centre of a small patch of cover, which, on the persistent outcries of the markers, you have been vainly hunting through, backwards and forwards, for the ten previous minutes. “But you do not account for all, unless you are a better shot than I ever yet saw, though in these days of breech-loaders far fewer ought to escape—some wounded birds, and many of the unwounded will have given leg bail, and the distances they will then go is surprising. I have, quite by accident, recovered by a dog pouncing on it a Cheer, with pinion broken, the blood still fresh on it, fully three miles down a valley at the upper part of which two or three hours previously I had had a beat. ‘The sport is very exhilarating, but you are generally lower down than in koklass- shooting; you are more closed in; the air is not so fresh and bright ; there are no superb wide-reaching views, changing as you move; a glimpse of the snows is rarely to be caught; you have no magnificent forest about you, and when brought to bag your bird is very poor eating compared with koklass or woodcock. “The force with which Cheer descend is almost incredible. Other pheasants in descending keep the wings a little open ; these birds pass one at such a fearful pace that it is impossible to be certain, but it always appeared to me that Cheer quite closed their wings, and I attribute their power to do this to their enormous tails sufficing to guide them. When within a hundred feet—I speak by guess—of the level at which they intend to light, suddenly out go the wings, the tail is spread to its fullest expanse, the bird looks double the size it did a second before, and sweeps off in graceful curves right or left, shortly dropping suddenly, almost as if shot, into some patch of low cover. If no shots have been fired, you may walk straight down, and ten to one find him exactly where you marked him. ) ‘At times you get them on the hillsides, where the trees are thin, but there is no great sport to be got there. The whole covey is scattered over an endless distance; you must make a line; the birds wz// get up in front of any one but the gunner, and run down- hill in a most provoking manner. If you get two brace in such a situation after five or -six hours’ fagging you may be well pleased, unless the covey happens to have an antipathy to dogs, as they occasionally seem to have in out-of-the-way places. Then almost every bird that is found by these flies straight up into the nearest tree, and thence, standing almost on tip-toe on some horizontal bough, with feathers erected and tail spread, chuckles or crows, or whatever you like to call it, at the barking and yelping cockers below, till you walk up and (tell it not to your friends when you return to camp) solemnly pot him or her then and there. “T was oncé nearly killed bya Cheer. I was standing in a rather awkward place, the extreme outer edge of a plateau jutting out for twenty or thirty yards near the base of a patch of precipitous ground; behind me was a sheer fall of about forty feet; a Cheer was CHEER PHEASANT 55 flushed above, it was coming right for me. I let off the gun somehow, and almost before it seemed well off, my gun was dashed aside and I got a blow in the face that made my nose bleed, and knocked me over the precipice, to the bottom of which my gun fell, as should I also, had not the two men squatting at my feet seized my legs. Yet this bird, as the state of the body proved, must have been at least thirty yards from me when the shot struck it, and it was stone dead when I had sufficiently recovered myself to think of it.” “This species,” says Wilson, “is an inhabitant of the lower and intermediate ranges, seldom found at very high elevations, and never approaching the limits of forest. “Though far from being rare, fewer perhaps are met with than of any other kind unless it is particularly sought for, always excepting the Jewar, 7vagopan melano- cephalus (Gray). The reason for this may be that the general character of the ground where they resort is not so inviting in appearance to the sportsman as other places ; besides, they are everywhere confined to particular localities, and are not, like the rest, scattered indiscriminately over almost every part of the regions they inhabit. Their haunts are on grassy hills with a scattered forest of oak and small patches of under- wood, hills covered with the common pine, near the sites of deserted villages, old cow-sheds, and the long grass amongst precipices and broken ground. “They are seldom found on hills entirely destitute of trees or jungles, or in the opposite extreme of deep shady forest; in the lower ranges they keep near the top of the hill or about the middle, and are seldom found in the valleys or deep ravines. Further in the interior they are generally low down, often in the immediate vicinity of the villages, except in the breeding season, when each pair seeks a spot to perform the business of incubation; they congregate in flocks of from five or six to ten or fifteen, and seldom more than two or three lots inhabit the same hill. “They wander a good deal about the particular hill they are located on, but not beyond certain boundaries, remaining about one spot for several days or weeks, and then shifting to another, but never entirely abandoning the place, and year after year they may, to a certainty, be found in some quarter of it. ‘During the day, unless dark and cloudy, they keep concealed in the grass and bushes, coming out morning and evening to feed. When come upon suddenly while out, they run off quickly in different directions, and conceal themselves in the nearest cover, and seldom more than one or two get on the wing. They run very fast, and if the ground is open and no cover near, many will run two or three hundred yards in preference to getting up. “ After concealing themselves they lie very close, and are flushed within a few yards. There is, perhaps, no bird of its size which is so difficult to find after the flock has been disturbed and they have concealed themselves; where the grass is very long, even if marked down, without a good dog it is often impossible to flush them, and even with the assistance of the best dogs not one-half will be found a second time. A person may walk within a yard of one, and it will not move. I have knocked them over with a stick, and even taken them with the hand. In autumn the long grass, so prevalent about many of the places they resort to, enables them to hide almost anywhere; but this is burnt by the villagers at the end of winter, and they then seek refuge in low jungle and brushwood, and with a dog are not so difficult to find. 56 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS “Both males and females often crow at daybreak and dusk, and in cloudy weather sometimes during the day. The crow is loud and singular, and when there is nothing to interrupt, the sound may be heard for at least a mile. It is something like the words chir-a-pir, chir-a-pir, chir, chir, chirwa, chirwa, but a good deal varied; it is often begun before complete daylight, and in spring, when the birds are numerous, it invariably ushers in the day; in this respect it may rival the domestic cock. When pairing and scattered about, the crow is often kept up for nearly half an hour, first from one quarter, then another; and now and then all seem to join in a chorus. At other times it seldom lasts more than five or ten minutes. “The Cheer Pheasant feeds chiefly on roots—for which it digs holes in the ground —grubs, insects, seeds and berries, and, if near cultivated fields, several kinds of grain form a portion of its diet; it does not eat grass or leaves like the rest of our pheasants. “This bird flies rather heavily, and seldom very far. Like most others, it generally utters a few loud screeches on getting up, and spreads out the beautifully barred feathers of its long tail both when flying and running. It does not perch much on trees, but will occasionally fly up into one close by, when put up by dogs. It roosts on the ground generally, and when congregated together the whole flock huddles up in one spot. At times, however, they will roost in trees and bushes. “The Cheer breeds throughout the lower ranges of the Himalayas, within the limits already indicated, at elevations of from four to seven or eight thousand feet. Their nests may be met with from April to June, most of the eggs, however, being laid during May, early or late in the month, according as the season is a cold or warm one. Personally, I have only taken three nests of this species altogether, so that I cannot generalize safely ; but my impression, derived from this limited experience, is that they always nest near or about the foot of some very precipitous hillside, what the natives call ‘Dang,’ cliffs not absolutely vertical, but still the next thing to it, broken up into ledges and steps, and studded with down-trailing bushes, tufts of grass, and, growing here and there out of some larger cleft or wider ledge, a few stunted trees. “T was once living at a small house behind the ‘Camel’s Back’ at Mussooree, a house which was afterwards converted into a dispensary. About a thousand feet below, and perhaps half a mile from this, is a precipice such as I have described, and at the foot of this, in the midst of a tuft of grass, I found, on the 3rd of May, a nest of the Cheer containing two eggs. It was a mere depression, some fourteen inches in diameter and three inches in depth in the centre, obviously scratched by the birds, and strewed, rather than lined, with a few scraps of grass. Eleven more eggs were laid, one daily, and then the hen began to sit. One egg was addled; the rest were hatched some time in June, but I kept no note of the date. The whole family then took up their residence in the precipice, and there remained until the middle of October, when, the young being nearly full grown, I commenced shooting them, and shot a brace once or twice a week, until there were only two or three young ones left. At 11 a.m. they were always in the upper part of the precipice; my dogs used to be put in, and would rummage along the ledges and turn them out, when, after a few strong strokes outwards from the face of the cliff, they would all but close their wings and come down past me (I always stood in the same place, on a knoll at the foot of the cliff, where I was safe from stones) like lightning. I remember well missing every single shot the first day, but the next time WESTERN HIMALAYAN HOME OF THE CHEER PHEASANT Wuenre the spires of tens of thousands of deodars and spruce climb the mountains, and close around the out-jutting boulders, the hardy Cheer Pheasants spend their days, feeding, sunning themselves, or dusting their plumage at the very brink of the precipices. The open slopes and cliffs are steep, and as I climbed them in search of the Cheer, I had to cling to the shrubs, bright with clusters of scarlet rhododendron blooms, and to the rocks to aid my unsteady, shifting footing. For yards I trampled on edelweiss and myriads of tiny, pale blue forget-me-nots, while on the shady sides of the rocks begonias carpeted the bare surface, their dainty pink blossoms waving on long, curved stalks with every breath of the mountain breeze. Uke: iG ht af 39. lee sie + De. : gnila 08 ‘bed Eo a erie olds aig | aE rE ass, ; Ta s * ES: 3, ad PHOTOGRAVURE PLATE 4] CHEER. PHEASANT. L 12 OR Tia Ly i) + WESTERN HIMALAYAN HOM CHEER PHEASANT BY I got a brace, and after that I never went home without one or two, and, strange to say, my weekly, and sometimes bi-weekly, visits never had the effect of driving them away, and what is more, in October seven years afterward, when I again visited the place, I found my friends in their old locality, and got three brace then and there. “T found another nest with several eggs late in May, in a very similar situation, on Nagtiber, at, I suppose, an elevation of about six thousand feet, and a third, containing four eggs, which I took very early in May, a few miles from Juggutsook, in the upper valley of the Beas. This, too, was similarly situated.” My observations on the preference of individuals of this pheasant for some one locality are, of course, not as valuable as if extended over a longer period of time. The flock which I so unexpectedly flushed from the steep hillside did not visit the same spot again within the succeeding two weeks. In another locality some distance away later in the spring I found Cheer in pairs and beginning to nest, and here they were, of course, exceedingly sedentary, and I could tell within a few dozen yards just where I could find them. Fortunately there were no sportsmen about, nor, judging from the birds, had there been any shooting hereabouts, and I had no difficulty in watching the birds from well-selected points of observation. I spent many hours with a pair of Cheer in full view, but sometimes after a whole afternoon of such observation I would have no fact of interest to record. Much of the time I might as well have watched a rooster and hen from a native barn-yard as far as unusual traits were concerned. I regretted not being earlier on the ground in order to be able to watch the method of courtship employed. In spite of the number of times that this species has bred in captivity, no record has been kept of this interesting performance, and all that has been written of it is a single paragraph by Finn: “ This species is said not to show off, but a vicious male in the Calcutta Zoo used to show off in the common pheasant’s attitude, aslant with spread tail, when trying to attack, and as the show position so commonly seems to be the fighting one too, I expect the species does thus display when courting.” I saw this twice in wild birds, both times as a challenge or pose of defiance, once against a crow and again when a brace of partridges approached closely to the Cheer’s nest. The attack, which was not actually made in either case, was apparently intended to be by means of the spurs. The pheasant did not approach the intruders directly, but with a curious sidling gait which took it in a curve first to one side then to the other. Whichever side was presented was the one upon which the display was made, and which differed in no essential particular, as far as I could see through my field-glasses, from the courtship attitude of the common pheasant. The back was flattened, the wings lowered and raised respectively, and the tail slanted and spread widely and rather suddenly toward the end of the sidling walk. In fact it was the sudden display of this conspicuously marked and coloured organ which dismayed the objects of the Cheer’s agitation, causing the crow to take to flight with a low croak and the partridges to run to cover. The Cheer recovered his equanimity at once, and after standing at attention for a few moments, began to wander off down the ridge without a glance in the direction in which I knew his nest to be. Within a radius of a mile there were three pairs of Cheer, all, I am certain, nesting, although I was able to find the nest of but one. By walking slowly past the VOL. III I 58 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS haunts of each pair, and keeping a very sharp look-out, I was able almost always to see either one or both birds dive suddenly into a tuft of grass, or very rarely to flush from almost under my feet. When the first happened I would walk straight on as if I had not seen the birds, and then, when out of sight, circle around and wriggle my way behind boulders and scrubby trees to some overlooking shelf or mass of vegetation. I found that my umbrella observation tent was most useful with these birds, and after the tent had been in position for only twenty-four hours, I could enter it and count on the birds recovering their confidence within ten or fifteen minutes. But, as I have said, such a splendid chance of observing sedentary pheasants in comparatively open, unobstructed country was robbed of much of its pleasure by the very bourgeois behaviour of the birds. During the time of my stay I saw no other but the three pairs of Cheer near this place, although impeyan, koklass and kaleege were not far away. The covey of eight or ten which I have described is the only flock I observed. Other observers give us four to twelve, or six to twenty individuals as being the number sometimes found together at other times than the breeding season. It was most interesting and significant to see to what an extent both cocks and hens trusted to concealment by squatting rather than running or flying, and I consider it an expressive commentary on the protective value of the plumage coloration of both sexes of this species as compared with that of others such as the impeyan. It is well enough to sit in our study or to take the skin or mounted specimens of these various birds to the woods and fields and prove to our entire satisfaction that the colours of all can be made to harmonize with some one or other situation. But it is proof past convincing when we see an impeyan get up and betake his armour of rainbow metallic tints off, as far away as the bird can detect us ; and again when we almost put our foot upon a cock Cheer as it squats closely amid the stubby grass‘ which so nearly approximates its own yellow buffs and browns—it is proof of the relative protective values which is as good circumstantial evidence as Thoreau’s trout in the milk-pail. If we cannot trust the relative instinctive reactions at the approach of danger which not one, but myriads of lifetimes have stamped upon the behaviour of absolutely wild birds, many of which have never seen man before, we assuredly cannot accept the evidence of artificial manipulation of dead actors and ill-adapted scenery in a land on the opposite side of the globe from where the age-long evolution of the pheasant itself took place. Like many dull, protectively hued birds, these pheasants are ‘most conspicuous when in full flight, apart from their abrupt removal from the assimilating hues of the grasses. The golden and green sheen of the back and rump at the time of their headlong rush sometimes catches the glint of the sun, but the tail flares out into a streaming cross-barred train, and when the bird veers suddenly to clear a low tree or projecting boulder, this fan spreads widely and becomes for a fraction of time a most conspicuous spot of pattern and colour. The flight of the Cheer, while for sheer speed excelled by probably few other birds, yet is heavy and far from actually strong. The bird has marvellous ability to turn and stop itself, but to see it beating uphill or even on a level is to realize that gravity is the prime factor in its wonderful bursts of speed, and that trusting to muscular effort alone, it would be able to cover only very short distances. Unless CHEER PHEASANT 59 turned aside by some barrier, or to escape danger by taking to a tree, I do not suppose the bird would ever willingly fly upward. No matter how far downward the pheasant may go in its single headlong flight, it seems invariably to return on foot, working upward sometimes by an extremely indirect route. More than once I have known one > of the pairs of birds which I had under observation to flush and scale far down into the valley, and some two hours later to return along the mountain-side from the north, a route which must have taken them several hundred yards out of the most direct way back. There appears to be no especial significance in the Cheer’s perching in trees. They will do this when slightly alarmed by the approach of an animal such as a dog, and the fact of having a nest near by seems also to bring about this habit more frequently, probably owing to a disinclination to leave the vicinity until compelled to do so. Many years ago it was stated by some author, and since then has been religiously reiterated in many, many volumes, that the Cheer Pheasant feeds on grubs, insects, seeds and berries, and mever touches grass or leaves. I was able to examine only a few crops of freshly killed birds, but in two I found an abundance of small leaves, partly comminuted. On the whole, however, the statement as regards their diet is correct, and I give the exception only to show how futile it is to formulate hard and fast rules when considering the lives of those very adaptive and individual creatures—the birds of our earth. Cheer are essentially diggers of the soil, like impeyans, only both sexes are more often found together, and except when the hen is actually incubating, they are seen in pairs labouring close together. Like the impeyans, they have favourite digging places, and where grubs or terrestrial tubers are abundant they will often work down a foot or more below the surface of the ground, their bodies almost wholly concealed, their long tails fraying out behind them against the soil and grass, and every second or two the head and neck shooting up for a glance in all directions. Where the ground is grassy and pliable, one may see where these pheasants have fairly ploughed up the turf for many yards, but this is a rare combination of favourable conditions, and usually one finds isolated diggings here and there. among the outjutting boulders and rocky ledges. I once shot a Cheer in the very act of digging, needing it both for the pot and for my investigations, and found eleven wire-worms and a half-dozen fat, white cockchafer grubs which it had but recently unearthed and swallowed. It was not a rare sight, when I was watching a single Cheer cock, to see it pick ants or other small insects from the grass stems and low shrubs, and several times I saw the birds pursue and capture some winged insect, either grasshopper or small moth, which had been disturbed into flight. I could not solve the drinking habits of the birds to my complete satisfaction. On many days I am positive the birds did not, as was the habit of the impeyan and koklass in the vicinity, go down the slope to water in the evening. On only two days did I see both birds of a mated pair wander off, and then I was not able to follow them. Whether their excessive insect diet supplies them with sufficient moisture, or whatever the reason, Cheer certainly do not show the regular migration to and from water once or twice a day which is so marked a feature in the daily life, for example, of some of the kaleege pheasants. * 60 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS Neither did I observe that the birds ceased wholly to feed in the middle of the day, although many of the days which I spent in this region were partly or wholly cloudy, and this may have had something to do with the more or less uninterrupted diurnal activity of the pheasants. When the sun shone with unusual vigour, I have seen a hen Cheer go to a bit of old dug-over ground and give herself up to the pleasure of a thorough dust-bath, working sideways, downward and scooping the dust over her body with one wing, exactly as a barn-yard fowl would do. She never, however, relaxed her vigilance for a moment, and even when apparently wholly absorbed in her wriggling and spasmodic stirring up of the dust, without warning she would rise up and stand with concentrated eyes and ears until the suspicion of danger passed. Not until then would she shake or settle her ruffled plumage and return to her occupation. I have never seen a Cheer take to a tree to roost nor even toa low bush, but have seen a bird squat closely under a tuft of grass in full view of my observation tent, and have been certain, at least until the last tinge of afterglow faded and the night had closed down, that the pheasant was still there. The Cheer does not come into very close touch with any other pheasants, although I have watched a pair of birds in early morning, and have known by sight or hearing that impeyan, tragopan and koklass were within a quarter of a mile. But I have never actually seen the birds together on the same slope. The koklass keep pretty consistently to the forest cover and the impeyans haunt the open spaces several thousand feet higher. In all my many days of intensive study of the Cheer I saw no direct tragedy, though the appearance of any large raptore sent the birds to shelter like a flash. In fact they always discovered the eagle or hawk long before I did, and it was always some time after they had vanished that, through the ventilation wires of my observation tent, I was able to follow their glances upward to the dreaded speck high in the blue sky. Living their lives thus in the open, they were past masters in the matter of discrimination of dangerous from harmless raptores, and, unlike some forest or jungle-haunting pheasants, I have never known them to pay more attention than a quick, careful scrutiny to any vulture which happened to soar suddenly into view. Near the edge of a deodar forest I saw a big langur monkey one day galloping along on three legs, with a large trailing object held close to his body in one of his fore-arms. A glance through the glasses showed this to be a dead, bedraggled Cheer Pheasant. Although my experience and that of others has shown that one may approach very closely to these birds, so complete is their trust in their concealing garb, and Wilson relates the almost incredible fact of being able to pick a Cheer up in the hand, yet I doubt much whether these birds would ever permit themselves to be caught by a langur. This bird was very probably wounded or dead when found by the monkey. There is small doubt, however, that such animals work havoc among eges and chicks, and a black eagle has been shot with the inside of the mouth and throat covered with small pieces of egg-shell, probably of this pheasant. I can say nothing further with certainty of the enemies of the Cheer, but on excellent authority (B. B. Osmoston) I am told that chief among these are the Indian marten, the leopard-cat, the Nepal hawk-eagle, the crestless hawk-eagle and the jungle crow, the latter, of course, taking the eggs and young chicks only. CHEER PHEASANT 61 Wilson has well described the morning and evening call of the Cheer, although when the notes are uttered hastily and run together they strike the ear as a sort of curious tremulous or querulous squeal, very penetrating and characteristic. It is from the sound of the separate notes, which are often given in slow succession or even singly, that the native name of the bird is derived, the hill-tribes calling it Chér, pronounced to rhyme with the French méve. The wild, frantic vocal outburst which is heard when the birds are suddenly flushed cannot better be described than a series of screeching chuckles. Observing the birds, as I did many times, while they were wholly undisturbed, I was able to hear something of their more conversational utterances. The content note of the hen, and occasionally of the male as well, is a low, sleepy waaaaaaak, waak, waak, exactly like the similar utterance of a domestic fowl when she is searching idly for food. When a pair of Cheer were digging side by side they mumbled inarticulately to themselves now and then, while a sharp ¢wk/ uttered almost involuntarily, would bring the other bird at once to full attention. If suspicion of danger then increased, the cock might leap up to the nearest mound of turf and utter the fuk ! tuk ! tuk ! twenty or thirty times, his whole body twitching at each note with the effort of utterance. When approached in captivity the Cheer, if at all pugnacious, will often give voice to a murmuring through almost closed beak, much like the characteristic note of the silver pheasants. Once when a bird dashed past me, sending forth the flood of agonized chuckles, it dipped just over a ridge below me, and almost at once gave vent to a series of plaintive cries, as if it might have been captured and held by some enemy. I hastened after it, but the outcry ceased, and I could find no trace of pheasant, enemy or tragedy, and cannot conceive what caused the sudden change in notes. First-hand accounts of the habits of the Cheer are too rare to omit any of the notes on the nesting. Wilson says that “the female makes her nest in the grass or amongst low bushes and lays from nine to fourteen eggs of a dull white, and rather small for so large a bird. They are hatched about the end of May or beginning of June. Both male and female keep with the young brood and seem very solicitous for their welfare.” I had erected my umbrella tent for two days on a bit of rocky shelf half-way down a steep slope in central Garhwal, and had spent many cramped hours watching a cock Cheer doing little or nothing, but remaining persistently near a patch of young deodars. One afternoon as my eye was glued to one of the loop-hole slits, running idly over the expanse of coarse grass and fern, a hen Cheer suddenly appeared from nowhere, standing and looking about her. Soon she took a step forward, and then turned and walked back beneath the low, drooping branches of the conifer, and shortly reappeared on the other side of the clump of small trees. As both birds then vanished I returned to camp after another hour of vain watching. The next morning neither cock nor hen Cheer was visible, and ensconced within the tent I began searching for signs of them. As my eye rested for a moment on the spot where the hen had appeared, I suddenly detected her through the grass stems squatted close to the ground. I thought she was still alarmed at my entrance into the tent, but as an hour passed and she did not move, while the cock marched past several times, feeding as he went, my suspicions began to be aroused, and I suspected that she was actually sitting upon eggs. About three in the afternoon she rose as before, stood motionless a minute and repeated her exit to the 62 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS very least detail—a single step forward, then a sharp turn beneath the deodar branches and out on the opposite side. When she was well away I crept out and found six eggs, unusually heavily speckled for Cheer eggs. There was no hollow in the ground, but a mere depression in the steep slope of grass stems, with two or three feathers of the bird which had accidentally lodged there. I had to bend the grass and ferns down to photograph the nest, and when I left I replaced them as best I could, This disturbance did not affect the parents, and indeed a few days afterward a terrific hailstorm flattened all the weak turf vegetation, together with my tent. When I left a week later she was sitting as closely as ever on five eggs, as I had taken one. The embryos at this time being of large size, the eggs would hatch in about five days more, the duration of incubation being twenty-eight days. I trust no eye of eagle or mink found her out before that time. The eggs are of a broad oval shape and somewhat glossy. The background varies from pale stone-colour to cream. While some are entirely plain, quite unmarked, others show a few reddish-brown dots at the larger end, and the extreme of marked eggs is where, as in those which I photographed in the nest, the entire shell is sprinkled more or less thickly with fine dots and specks of reddish brown, much as in the eggs of the red-legged partridges Caccabis (now Alectoris). An even heavier-marked specimen is figured by Mitchell. Thus we see that the eggs-of the Cheer are entirely unlike those of the genus Phasianus, with which it has so frequently been associated ; and, on the other - hand, they have none of the warm café au Jait hue of the eges of the impeyan, koklass and kaleege, so that in this character the Cheer stands quite isolated. As Wilson has remarked, the eggs are somewhat small for the size of the bird, but this is only in proportion to the number laid. Compared with the impeyan pheasant, we find the Cheer much the same-sized bird, measuring (exclusive of the tail) about 430 mm., as against the very slightly larger impeyan’s 440. The average size of Cheer eggs is 55 x 39; while those of the impeyan measure 65 x 45. The compensation lies in the fact that the Cheer deposits from nine to fourteen eggs, while the impeyan lays only from two to five or very rarely six. The Cheer will hardly last mueh longer except in the most inaccessible of their haunts. ~ In reserved forests there is a close season from the 1st of March to the r5th of September, but elsewhere it is shot at any season, as it is counted an excellent dish for the table, and its habits of lying low and then trying to escape with a sudden terrific burst of speed appeals as a challenge to the skill of every hunter Sahib. CAPTIVITY The Cheer pheasant has long been a familiar bird in Zoological Gardens and large private collections, but, like the impeyan, it has completely failed to fulfil the great hopes which early breeders entertained of establishing this species in foreign countries in such numbers as the common pheasant. When the Cheer has been turned out with other pheasants in England, Germany and elsewhere, the result has been invariably the same. Unlike the other species which seek cover in woods and undergrowth, this pheasant at once wanders afar in search of open grassland, and seems to lack all homing instincts. It has, however, bred many times in captivity. The Cheer pheasant seems PHOTOGRAVURE 42 NESt AND EGGS OF THE CHEER PHEASANT HicH up among the tumbled mountains a slight depression is scratched among the ferns and spruce needles. It is usually close to the trunk of a tree, or beneath the protecting fronds of a deodar branch, and here the eggs are laid. The little dull-coloured hen sits closely, for the eyes of crows and monkeys are sharp and her plumage is much less conspicuous against the grass than the eggs. el THReATHA AAAHO. Aut 40 4 ; < - | Sire ; F, ar « : 7 . Peary “ ae! ¢ oii gnoms boroisroa. angpb i neh alowed asbosb.. & jo, ehaort. -gititseIo1g: ods: siconad.10...99 exoalnon bas! awors to e9xo: ont. sot vglozolay 2 _eage:orls isda a cathy: denrings PHOTOGRAVURE PLATE 42 CHEER PHEASANT TNGAGS (Oleh Whe, INES a SAIN MI ‘tes 4 Ai CHEER PHEASANT 63 to have been brought to Europe first in the year 1857, and the very following year it laid eggs and reared its young in the London Zoological Gardens. In 1863 it was observed that this bird bred much less freely than the species of Gennaeus, and failed utterly to give promise of reproducing regularly'in confinement, so as to be of use in rearing for shooting in coverts and preserves. In 1876, when a large consignment of pheasants was received from India, this species far outnumbered the others, more than a score being included, and since then it is seldom that the species cannot be obtained from dealers, either wild birds trapped by the hill tribes, and which find their way to the Calcutta and Bombay markets or, more rarely, birds reared in captivity, chiefly in France and Germany. Of seventeen individuals of which records have been kept in the London Zoological Gardens, the average duration of life was a little over two years and a half, while one hardy individual had a lease of life in captivity of six years and seven months. e DETAILED DESCRIPTION ApuLT Mare.—Forehead dark brown, widely margined with grey. Crown with less grey, and a narrow elongated crest springing from the occiput, wholly dark brown with paler grey tips to the feathers. Lower border of bare facial area dark brown, paling slightly on the ear-coverts. Under eyelid covered densely with white feathers, surrounded by a border of black ones. Nape slaty blue; hind neck greyish white, with a dark cross-bar, and a shaft-spot on the concealed portion of the feathers. On the lower neck and mantle the cross-bars increase in number to three or four, the two distal ones visible, and the one nearest the tip acquiring a metallic-green sheen. The terminal fringe is white, but the back- ground changes to a pale buff. This is the type pattern of the entire body plumage. All the feathers of the lower neck, mantle, scapulars, inner wing-coverts, back and rump show the metallic-green subterminal border. On the wing-coverts, however, the second black bar becomes changed into two L-shaped markings, facing the shaft, while posteriorly the feather becomes mottled with buff, grey and dark brown, the only distinct black lines being longitudinal. The inner secondaries have a background of mottled grey and buff, with four or five cross-bars of pale buff, each bordered with black. On the outer secondaries and primaries these bars become solid buff, and very wide and pronounced on the outer web, coalescing along the margin. From the mid-back at the edge of the mantle back to the rump, the feathers are bright golden rufous, with well-developed subterminal band of green, and a few irregular concealed black spots. The fringe of these feathers is quite disintegrated, and of a shining golden rufous. The upper tail-coverts resemble the central rectrices. These latter are quite long and tapering, of a pale buff ground- colour, with about eight wide cross-bars of dark brown, quite densely mottled or vermiculated with grey. On the lateral feathers the background becomes a warmer buff, and the grey mottling is replaced by solid dark chestnut, so extremely developed on the inner web that the black is reduced to a mere anterior and posterior border. The chin, throat and chest are greyish white, indistinctly and concealedly barred on the upper breast, the two anterior bars coming into full view, however, on the remaining 64 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS ventral plumage. The breast and sides remain quite white, the fringe being disintegrated and silvery white, but the central lower breast and belly change to pale buff, and along the central line rather suddenly to brownish black, the buff being reduced to a pair or two of marginal spots. The lower sides, flanks and under tail-coverts are bright rufous, the black reduced to a spot in the former, and entirely absent in the latter. Thus the rufous of the back and rump are continued clear around the extreme posterior end of the body. Mandibles pale yellowish horn colour; iris quite reddish in some individuals, yellowish brown in others; legs and feet pale lead-colour, fleshy tinge on the posterior positions. Bare facial area scarlet at the breeding season, paler, more pinkish at other times. Weight from 2 Ibs. 10 ozs. to almost 4 Ibs. Length, 960 mm.; extent, 760; bill from nostril, 26; wing, 259; tail, 560; tarsus, 73; middle toe and claw, 69. The spurs are stout and straight, and measure about 13 mm. in length. Wilson says that the length of an adult cock may reach 1160 mm. in length, but this is most exceptional, and I have never seen one over a maximum length of 1000 mm. ADULT FEMALE.—Forehead, and a wide border all around bare facial area, whitish, with narrow brown shaft-streaks. Crown and a short occipital crest brownish black, with narrow buff margins. Under eyelid white, bordered with brown featherlets. Chin and throat pure white. Breast, sides and hind neck creamy white, with a large shaft- streak, which basally is split by a whitish shaft-spot. On the mantle the ground-colour has changed to warm chestnut, and so increased that the black is reduced to several spots or successive bars. Very characteristic of the entire upper plumage is the shining white rhachis, which from the hinder mantle posteriorly becomes a shaft-stripe, distally divided into a spot on the back, and merging with the broad, buffy-white tips of the wing-coverts. The shaft-stripe splits the subterminal black marking into two rather symmetrical ocelli. ; On the hinder mantle the rufous gives place to a mottled grey, the former colour persisting only on the concealed portions of the feathers. The back and rump plumage varies greatly from a dark, mottled brown, with several irregular alternate black and buff cross-bars, to a cold, clouded grey with a conspicuous, black-bordered shaft-streak. The secondaries and primaries are dark brown, strongly barred with rufous on the inner, and buffy white on the outer webs, the bars being mottled on the secondaries, but solid on the primaries. The central rectrices present a series of cross-bands, so arranged that it is difficult to say what is the ground-colour. A narrow black cross-bar is followed posteriorly by a wide, clear bar of buffy white. Then large black blotches appear, and quickly become a fine mottling, while the buff changes into a greyish rufous. This in turn is abruptly stopped by the next black bar, and so on. The colour zones of the ventral surface are very distinct. The white chin and throat give place abruptly to the brownish black of the breast with its wide greyish-white fringe. Although most of the breast plumage is rufous basally, this is quite concealed until, abruptly on the lower breast, the black disappears and the entire remaining ventral plumage shows as rich rufous, with a wide pale buff margin. CHEER PHEASANT 65 On the sides the black persists as irregular blotches, and on the posterior sides and thighs it increases as two black bars. Mandibles pale brownish horn, sometimes more or less yellow; facial skin increas- ingly crimson as the breeding season approaches; iris reddish brown; legs and feet pale lead colour. Weight, 2 lbs. to 2 lbs. 10 ozs. Length, 660 mm.; extent of wings, 680; bill from nostril, 24; wing, 230; tail, 383; tarsus, 63; middle toe and claw, 61. Spurs, low blunt scalules. Cuick In Down.—A very young Cheer chick shows quite distinct colour zones separating head and body. The centre of the crown, widening posteriorly and ending on the nape, is dark chocolate or mahogany. Obliquely downward from the posterior corner of the eye, a sharp, narrow, jet-black line extends to the ear-coverts, where it expands, and then, narrowing again, continues back down the side of the neck. Elsewhere the head above is rich creamy buff, paling on the lower face. Abruptly at the lower neck the body-down becomes a grizzled grey, with dark chocolate on shoulder-spots, anterior half of the wing, and entire centre of the back. This latter area is trisected by two lateral lines of pale grey, reaching back almost to the tail- down, which in turn has a warm buffy tinge. The buff of the face pales to a creamy white on the chin and throat, the remainder of the under parts being more of a greyish white. The chick measures: length, 100mm. ; bill from nostril, 6; wing, 30; tarsus, 21; middle toe and claw, 18. JUVENILE PLumMAGE.—Lores, broad superciliary and large sub-ocular patch, chin, throat, and side neck pure white. Crown dark brown, bordered on occiput with buff, the feathers being normal in shape with as yet no hint of a crest. Mantle, scapulars, upper back and tertiaries rufous or greyish buff with a very wide, prominent, tapering, white shaft-stripe, the distal half of this being bordered with black. Wing-coverts without the rufous tinge, with a very narrow shaft-stripe and broad terminal margin of white, and a stain of rust-colour just basal to the latter. Secondaries a finely mottled brownish ; background of the primaries clear blackish brown, all of the flight-feathers with pale buff cross-bars, chiefly on the outer web, very narrow on the secondaries, and much wider on the primaries. Lower back and rump of disintegrated, patternless feathers. Tail mottled like the secondaries, with rather indistinct bars. Lower parts, beginning abruptly at the neck, sandy buff with a wide, white shaft-stripe. On the sides the buff deepens and the stripe widens until the general appearance approximates that of the mantle. On the lower breast and belly the buff disappears, posteriorly giving place altogether to pure white. Bill from nostril, 11 mm.; wing, 131; tarsus, 48; middle toe and claw, 37. First YEAR PLuMAGE, MaLre.—The young birds, after their moult from the juvenile dress, appear in general like the adults, but they are considerably smaller, and on close examination differ in a number of characters. They have considerably less chestnut in the tail-feathers, less visible black on the ventral plumage, and much more yellow buff on those parts, in this respect resembling the female. On the upper surface we find much less metallic green, often confined to the central part of the mantle. VOL. II K 66 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS This green appears first not on the sub-terminal black band, but in irregular spots and lines on the terminal bluish-white mantle fringe. A most interesting character present in every male of this age which I have examined is found upon all the dorsal feathers, from the nuchal plumage to the longest wing-coverts. This is a conspicuous, terminal, central spot of shining golden rufous. The spurs at this age are short, but sharp. Bill from nostril, 25 mm.; wing, 238; tail, 385; tarsus, 66; middle toe and claw, 58. | EARLY HISTORY The Cheer pheasant was first brought to the attention of science by Major-General Hardwicke in the Transactions of the London Linnaean Society for 1827, five years after he described the male blood pheasant. Besides the actual description of the bird, he appends a few facts which are of interest as showing the sum total of our knowledge of the bird at that time, and, indeed, for many years afterwards. ‘The local name of this bird is the Cheer. It is a native of the Almorah hills, on the north-eastern boundary of Hindostan, and is about the size of the impeyan pheasant of Latham. It is remark- ably bold, and fights with great vigour on the least irritation, at the same time raising its feathers and prating with a noise which resembles the word Zuckraa, Tuckvaa, several times repeated. . . . This bird bears the Bengal climate very well, and with little care and trouble might be brought alive to England.” Hardwicke very naturally placed his newly-described pheasant in the all-inclusive Linnaean genus Pasianus, and in this he was followed by many writers until recently, when most authorities have realized that a separate genus is well deserved. SYNONYMY Phastanus wallichii Hardwicke, Tr. Linn. Soc. XV. 1827, p. 166 [Almorah Hill]; Hodgson, in Gray’s Zool. Misc. 1844, p. 85; id. Icon, ined. in Brit. Mus., Gall. pl. 12 bis, nos. 76-78 ; Gray, List of Birds, pt. III. Gall. 1844, p. 24; id. Gen. B., III. 1845, p. 497; id. Cat. Hodgs., ed. I. 1846, p. 124; Hutton, J. As. Soc. Beng. XVII. pt. 2 1848, p. 695; Blyth, Cat. Mus. As. Soc. 1849, p. 245; Adams, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1858, p. 499 [W. Himalayas] ; Mitchell, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1858, p. 545, pl. 147, fig. 1, and pl. 149, fig. 4; Irby, Ibis, 1861, p. 235 [Kumaon]; Jerdon, Birds India, III. 1863, p. 527; Sclater, List of Phas. 1863, p. 5; Gray, List Gallinae Brit. Mus. 1867, p. 28; Adams, Wanderings of Naturalist in India, 1867, p. 91; Tytler, Ibis, 1868, p. 203 [Simla to Mussooree] ; Béavan, Ibis, 1868, p. 380 [Simla]; Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1869, pr 628; Gray, Hand-list Birds, II. 1870, p. 258; Elliot, Monogr. Phas., IL, 1872, pl. X. [text]; Hume, N. & E. Ind. B. 1873, p. 524; Sclater, Proc, Zool. Soc. 1876, p. 464 ; Marshall, B. Nests India 1877, p.59; Hume and Marsh, Game-birds India, I. 1878, p. 169, pl.; Scully, Str. F., VIII. 1879, p. 345 [Nepal]; Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1879, p. 115; Garrod, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1879, p. 364; Marshall, Ibis, 1884, p. 423 [Chamba]; Stolzmann, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1885, p. 431; Stewart, Zoologist (3), X. 1886, p. 440; Oates, ed. Hume’s Nests and Eggs, III. 1890, p. 412; Evans, Ibis, 1891, p. 76; Giinther, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1904, p. 130; Mitchell, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1911, p. 421. Lophophorus wallichit Lesson, Man, d’Orn.,, II. 1828, p. 179; Griffith, ed. Cuv., III. 1820, p. 15; Vigne, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1841, p. 6 [Chamba]. Phastanus staceit Vigors, Phil. Mag. 1831, p. 232; id. Proc. Zool, Soc. 1831, p. 35. ' Catreus wallichit Gould, Cent. B. Himal. 1832, pl. 68 [text]; Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1859, p. 205 ; Gould, B. Asia, VII. 1865, pl. 18; Saint-Hilare, Bull. Soc. d’Acclim., VII. 1870, p. 134; Grant, Cat. Game-birds Brit. Mus.,: XXII. 1893, p. 317; Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, I. 1897, p. 1; Blanford, Fauna Brit. India, Birds, IV. 1808, p. 82 ; Oates, Game-birds India, I. 1898, p. 293; Sharpe, Hand-list Genera and Species Birds, I. 1899, p. 37; Nehrkorn, Kat. der Eiersammlung, 1899, p. 193; Oates, Cat. Eggs Brit. Mus., I. rgor, p. 56; Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 58; Finn, Avicultural Mag. (3), I. rozO0, p. 129; Finn, Game-birds India and Asia, I9II, p. 51; Heinroth, Jour. fiir Orn. Tort, p. 355; Baker, Jour. Bombay Nat. His. Soc, XXVI. 1918, p. I. HASIANUS ee ee Oe ee fae i paar § Mileage PHASIANUS TRUE PHEASANTS Family PHASIANIDAE Subfamily PHASIANINAE Genus PHASIANUS Tuts is the group of so-called True Pheasants, the group which includes the bird known almost everywhere as the Common or English Pheasant. Some of the members of this genus are among the most familiar of the birds comprised in this monograph, while others we know only from a single individual, purchased in a market in some isolated Turkestan village and deposited in a far-distant Russian museum. Their habits are much alike, although they are widely distributed, and in voice, modes of life, courtship, eggs and development of plumage there is very little difference between colchicus, which ranges the Caucasus along the eastern shores of the Black Sea, and versicolor, the sound of whose challenge mingles with the boom of the Pacific breakers, pounding on the Japanese coast, fifty-five hundred miles to the eastward. In order to treat the group clearly I have drawn a sharp line of demarcation between Phasianus as they exist in their real zone of distribution, and the forms which have been crossed indiscriminately and acclimatized in all parts of the world. At least thirty-five forms of these pheasants have been described, and ranked and re-ranked according to the personal bias of various authors. Some give to each a binomial name and full specific rank; at the other extreme we find colchicus called a species, and all the rest subspecies or geographical races of this. Until the vast wilderness stretching from the Caucasus eastward through Turkestan, Mongolia, Central China and Manchuria is zoologically better known, we can only sum up our present knowledge and place our construction on the members of the group accordingly. In the evolution of these birds it appears that mutation has played little part, and most of the forms actually grade into one another, and in their extremes are separated only by slight differences of colour and pattern. This last is true even of the Formosan bird, but that of Japan has departed more widely from the general type of mainland pheasant. There is a good deal of individual variation, especially in the more widely distributed forms, as those of Eastern China, and this necessitates the changing of the species status in this genus. 69 70 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS The form of the birds is much the ‘same in all, and the sexes are very unlike. The chief characters of the males are brilliant metallic colouring, coppers, greens and purples, a bare, red facial area, feathery ear-tufts rising from the sides of the crown, a long, tapering tail, and the lower back and rump with disintegrated fringes of such length that these parts appear hairy, without cohesive webs. Spurs are present. The females are dull in hue, various browns and buffs, marked with darker tints. - There are eighteen tail-feathers, so graduated that the inner pair is usually three or even four times the length of the outer ones. The Ist primary is about equal to the 8th and considerably longer than the roth. The genus has usually been considered to include more than the typical birds I have described. Indeed, Linnaeus made it equal almost to the entire family. Authors have gradually shorn it, first of one, then another, well-marked group. Consistently applying my criterion of genera—that of geographic non-overlapping— I have removed the genera Syvmaticus and Calophasis, including the Reeves, Copper, Elliot and Bar-tailed birds, from Pasianus, and thereby cleared the situation of the difficult condition of several species of the same genus found in the same locality. As I have said elsewhere, this is not put forth as any widespread, fundamental law, but, like my subfamily classification by tail moult, it appears to apply logically to the group of birds under consideration. Phastanus is thus left as an exceedingly homogeneous group, with the loose-fringed, hair-like feathers of the lower back and rump as an important distinguishing character. Correlated with this simplicity of structure we find a wider distribution than exists in any other phasianine genus. I have devoted much time to the plan of classification of this genus, and have successively put myself in the frame of mind of the “lumper” and the “splitter” of taxonomic forms. Besides careful comparison of the numerous types of Phasianus in my own and museum collections, and study of their environment, distribution and barriers, the facts resulting from two very different lines of experience have done much in compelling my ultimate decision. First, the results of a single day’s shooting in various parts of China, often resulting in the securing of several birds from a single covey. Out of four brace of pheasants thus killed on the middle Yangtse, well within a region of ring-necked birds, were individuals with a broad white neck ring, a narrow interrupted ring, and a third showing a few irregular white feathers on the right side. The coloration of the wing-coverts was correlated with the ring or ringless condition, being much whiter in the first-mentioned case. A variation in rump colouring in another bird would have been of full subspecific value if it had been killed in an isolated region, unassociated with its fellows. These birds were fully adult and in freshly moulted plumage. Yet within the space of two rice-fields of moderate size, and in a single morning, I had shot three recognizable forms or “subspecies,” and two undescribed ones. Many correspondents have told of similar experiences. The second array of facts is derived from the conditions found among semi-wild hybrids introduced into foreign countries. One example, out of many, must suffice. At Tring, England, Lord Rothschild turned down pheasants for shooting with varying amounts of colchicus, torguatus, and even versicolor blood. Later a strain of pallasé blood was introduced, and from this mélange de sang there arose pheasants which were JO[ODISIOA * snyenbioy “f IModIey si ye 1yooquesey HY a Iseyyed i % SNUBSOWIO] SNoIYyo[OO snuBiseyg ‘quamysygn7sz jp2yYydDsBoa9g s,psojunzg oObl 74 snye[[oo0p TI 0 sueseja # 78 GES ones . ; ‘Ol Elan: WyesuejaA GI ‘0z ‘> ~~ sisuenayosyes a i ‘p| Ys SISUDUUIZB] SNOIYO]OO snueiseyd “¢| SENVsVelhied “Hide “See AO 900! uoIsay NOILNGIYLSIG AHL ONIMOHS meus af os snoljosuoul UG ae snolueyseoiny -° sejawosAayo i s myoueiq ‘s . 908 ‘Zl tAupnuez a tl sijediourad i = Ol 6 8 snolueysjedez snolyojoo snuviseyg ° snoisued He M4 SISUBYDSI[BY | * SI[BUOIJ}US}d9s ey i t Ll SNOIYO[OD Snodiyojoo snuviseyd uoIgey uolsayY HNO TNS dVW “S49 Ysi/ 9nd K942YUM PY H 509 ) i NV IO yOIMuaasg JO YSEJ {OF "le, ee —YOLVNOT >"\WINISSASY \ = D saNWIsI OMA = ANIddtihd “4 nf ae J EUPIA “NFIIO ; 02 = peste ae DLAL IC A gsowss ine cle | Oba uded a ree en ES S99UDD | fO 2/701] HLlLLON TIX dVW sek 7S GE MOTTIA .. ee s os eeyecemaNe) ’ at : i . £ VISYad SOs pepyseg +4 HSVHTVG JNV7 TRUE PHEASANTS "I absolutely indistinguishable from the wild form known as satscheuensts. Now colchicus hails originally from the region between the Black and the Caspian Seas; ¢orguatus is a native of extreme south-eastern China, versicolor inhabits Japan, and patllast dwells in northern and central Manchuria. From these extreme east, west and northern types the farthest removed, living in the very heart of Central China is sa¢cheuensis. Q.E.D. After taking into consideration scores of facts like those I have detailed, I have, without hesitation, arrived at the conclusion already suggested by Lord Rothschild; and in still greater detail by Dr. Ernst Hartert (‘ Novitates Zoologicae,” XXIV, 1917, p. 449). This is to accept the name bestowed by Linnaeus, Phasianus colchicus, and to consider every one of the continental forms of Phastanus as subspecies of a single species. I even include the bird of Formosa, owing to the fact of its variability, as I have seen individuals taken on that island which differed very appreciably from one another. P. versicolor, in Japan, without question stands the test of a good species, both on account of its radical difference in pattern and colour, and because of its remarkable lack of individual variation. I could very easily add a dozen new names to the thirty odd which have been proposed. It would seem, indeed, more logical to call these forms variations or geographic races, while in some cases they are most certainly nothing more than hybrids. But in the interest of simplicity and uniformity I see no need of indicating them as other than subspecies. The most important thing in a case such as this, is to realize that the name colchicus colchicus, as applied to the most western Caspian bird, indicates only the adoption of the priority term given by Linnaeus, and means nothing whatsoever in regard to ancestry or typical characters. P. colchicus hagenbeckt, of doubtful distribution, deep in the heart of northern Mongolia, may just as well represent the original centre of evolution of the genus, while colchicus elegans, far south within Burmese boundaries, may, for aught we know, most nearly typify ancestral colouring and pattern. A given name, like the disappearance of the sun beneath the horizon, may result in an absolutely false habit of thought. The distribution of the wild members of this group extends quite across the continent of Asia at its widest part, from the Sea of Azof and the Black Sea on the west, to the shores of the Japan Sea, almost five thousand miles distant. In Manchuria pheasants reach at least as far as 48° N. Lat., while three or four forms extend southward across the Tropic of Cancer. Throughout much of this area the birds have spread into every available valley or along the mountain slopes, sweeping through passes and adapting themselves to semi- arid deserts. They are at home among the bleak boulders and bitter winds of Mongolia and Turkestan, the temperate uplands of Burma, and the flat rice-fields of Eastern China. In some districts they are very rare, a single pair of birds seeming to have whole mountain-sides to themselves, while in the Yangtse valley five hundred pheasants may sometimes be seen in the course of a day’s ride. They are essentially gregarious, and prefer to feed and roost in company. The broken crow of the cock pheasant is common to every continent, and whether ringing out among the bamboos of Yunnan, the oaks of English uplands, or the maple groves of American countrysides—it is identical and unmistakable. 72 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS The flight is weaker than in many other pheasants, and slower than the great Reeves. Pheasants feed on a host of vegetable and animal substances, grain and insects forming the two chief staples. They roost by preference on the ground, but occasionally an excess of terrestrial dangers compels them to take to trees. The difference in coloration between the sexes is pronounced, the female being adapted for concealment while incubating, although the cock knows well how to hide himself in even a small tuft of grass. Courtship is lateral and persistent, but the birds have short tempers, and rough tactics sometimes supplant continued effort at display. The cocks may fight fiercely, but are not as pugnacious as some other forms. The eggs are the smallest of all the pheasants, and vary from pear-shape to a rather broad oval, with a smooth and glossy surface, which is quite unmarked. Usually they are olive brown, but they vary from greenish white and pale stone colour to brownish cream or greenish blue. They measure 41 to 47 mm. in length, and 33 to 36 in width. The chicks are pale buff, with black lines high over the eye, and two on the crown, filled in with dark seal brown, forming an arrow mark or long triangle, the tip ending at the base of the beak. The nape usually has several irregular markings, and two dark lines which meet on the hind neck, extending thence as a single, broad, blackish-brown band down to the rump. There is a small triangular ear-spot, and a dark line down in front of the wing; a large seal-brown dorsal wing, or shoulder-spot, and an L-shaped mark back of the wings, paralleling the dorsal mid-band. The tail down is pale chestnut, and the under parts are pale buffy white. The young birds acquire the adult dress before the first winter. Next to the domestic fowl, descendants of the red junglefowl, the birds of this genus are of the greatest importance to mankind. They are notable as surpassingly beautiful inmates of aviaries, as affording the best of sport to hunters all over the world, as invaluable agents in preserving the balance of nature in replacing indigenous game-birds, and finally as articles of food, both fresh and conveyed, frozen in cold storage, to the most distant parts of the earth. PHASIANUS Type Phasianus, Linné, Syst. Nat., I. 1766, p. 270 . ; 4 ; : i : . PL. colchicus The forms of Phastanus which I recognize are as follows: the asterisk indicating those represented by coloured plates. Phasianus * colchicus colchicus Linné, colchicus septentrionalis Lorenz. colchicus talischensis Lorenz. colchicus persicus Sewertzow. * colchicus princtpalis Sclater. colchicus zarudnyt Buturlin. colchicus zerafshanicus Tarnovski. colchicus bianchi Buturlin. colchicus chrysomelas Sewertzow. colchicus turcestanicus Lorenz. * colchicus mongolicus Brandt. colchicus shaw? Elliot. * colchicus tarimensis Pleske. colchicus satscheuensis Pleske. colchicus vlangaliz Przewalski. *® colchicus straucht Przewalski. colchicus elegans Elliot. * colchicus decollatus Swinhoe. TRUE PHEASANTS 73 » Phastanus * colchicus formosanus Elliot. * colchicus pallast Rothschild. * colchicus hagenbeckt Rothschild. colchicus karpow? Buturlin. colchicus torquatus. Gmelin. versicolor Vieillot. * * KEY TO THE ADULT MALES OF PHASIANUS (Adapted from Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, pp. 378-385) I. Under parts not wholly metallic green. 4 . Phastanus colchicus. a Lower back, rump, and upper tail- cone oF a nee: ks maroon, or rusty-orange general colour, sometimes glossed with oily green ; black bars on the tail generally narrow. a Wing-coverts sandy brown or sandy rufous. a’ Margins of the feathers of rump and upper tail-coverts coppery maroon ; chest feathers margined with black. a Middle of breast and sides of belly dark purplish green; centre of belly and under tail-coverts darker, blackish brown; chest and | breast-feathers broadly tipped with black. a General colour darker, more intense coppery red; black mark- ings of mantle, chest and flanks glossed with greenish blue or ee asthe sidesofneck . : ; . colchicus. &* General colour paler, more golden orange ; Bik Hee of mantle, chest and flanks glossed with green; sides of neck with hardly any purple-blue gloss : . septentrionals. 68 Middle of breast and sides of belly purplish red- wee ceutie of belly and under tail-coverts lighter, more rusty ‘pears black margins of chest- and breast-feathers narrow and Biosed with dark blue . ; : . talischensts. 6” Margins of the feathers af rump Me Soper one ee green and buff; chest-feathers not margined with black : : : . larimensis. a Wigneccovene white, yellowish white, or silver grey. c’ Middle of breast and sides of belly dark green; centre of belly brownish black. c8 Throat coppery maroon; a white collar. c+ White collar, wide and complete or nearly complete in front; maroon colour of the throat divided from the cheeks by a streak of bluish green; crown, nape, and hind-neck with prevailing green gloss; forehead, sides of neck, and tips of throat-feathers with prevailing greenish-blue gloss; chest and mantle with prevailing bluish and purple gloss; middle of breast green; black mage of flanks purplish and greenish blue : : . turcestanicus. a* White collar narrower aaa more faeearptedt in ureter only the very tips of the maroon feathers bordering the Shocks below with light greenish ; prevailing metallic gloss is purple and bronze on the crown, nape and hind-neck, dark yellowish green on forehead, bronzy green on sides of neck and on tips of throat-feathers, as also on chest, mantle and middle of breast ; black markings of flanks glossed with green. . mongolicus. d@> Throat dark green; no white collar or only slight traces of it. e Flank feathers narrowly tipped, those of the chest, breast and upper back very narrowly edged with black, having a purplish-green gloss; rump-feathers with a subterminal spot of green on each side of the shaft; black tail-bars much broader, wing-coverts somewhat eee . shawe, j* Flank-feathers broadly tipped, those of the chest, ‘ata: and upper back very broadly edged with black, having a rich green gloss; rump feathers with a triangular green spot at the end of the shafts; black tail-bars much narrower; wing- coverts clearer white. VOL. III L 74 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS a Chest and breast considerably lighter, as the coppery-red subterminal part of the feathers is wider and the dark green margins are much narrower 6° Chest and breast considerably darker, as in conpeny -red subterminal part of the feathers is narrower and the dark green margins are much broader ad” Middle of breast and sides of belly purplish aaa ted e? Chest and upper breast-feathers with narrow blackish-blue edges ; centre of belly darker brownish ; more dark coppery red 7® Only on the sides of chest and breast are the feathers more or less edged with black; centre of belly light chestnut red ; rump more golden or orange red. White collar incomplete in front and extremely narrow, but quite recognisable ; chest- and breast-feathers very narrowly (about ;-inch broad) tipped with somewhat light purplish red bronze and often with a narrow blackish-blue apical shaft-streak ; scapulars with little of a blackish-blue apical spot, but without or nearly without black ea flanks spotted with black and purplish blue h* Collar extremely narrow and broadly interrupted in front str behind ; chest- and breast-feathers widely (about }-inch broad) Boeee with somewhat dark purplish-red bronze with faint greenish gloss, and on the sides of these parts margined with blackish green; scapulars tipped with blackish-green spots, but with no or hardly any black margins; flanks spotted with blackish green . Collar absent or only some white spots, as eee: * it, ne chest- and breast-feathers widely (about 4-inch broad) tipped with somewhat light purplish-red bronze, without greenish gloss and black apical shaft-streaks ; ee ae Be oe and widely tipped with blackish blue . b Lower back, rump and upper tail-coverts of a light and more or jess deni ievendeebine greenish- or yellowish-grey, or olive-greenish colour ; a rusty orange patch on each side of the rump; black tail-bars generally broad. c’ No white collar or only slight traces of it. e’’ Dark green of the neck extending to the middle of chest and breast. j*® Flanks golden buff; mantle bright sandy red; scapulars bright sandy red or light brownish maroon with lighter edges, but not freckled with whitish or blackish in the centres k® Flanks coppery maroon; mantle maroon, scapulars bright maroon with paler tips and Bleek and buff centres f” Dark green of the neck banded in front by the golden vellow, fey or coppery red of the chest. 23 Chest- and breast-feathers broadly margined with black, this black having a dark green gloss; middle of breast and sides of a slightly glossed with purplish green ; flanks buff : m® Chest- and breast-feathers ee margined with black ; seks darker h . d"’ White collar present, but narrow, and see ey or neue sie rupted in front. g Chest- and breast-feathers broadly margined with blackish green ; general colour very pale. nz® Scapulars margined with sandy brown; general colour of mantle and flanks yellowish buff; chest glossed with pink; rump mostly grey; superciliaries completely or nearly wanting o® Scapulars margined with red maroon; general colour of mantle and flanks very pale primrose; chest slightly glossed with pink; rump more greenish; white superciliaries better marked . kh Chest- and breast-feathers not margined or very narrowly margined with blackish blue; general colour bright . ; : ‘ e’ White collar complete and very broad, even in front. oe oft 3} 74 chrysomelas. bianchii. persicus, Zerafshanicus, sarudnyt. principalis, vlangalit. elegans. decollatus. straucht, saischeuensts. . formosanus. torquatus. TRUE, PHEASANTS 7” Black patch under the ear with a white spot; superciliaries white, broad and nearly meeting in front; general colour of mantle and flanks very pale; scapular margins maroon; chest-feathers with narrow, if any, blackish-blue margins ; front and sides of the neck more purplish blue than green : : j’ Black patch under the ear with no white spot. ~® General colour exceedingly pale; mantle and flanks straw yellow ; scapular margins rufous buff; crown more yellowish olive ; superciliaries snow white and very broad; front and sides of the neck more greenish ; wing-coverts bluish grey ; rump more mottled . ; Arie oe : : ; ; : : g® General colour very dark; mantle and flanks intense golden orange; scapular margins dark maroon or chocolate rufous ; crown more rusty brown, superciliaries narrower and partly chestnut-stained ; front and sides of neck more purplish blue ; wing-coverts sandy or creamy grey; rump not much mottled . II. Under parts wholly metallic green pallast. hagenbecke. karpowt. Phastanus versicolor. 75 CAUCASIAN PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus Tuts pheasant has been separated into three more or less distinct subspecific forms, septentrionalis, colchicus and talischensis. All of these inhabit the Caucasian region between the Black and Caspian Seas, extending into Russia on the north as far as Astrakhan, and into northern Persia on the south. One or more of these were the original components of the so-called common or English pheasant, and when in one of these hybrids an excess of colchicus blood has restricted or entirely supplanted the white torguatus collar, and the bird in general resembles the present form, it is usually called the Black-necked Pheasant. NAMES.—Generic: Phasianus, Greek, ¢actaves, a pheasant, the Phasian bird, from Phasis, @aous, a river in Colchis, near the mouth of which these birds are said to have been numerous. Specific: colchtcus, from the region Colchis, now Mingrelia, in western Trans-Caucasia. English: Caucasian or Black-necked Pheasant. French: Faisan de Colchide. German: Jagdfasan. BRIEF DESCRIPTION.—MALE: Centre of the crown bronze green; rest of the head dark green; neck purple; mantle, breast and flanks coppery orange, margined narrowly on the upper plumage and more broadly on the lower with black, glossed with purple, green blue or violet; upper back and scapulars basally with con- centric lines of black and buff, widely fringed with purplish lake; lower back, rump and upper tail-coverts red maroon, glossed with purplish lake ; wing-coverts sandy brown; mid-breast and sides of abdomen dark purplish green ; mid-abdomen dark brown mixed with rufous; tail-feathers olive down the centre, with narrow, wide-set black bars, and widely fringed on each margin with rufous, glossed with purplish lake. Female: General colour sandy brown barred with black; back and sides of neck pinkish with metallic purple or green margins; mantle, sides of breast and flanks chestnut with black centres and pinkish-grey margins; an elongate patch of white, black-tipped feathers below the eyes ; tail reddish brown down the middle, shading laterally into sandy olive, with wide irregular bars of black and buff. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION Considering for a moment the Caucasian forms of colchicus as a single group, Dr. Radde has presented us with the most exact information. In the entire Caucasus it is only rarely that these pheasants are found at an altitude higher than twenty-five hundred feet. A number of exceptions have been noted, especially in regard to the breeding haunts, as it is the rule for these birds to leave the steppes in the spring and to ascend the mountains during the warm season of the year. The general rule regard- ing elevation is confirmed by the fact that the western limit of distribution, on the plains of Suram, is at a mean elevation of twenty-two hundred feet. Above the ravine of Borshon at Azkur and Achalzick, pheasants have never been seen. The neighbourhood of Nuchas and Schemacha, the plains bounded by the Alasan and the Kura, and many other places at corresponding elevations, mark the upper limits of distribution of this bird. In the lowlands of Lienkora the range of the pheasants is decided rather by the 76 PHOTOGRAVURE 43 CriGinAl, Went Ob tik ENGLISH PHEASANT, LOWER VALLEY OF THE Sate DUD beIWEeEN DEE CASPIAN AND THE BLACK SEAS Tuts particular spot is inhabited by the Talisch Caucasian Pheasant, Phascanus colchicus talischensis Lorenz, one of the three closely related forms living in the region between these two great inland seas. It was from this area that the Romans brought the first birds to Britain, The land is not fertile and is broken up by rivers, small during the seasons of dryness, but swelling into great torrents in the rains. The people are little changed from the times of old when the waves of emigrants swept first in one direction, then in another, and left this hinterland of Asia, the northernmost edge of Persia, wild and semi-civilized. Here the pheasants still lay their eggs and rear their broods, just as their transported fellows do in the coverts of England and America. AHP AO: VaR tA aawos ; TU2aHT HeLIona aH “Bare AAT HHT ah GaeTeAS aHE AACHTIS cruelty a suteioai ansenod aa. teil oot d Lae bas linet 3 ion, Bt Biel od” hic tsa ara TIDiz « ‘ Sen kata dud ack to. enoesoe. ate tet oat: ono ni aa sgowe nic: % eovaw orld sca blo Yo eomis wie sort boyasilo ol mS oe Dliw r sical ‘to. abe, Hepminialas6f on : = re —. metnta she wit< } PHOTOGRAVURE PLATE 43. - ED RUD, BETWEEN THE CASPIAN AND THE BLACK SEAS. ORIGINAL HOME OF THE BLACK-NECKED OR ENGLISH PHEASANT. VWALTENO OR™ TEE SAL CAUCASIAN PHEASANT esa occurrence of dense deciduous forests, into which they never penetrate, than by the rather slight changes in altitude. The same holds true of the Rion district, the real native home of the bird, and to which it owes its name. Here in natural clearings where the undergrowth is composed of dense thickets of smilax and clematis the pheasant finds a congenial home. The unbroken forests, which are not confined to the mountain slopes, are avoided. In lower reaches of the Terek, Sulak and Kuban Rivers, as well as along the littoral zone of the Caspian Sea, the pheasant becomes a dweller among reeds. Under similar conditions it still lingers in the lower half of Astrakhan, and has formerly been taken several times to the north of the city itself. The pheasant does not ascend any of the more elevated longitudinal valleys, most of which are blocked by steep limestone hills, and even the upper Rion valley, with many suitable places less than twenty-four hundred feet elevation, is wholly deserted by these birds. In the southerly cross-valleys of the great Caucasus the bird is rare above Gori in the Liachwa Plains, but abundant in the lower part of the Ksanka. A half-century ago it was fairly common on the Suram Plains, in the vicinity of the many swift-flowing brooks, but since then it has been completely exterminated. The same holds true for the Rion and Quirila districts above Kutais. Formerly they were so abundant in the Scharopan region that they were killed by the natives with sticks; now they have vanished. In the valley of the Aragwa they occur on the estate of Prince Muchrausky, where they are strictly protected; along the lower Jaral they do not quite extend to the plains of Tionet; they follow the course of the Alsanan almost to its origin at the Narrow Ravine. The Tiflis bazaar-pheasants come chiefly from Kacheten and Elizabethpol. Down the Kura they are found wherever jungle-like vegetation and Tartar gardens thrive near water, but they prefer the islets in the river. In ascending the mountains, going from Achsu to Schemacha, pheasants are constantly encountered associated with red-legged partridges. These heights are partly covered with brushwood, partly under cultivation and support a luxuriant flora. To the south the land has been cleared, and this, together with the water in the adjoining valleys, affords a very favourable home for the pheasants. In the Araxes Valley they are first encountered eastward of the gap in the Karabagher Mountains. ‘There is no record of them higher up than this. In these regions they avoid the arid steppes, the waterless stretches of desert and the dense forests. Their distribution on the west bank of the Caspian and in the Araxes Valley is sporadic, and where found they are found only at the edges of the sterile steppes, among the reeds in the proximity of the sluggish, half-stagnant streams. While they occur in greater or less abundance in the lowlands of Talysch, and to the northward over Kumbaschinsk and the southerly border of Mugan, they are entirely absent toward the north in the bare, hot and partly waterless littoral zone of the Caspian shore. They are also absent from the vicinity of Baku and the peninsula of Apscheron. At Lenkoran the hunters have almost exterminated the birds, which are valued up to one ruble. In the vicinity of Kubas and Derbent the pheasant is abundant, and in the lowlands of the Sulak and the Terek, where again it is an inhabitant of extensive patches of reeds, it is common. On the island of Sari, south of Kysyl-agatsch-Busen, in the Caspian, pheasants were introduced many years ago by 78 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS a Russian commander, and thrived well, Later they were almost shot off, then protection was accorded them and at present they are abundant again. On the north side of the Great Caucasus, in the neighbourhood of the two chief river-beds, the Terek and the Kuban, pheasants are common in many places. The line from the Kuma to the sea forms the limit of northerly distribution ; appearing first at the village of Obilnoe, close to Georgiewsk, it becomes common at Soldato- Alexandrowsk, and so on to the shore of the Caspian. Pallas, who knew the bird not only by the Russian name of Fasan, but also as Madsharski Petuch, that is, the Cock of Madshar, knew it from that locality. This place, on the left bank of the Kuma, is at present an insignificant settlement. In the time of the Empress Katharin, it was customary to send wine from this region to the court, and as this wine closely resembled Burgundy, the place was called Burgony-Madshari. To the westward, pheasants are sporadically common in the lower basin of the Kuban and along the eastern shore of the Black Sea. On the preserves of the Grand- Duke Michail Nicolajewitsch the birds were protected for several years, until their excessive numbers became a constant source of destruction to the crops of grain. Farther south, along the coast, they become scarcer, and seem to be wholly absent from the littoral stretch extending from Adler to the district of Suchum. Pheasants have been reported from the Kuban delta and near Temrjuk. GENERAL ACCOUNT Although man is the pheasant’s greatest enemy at present, yet there are few moments of the day or night when the birds are quite safe. Even in the darkness, so Radde tells us, when they are roosting in the thin-foliaged trees, the great Caucasian horned owl takes heavy toll of them. During feeding hours the black fox and the jackal stalk the birds among the grass or reeds, and in the air their two chief enemies are the peregrine falcon and the goshawk. The latter is the only bird used in falconry in Trans-Caucasia. When loosed these hawks rarely strike the pheasants while they are in flight, but pursue them until from fear they alight and hide. The goshawk then perches upon some adjacent bush or tree until the hunter comes up with his dog, which soon discovers the hidden bird. Should the pheasant be an old bird it will probably flush a second time, but young birds so dread the waiting bird of prey that they may often be caught in the hand. Sometimes a wild hawk will keep watch on the crouching pheasant and sail about overhead, screaming incessantly ; a telltale for the hunter, who, with the aid of his pointer, flushes the bird and easily secures it. The greatest feral enemy of the Caucasian Pheasant is the jungle-cat, which is found in every bit of uncut forest, and whose chief food indeed seems to be these birds. Guns, falconry and the jungle-cat have greatly reduced the number of pheasants, or actually exterminated them throughout large tracts of country. In Tiflis the market price of a brace of birds has already advanced to over two rubles (one dollar), whereas formerly they would have brought only twenty kopeks (ten cents). The systematic hunting in winter on the steppes of the mid-courses of the Terek and the Kuban will undoubtedly soon reduce the bird to the verge of extermination, especially as an unusually severe winter works terrible havoc among them. At Christmas time there regularly arrived, at Tiflis in former times, great German wagons laden down with CAUCASIAN PHEASANT _ 79 pheasants and partridges secured by pot-hunters. These were sent northward to Russia by railroad. As many as eighteen eggs are known to have been deposited by a single wild hen pheasant, but in spite even of the usual large number laid, eight to twelve, there is no doubt but that the bird will become extinct throughout this entire region before many years have passed. Of all berries the so-called Oblepicha of the Russians, which are of such importance in the native households, are the favourites of the pheasants. They also feed largely on blackberries and the allied Rudus fruticosus which grow in the jungle, but the chief article of diet seems to be the green sprouts and soft tips of grasses. When suitable trees are available the pheasants roost high, the cock flying up first and the female following, the trees with the thickest foliage, and preferably those growing in a dense grove, being chosen. They are easily approached when roosting, but one’s face must be hidden as one approaches. These pheasants are both monogamous and polygamous in a wild state, but the latter seems the more usual condition. Two or three hens are frequently seen associated with a single cock pheasant, the same ratio as obtains among the red-legged partridges. At the pairing time the cock is exceedingly stupid. He can be deceived by a common barnyard hen, and can even be caught alive. The hunters of Lenkoran practice the following method: at the mating season in early May a domestic hen is taken out with the hunters, preferably to the edge of a woodland which contains challenging and pairing pheasants. To prevent the poor hen from seeing or attempting to escape, her eyelids are stitched together. She is then placed before a kind of blind, such as the . great trunk of some fallen tree or a dense shrub behind which the man conceals himself. The frightened hen remains sitting until prodded with a stick, when she flaps her wings. The nearest pheasant cock hears this sound and at once approaches, uttering from time to time his sonorous di- or tri-syllabic crow. Again she is made to flutter, and soon the wild cock appears from the neighbouring brush within easy range. The alarm caused by the sound of the gun soon passes, and the experiment may be successfully repeated a short distance away. When, in the spring, the natives desert the lowland valleys for the elevated pastures of the mountains, the pheasants resort to the ash-heaps to enjoy dust baths. At such places wheat is scattered about as an added inducement in order to tempt them to come regularly and in numbers, and on a favourable opportunity a wholesale slaughter may be made with a single discharge of shot. SYNONYMY The Pheasant Albin, Nat. Hist. Birds, I. 1738, p. 14, pls. 25, 26; Selby, Brit. Orn., I. 1833, pt. II. pl. 57. La Faisan Brisson, Orn. I. 1760, p. 262; D'Aubenton, Pl. Ehl. pls. 121, 122; Buffon, Hist. Nat. Ois., II. 1771, p. 328, pl. xi. Phasianus colchicus Linnaeus, Systema Naturae, 1758, p. 158 [habitat] in Africa, Asia; Linnaeus Systema Naturae, 1766, I. p. 271; Gmelin, Nov. Comm. Ac. Petr., 1771, XV. p. 451; Gm. Sys. Nat., 1788, I. pt. II. p. 741 ; Lath., Ind. Orn., II. 1790, p. 629; Bonnat., Tabl. Encycl. Méth., I. 1791, p. 183, pl. 87, fig. 4; Meyer and Wolf, Tasch. der deutsch, Vég., I. 1810, p. 291, pl.; Pall., Zoogr. Rosso-Asiat., II. 1811, p. 83; Temm., Pig. et Gall., II. 1813, 'p. 289 ; Temm., Pig. et Gall., II]. 1815, p. 666; Temm., Man. d’Orn., 1815, p. 282; Vieill., N. Dict. d’Hist. Nat., XI. 1817, p. 29; Steph., in Shaw’s Gen. Zool., XI. 1819, p. 222, pl. 13 (hybrid); Temm., Man. d’Orn., II. 1820, p. 453; Roux, Orn. Prov., 1825, p. 47, pls. 262, 263; Vieill., Faun, Frang., 1828, p. 247, pl. 107, figs. I and 2; Werner, Atl: Ois. d’Eur., Ord. 10, 1828, pls. I. and II.; Cuvier, Reg. Anim., I. 1829, p. 477; Griff., ed. Cuv., III. 1829, p. 22; Less., Traité d’Orn., 1831, p. 495 ; Montagu, Orn. Dict., ed. 2, 1831, p. 367; Ménétr., Cat. Rais., 1832, p. 46 [Caucasus]; Selby, Ill. Brit. Orn., I. 1833, p. 417, pl. LVII.; Naum., Nat. Vog. Deutschl., VI. 1833, p. 432, pl. 162; Schinz, Nat. Abbild. Vég., 1833, p. 249, pl. 95 ; Macgill, Brit. Birds, I. 1837, p. 114; Gould, Birds Europe, 80 . A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS 1837, pl. 247; Bonap., Comp. List, 1838, p. 42, No, 285; Schinz, Europ., Fauna, I. 1840, p. 277; Démid., Voy. Russ. Mérid., III, 1840, p. 217; Keys u Blas., Wirbelth, 1840, p. LXIV; Cresp., Orn. Gard., 1840, p. 321; Yarrell, Brit. Birds, II. 1843, p. 277, woodcut ; Gray, List Birds, pt. III. 1844, Gall. Pe ose Schl ekeyvacrite@ ts: d’Eur., 1844, p. LX XIV.; Miihle., Beitr. Orn. Griechenl., 1844, p. LXXIV.; Brandt, Bull. Acad. St. Péters., IIL, 1844, p. 50 [Caucasus Pr.]; Gray, Gen. Birds, III. 1845, p. 497; Blyth, Cat. Birds Mus. As. Soc., 1849, p. 246; Degl., Orn. Eur., II. 1849, p. 40; Thompson, N. H. Ireland, II. 1850, p. 19; Watters, N.H. B. Ireland, 1853, p. 123; Schinz, Nat. Vég., 1853, p. 148, pl. 71; Brehm, Vogelfang, 1855, p. 265; Lloyd, Field, 9, 1857, p. 143; Tegetmeier, Proc. Zool. Soc, London, 1857, p. 81; Powys, Ibis, 1860, p. 237 [Albania, Salonika] ; Crisp, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1860, p. 258; Hamilton, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1860, p. 373; Sclater, List Phas., 1863, p. 4; Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1863, p. 116; Fitz, Atl. Nat. Vég., 1864, fig. 227; Fillipi, Viagg. Pers., I. 1865, p. 350; More, Ibis 1865, p. 425; Gray, List Gall. Brit. Mus, 1867, p. 26; Dawkins, Ibis, 1869, p. 358; Tyrell, Field, 34, 1869, p. 347; Gould, Birds Asia, VII. 1869, pl. 34; Elliot, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, p. 408; Hine, Field, 36, 1870, p. 141; Hutton, Ibis, 1870, p. 397; Elwes and Buckl., Ibis, 1870, p. 329 [Turkey]; Gray, Hand-list Birds, II. 1870, Paes 4 Gray, Birds West Scotland, 1871, p. 224; Elliot, Mono. Phas., IT. 1872, pl. 2 (text); Saunders, Ibis, 1872, p. 81 [Sicily]; Taylor, Ibis, 1872, p. 231 [Crimea] ; Sewertzow, Bull. Mose., XLVIII. 1875, pt. 3, p. 208; Gulliver, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1875, p. 489; Danford and Brown, Ibis, 1875, p, 418 [Transylvania]; Jesse, Ibis, 1876, p. 382 [Corsica]; Dresser, Birds Europe, VII. 1879, p. 85, pl. 469; Garrod, Proc. Zool. Soc, London, 1879, p. 364; Booth, Rough Notes, II. 1881-7, 3 pp.; Giglioli, Ibis, 1881, p. 206; Seebohm, Ibis, 1882, p. 220 [Astrakhan]; Stokes, Field, 59, 1882, p. 589; Seebohm, Ibis, 1883, p. 27 [Caucasus]; Hearder, Field, 62, 1883, p. 905; Bogdanow, Consp. Av. Ross, I. 1884, p. 19; Radde, Orn. Caucas., 1884, p. 367; Radde, Orn. Caucas., 1885, p. 269 (partim) ; Whitehead, Ibis, 1885, p. 41 [Corsica]; Giglioli, Av. Ital., 1886, p. 334; Tegetmeier, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1886, p. 81 [Transcaucasia]; Schneider, Ornis, 1887, p. 537 [Upper Rhine Valley]; Radde, Ornis, 1887, p. 496 [Caucasus]; Salvad., El. Ucc. Ital., 1887, p. 195; Seebohm, Ibis, 1887, pp. 169, 170, 288; Gurney, Ibis, 1888, p. 227; Lorenz, Jour. fir Orn., 1888, p. 571 [Tiflis, “Typisch”]; Giglioli, Av. Ital. pt. 1, 1889, p. 515; Saund., Ill. Man. Brit. Birds, 1889, p. 485; Radde u. Walt., Ornis, 1889, p. 90 [Transcaucasia]; Dubois, Ornis, 1890, p. 327 [Belgium]; De Ville, Field, 75, 1890, p. 738; Sclater, Ibis, 1890, p. 78; Radde, Ornis, 1890, p. 413; Altum, Jour. fiir. Orn., 1891, p. 130; Evans, Field, 78, 1891, p. 45; Evans, Ibis, 1891, p. 76 [Incubation]; Tegetmeier, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1893, p. 692 [Hybrids with golden and silver pheasants]; Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 320; Lilford, Col. Fig. Brit. Birds, pl. XXXIII. fig.; Tegetmeier, Field, 85, 1895, p. 85 [Samoa]; Tegetmeier, Field, 85, 1895, p. 289; R. W. E,, Field, 85, 1895, p. 885; Boswell-Smith, Field, 86, 1895, p. 518; Newbegin, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1896, p. 292; Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, 1897, Vol. II. p.9; Wilkonsky, Orn. Faun, of Adshoria, Gooria and N.E. Lasistan, 1897, p. 65; Reffitt, Field, 91, 1898, p. 745; Tuck, Field, 92, 1898, p. 227; Tegetmeier, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, X. 1900, p. CVII. [nesting in October]; Oates, Cat. Birds’ Eggs Brit. Mus., I. 1901, p. 57; Lyon, Field, 97, 1901, p. 928; Gurney, Ibis, 1901, p. 396; Dresser, Man, Palae. Birds, II. 1903, p. 658; Meade-Waldo, Avicult. Mag., N.S. I. 1903, p. 325; Buturlin, Ibis, r904, p. 385 [Western Trans- caucasia]; Tegetmeier, Bull. Brit. Orn, Club, XIV. 1904, p. 77 [Egg]; Tegetmeier, Pheasants, 4th ed., 1904, p. 150; Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 36 [Status, hybrid records]; Gunther, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1904, II. pp. 129-30 [Hybrids]; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 385; Collier, Ibis, 904, p. 500; Anwyl, Field, 103, 1904, p. 363; Read, Field, 104, 1904, p. 654; Parrot, Verh. Orn. Ges. Bayern, V., pp. 14-16 [Hybrid with Zetvao tetrax|; Arnold, Countryside, II. 1905, p. 70; Paterson, Countryside, I. 1905, p. 322; Davenport, Field, 106, 1905, p. 655; Bennion, Field, 106, 1905, p. 165; Buturlin, Ibis, 1906, p 409; “Gamekeeper,” Countryside, IV. 1907, p. 356; Pycraft, Brit. Birds, I. 1907, p. 166; Pearson, Brit. Birds, II. 1908, p- 98; Millais, Nat. Hist. Brit. Game-birds, 1909, p. 76; Gray, Bird Notes, Vol. VIII. 1909, pp. 285, 288; Gray, Field, 113, 1909, p. 131; Whittaker, Field, 1909, 113, p. 225; G. L,, Field, 113, 1909, p. 1113; Horsfall, Field, I14, 1909, p. 287; Burney- Brown, Field, 114, 1909, p. 144; Williams, Field, 115, 1910, p. 239; Bucknell, Ibis, I9I0, p. 407; Pethybridge, Irish Nat., 1911, 20, p. 54 [Crop contents]; Marshall, Field, 117, ror, p. 1088; Laubmann, Orn. Jahrb., 22, 1911, p. 60; Hammond-Smith, Proc, Zool. Soc. London, grt, p. 314; Pycraft, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XXVII. IOII, p. 553 Pycraft, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XXIX. 1911, p. 43; Detmers, Jour. fiir. Orn., 59, 1911, p. 499; Hammling, Jour. fiir, Orn., 59, 1911, p. 409; Finn, Game-birds India and As., 1911, p. 58; Bucknell, Ibis, 1911, p. 651; Hammond- Smith, Field, 117, 1911, p. 384; Grimshaw, Scot. Nat., 1912, p. 249; Karrig, Orn. Monats., rg12, p. 182; Zimmer- mann, Orn. Monats., 1912, p. 76; Witherby, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, 1913, 31, p. 40 [Plumage variation]; Bucknell, Ibis, 1913, p. 13 [Introduction into Cyprus]; Thomas, Proc, Zool. Soc. London, 1915, p. 279, fig. 1 [Mendelism in white collar of hybrid with C. torguatus]; Lindquist, Faun. och Flora Uppsala, 12, 1917, pp. 87-8; Heumen, Ardea, Leiden, 7, 1918, pp. 19-59, 147-71 [Stomach contents]; College, Sci. Progr, London, 13, 1918, pp. 264-75 [Economics and preservation]. Common Pheasant Lath., Gen. Syn., II. pt. 2, 1783, p. 712; Lath., Gen. Hist., VIII. 1823, p. 187. Phasianus marginatus Wolf and Meyer, Tasch. Deuts., I. 1810, p. 291, pl. PEATE L EI RION “CAUCASIAN “PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus colchicus Linné Tuis pheasant, living between the Black and the Caspian Seas, is the type of its entire group, and probably the same bird which was brought by the Romans to England, known commonly as the English or Black-necked Pheasant. It has since been introduced into many parts of Europe, Asia and America, and thrives in almost any temperate climate. In many places it has satisfactorily replaced the indigenous game-birds, which have been driven out by advancing civilization. ii S ‘at fi Rive a Tings on te . » 337, weadeut > trap, List Ranks @ , Muble, Reteitien! ‘Grieches.: tgas : i Binds: 21L 1S, Gage Baath, an Birds 3 v.60; Tiviegson, NT. tetand fsa. to% Mya $3, P. 145, ph P45 Srehay, Vogtieng, 1853,-p. 8865 Linyd, Field, Oi $857, potas: sri : fs 1857.8 Sh5- _Enwys, Tia, 2360 ap. 337 (Alsaeia, Salont y Crisp. Proc: Zack Soe Lo ; Pee £ ee Sée. Lond, $80, p. S23 titer, List Pinca 1863, bg S eee Pie: Sé: Landon, cae 5. . Gy FRAY. Nag, NS. 136g, Big. 227 Ftp, Vinge, Perf iS t85%,.p. ; a¢ dase. Maa, F ve 726; Dawkins, This, $850, pease: Senet Field, ee 865, 447; : 4 oe - Bool, Suc; Loaves: Era; | p. 408 5 Hep ats, tSPO, a 4s So p..3s9 [Tua Kak ay; Sarat. . Wide i Sez pi 357; Me mk, ae j drat ahs eke a a eae " some she weap st arto, Bail. ae ceiver Proc Sa75; & Sak MP 2 Bie a a it Spee. i Mettia, Ses Ki : pide, ky re roe 7, Ser pe tae: Seebastisis BRAD Petia 2 a oe + Frarnay, Sis, FREE neo “TM AGADHD WALA buB tial.” Sgt , #863 535 ;.Sannd, “o> Ae is “Bis ee Radde 3) Wate. Orde: F880, ew 4a4 rie csulbetel: Datos, Giris, r890:-p. res mRP Be Ville Picts, 75: ie dde, Otnis, 1890, p. 434; Aum, = a 18g! p. 250; Bysge Fie 28. 3 AS Beans, ibis, casi, p. Fe [tncubation} ¥; ‘Tegetneier, ar | aaa ’ Has sell" le tie x 3, Siling Ci i des - of Te ane ase i? ey Fieid, & na dellgatvots, be laornaon fewenel a id gna rah gasost eh igure sw ii Newbes ip Pe are) ie : “Fee ee sohiaf bis “sich” oqau at ie Pl neal ‘s $2273, PA = bait 5 5 e t, f suns pri (Eggi: Vere ee eet Cue ma nat Ps 19 fe - 364: coe Se ARR. Ws Whittaker, Field, Tge6, Tih ee 205g Ge Dg Prete g 5 ae: Brows, Bisld, £24, f90).po¥eq ; Willieas, Field. is DIG © + Nat. 1pt, 20, p. 34 {Cinp-comtents) Marshall, F = 60; Resa aint sgt aa Pyerait, Gull. Brit: On. Chub, Ate bee. Dam, 4 OUT, p. 409 Fina, Gar a sic! je Pegi Fc th PEATE EF. “LNVSVAHd NVISVONVYO NOId RION CAUCASIAN PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus colchicus Linné NAMES.—Subspecific: colchicus, from the region Colchis, now Mingrelia, in Western Transcaucasia. English: Rion Pheasant. Type.—Locality : “in Africa, Asia.” ~ Describer: Linnaeus. Place of Description: Systema Naturae, 1758, p. 158. Present Location of Type: Unknown. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—The abdomen is blackish brown or dark chocolate, and a blue or violet gloss is dominant on the black markings of the mantle and breast ; the bird on the whole is of a somewhat darker, more coppery red. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION TRANSCAUCASIA, including the basins of the Rion and the Chorokh Rivers and the south-eastern coast of the Black Sea, north to Sukhum-kale, just south of the main east and west chain of the Caucasus Mountains; the bases of the Kura and lower Araxes and their tributaries up to nearly three thousand feet above sea level. It touches the Caspian Sea at the Kizil-Agatch Gulf. SYNONYMY Phastanus colchicus Linnaeus, Systema Natura, 1758, p. 158 (Habitat in Africa, Asia); Linnaeus, Systema Natura, 1766, p. 271; Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus. XXII. 1893, p. 320 (partim, cam subsp: septentrionalis) ; Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, 1897, Vol. II, p. 9 (partim, cum subsp. sepcentrionalis) ; Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, II. 1903, p. 658 (partim, cum subsp. septentrionalzs) ; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 385 (Western Transcaucasia). Phasianus talischensis Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus. XXII. 1893, p. 324 (Alazan River; partim, cum P, talischensis) ; Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, II. 1903, p. 660 (partim). Phasianus colchicus lorenzt Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 386 (Central and Eastern Transcaucasia) ; Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, pp. 584, 586; Zarudny, Journ. fir Orn. 59, 1911, p. 204 (N.W. Persia), Phastanus colchicus colchicus Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p.37 ; Jourdain, Ibis. (9), VI. 1912, p- 327; Hartert, Nov. Zool. XXIV. 1917, p. 449. VOL, III 8I M NORTHERN CAUCASIAN PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus septentrionalis Lorenz NAMES.—Subspecific: septentrionalis, Latin, septentrionalis, northern. English: North Caucasian or Astrakhan Pheasant. TyPE.—Locality: Kuban, Terek. Describer: Th. C. Lorenz, Place of Description: Journal fir Ornithologie, 1888, p. 571. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—Male: Greenish gloss dominant on black markings of mantle and breast ; general colouring paler, more of a golden red. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION Tus is the northernmost of the several co/chicus forms. It inhabits the basins of the Kuma, Terek, Sulak and Kuban Rivers, ranging up to an elevation of two thousand to twenty-five hundred feet, and in the lowlands it extends to the northward along the western shore of the Caspian Sea to Astrakhan ‘at the delta of the Volga, while on the south it reaches almost to the Apsheron Peninsula. In the central part of Northern Caucasia from Stavropol to Georgievsk it has been completely exterminated late in the nineteenth century. SYNONYMY Phasianus colchicus Pallas, Zoogr. II. 1811, p. 83 ; Lorenz, Beitr. Ornith. Nordseite Kankas. 1887, p. 56; Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus. XXII. 1893, p. 320 (partim; cum colchécus); Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, Vol. II. 1897, p. 9 (partim; cum colchicus) ; Dresser, Man. Palae. Birds, II. 1903, p. 658 (partim ; cum colchicus). Phastanus colchicus L., subsp. septentrionalis Lorenz, Jour. fiir Orn. 1888, p. 571 (Kuban, Terek). Phastanus colchicus septentrional’s Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn, Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p- 385 (basins of Kuban, Terek and Kuma) ; Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, pp. 584, 586; Hartert, Nov. Zool. XXIV. IQ17, Pp. 449. 82 TALISCH CAUCASIAN PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus talischensis Lorenz NAMES.—Subspecific: ¢alischensis, after Talisch, the Russian district inhabited by this bird. English: Talisch Pheasant. TvpE.—Locality: Talisch. Describer: Th. C. Lorenz. Place of Description: Journal fiir Ornithologie, 1888, p. 572. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—Middle of breast and sides of abdomen are purplish carmine, and chest and upper breast are narrowly margined with purple ; breast feathers more pointed and their black margins narrower than in the other related forms. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION Tuts is a bird of the lowlands of the south-western shore of the Caspian Sea. Its range includes the Russian district of Talisch and the Persian provinces of Ghilan and most of Mazanderan. On the north the Talisch Pheasant grades into colchicus, while in the south-eastern part of its range it comes very close to the Persian Pheasant (ferszcus). In its subspecific characters it approaches this latter pheasant, but is worthy of a definite place with the red-rumped Caucasian group on account of its consistently sandy-brown wing coverts. Writing of Northern Persia, Buxton tells us that “this race of the pheasant is common both on the northern slopes of the Elburz and low down in the extremely marshy forest close to the Caspian. Ingoldby flushed the bird at Bandar-i-Gaz from small tufts of rice straw in wet paddy-fields in winter, and they are not rare in the dense reed-beds round the Resht lagoon country in which purple herons, gallinules and water rails seem more naturally at home. If one were to judge from the few specimens at Tring and the British Museum, and the three males at my disposal, one would conclude that the white ring so characteristic of some Eastern pheasants was repre- sented solely by an occasional white-tipped feather in some males and not in others, but this is far from being the case. I have seen many scores of specimens in the bazaars of Resht and Enzeli, and a small proportion of them have very nearly complete white rings to their necks, but are in other respects typical Zalyschensis. The throats of these specimens had been cut almost to the point of decapitation, and I preserved no skins. Pheasants are sold for about one tolman, approximately eight shillings, a price sufficient to put every gunner’s hand against them.” SYNONYMY Phastanus colchicus Blanford, East. Persia, II. 1876, p. 272 (Resht, Mazanderan); Radde, Orn. Cauc. 1885, p. 289 (partim) ; Radde and Walt, Ornis, 1889, p. 90 (Talisch). Phasianus persicus Suz., subsp. talischensis Lorenz, Jour. fir Orn, 1888, p. 572 (Talisch). 83 84 Hand-book Game-birds, 1897, Vol. Il. ‘. IAL Dresser, Manual Pane Bits, Ty 1903, Pp. 660 ane 0 60 Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, pp. 585, 586; Witherby, Ibis, 1910, p. 516. ae Phasianus persicus talyschensis Zarudny, Orn. Faun. Transcasp. 1896, Pp. 475 (Sari, Mazanderan). Phasianus colchicus talischensis Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 375 Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p- 386; Hartert, Nov. Zool. XXIV. 1917, p. 449. : det Phasianus talyschensis Zarudny, Jour. fiir Orn. 59, 1911, p. 204 (Southcaspian). ; a Sed = Ly Phasianus colchicus talyschensis, Buxton, Jour. Bombay Nat. His. Soc. XXVII. 1921, P- 881. SE PERSIAN PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus persicus Sewertzow NAMES,—Subspecific : perszcus, Latin, persicus, Persian. English: Persian Pheasant. Type.—Locality: Southern shore of Caspian Sea. Describer: Sewertzow. Place of Description: Bull. Soc, Nat. Mosc. XLVIII. 1874 (but published in 1875), p. 208. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—Male: Differs from the Caucasian Pheasants in having the lesser and median wing-coverts buffy white ; the back, flanks and breast have a much stronger golden-yellow ground colour; the abdomen is edged with purplish red; the breast feathers are somewhat pointed, and deeply emarginate, while the black margin is very narrow, not wider than half a millimetre. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION NORTH-EASTERN Persia and South-western Transcaspia, including the valleys of the Atrek and Gurgen Rivers, and their tributaries, such as the Tchirin-tchai, Kizzl-kan, Sumbar, Chafidyr, middle Atrek and Kara-su. -It extends along the Caspian coast from the left bank of the lower Atrek to the Ashur-ada Island and Potemkin Peninsula. It probably does not quite meet colchicus talischensis in Mazanderan. To the south it is bounded by the Elburz Mountains; on the north the lower Atrek and the Kopet-dah Mountains form a natural boundary, and in the east it does not extend beyond Darah-gaz, Kalat-i-Nadir and the other mountains which form the watershed between the valleys of the Atrek and the Heri-rud. GENERAL ACCOUNT In geographical position, as well as in plumage characters, the Persian Pheasant is ‘intermediate between the dark-winged, brownish-bellied Caucasian Pheasants and the white-winged, maroon-rufous-bellied birds of the Arimcifalis group. It overruns what well might be mountainous barriers to most avian species, and shows occasional hints of interbreeding. The Tchirin-tchai and the Kizzl-kan are two northern tributaries of the Atrek along which the Persian Pheasant is found in numbers. The sources of these rivers lie in vast plains covered with reeds, which are inhabited by troops of wild boars and covies of pheasants. The parts of the country free of reeds have the appearance of steppes and are of the same general character as the slopes of the surrounding mountains. Here quantities of bustards are found. Along the banks of the rivers the vegetation forms a zone of dense growth. It is sometimes necessary to travel a considerable distance before being able to penetrate to the water. Here the berries of the junipers ripen in late July and early August, and furnish food not only for the pheasants, but for quantities of starlings and warblers. After leaving the plains the rivers occasionally flow through gorges, often exceedingly deep and narrow. Islands appear now and then covered with 85 86 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS reeds, which form safe refuges for both wild boars and pheasants, the latter flying to the shore and feeding throughout the day, returning at night to roost among the reeds. In fact, of the pheasants found in the vicinity of these islands, almost all seem to have this habit. It would seem to be a necessary method of escape from the leopards, cheetahs, hyaenas and other dangers which in this almost treeless country would soon bring about the extermination of these birds were they compelled to roost upon the ground with no surrounding barrier of water to protect them. The Persian Pheasant is extremely local in its haunts, and while abundant along the course of one river, may be entirely absent from the adjacent ones, or from a parallel stream flowing through exactly similar territory, with otherwise corresponding fauna and flora. SYNONYMY Phastanus colchicus, var. Poelzam, Proc. Kasan Soc. Nat. I. 1870, Pp- 140 (zec Linnaeus 1758). Phasianus persicus Sewertzow, Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc. XLVIII. 1874, pt. 3 (published in 1875), p. 208 (southern shore of Caspian); Sewertzow, Jour. fiir Orn. 1875, p. 225 ; Sewertzow, Ibis, 1875, p. 494; Bogdanow, Consp. Av. Russ. I. 1884, p. 19 (Ashourada and Peninsula of Potemkine) ; Seebohm, Ibis, 1887, p. 170; Menzb., Ibis, 1887, p. 302 (Atrak, Sumbar and Chandir Rivers) ; Sharpe, Trans. Linn. Soc. (2) Zool. V. 1889, p. 86 (Bauder-i-ghaz) ; Radde and Walt., Ornis, 1889, pp. 89-96, 170, 180 (Transcaspia) ; Zarudny, Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc., 1889, p. 812; Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus. XXII. 1893, p. 324; Dresser, Birds Eur. Suppl. 1895-96, p. 317, col. pl.; Zarudny, Orn. Faun. Transcasp. 1896, p. 476; Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, Vol. II. 1897, p. 15; Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, 1903, p. 661; Buturlin, Ibis, t904, p. 387 (N.E. Persia and S.W. Transcaspia) ; Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, pp. 585, 587; Witherby, Ibis, 1910, p. 516; Zarudny, Jour. fiir Orn. 59, I9II, p. 204 (Choressen, Persia). Phasianus shawi Eliot, Ibis, 1876, p. 132 (zec Elliot, 1870). Phasianus komarowz Zarudny, Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc. LXI. 1885, pp. 277, 322 (Tchirin-Tchai, Kizzl-kan). Phastanus colchicus persicus Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37 ; Hartert, Nov. Zool. XXIV. 1917, Pp. 449. PHOTOGRAVURE 44 HOME OF THE PERSIAN PHEASANT IN sourfeen TRANSCASPIA Phasianus colchicus persicus Severti Tues birds live in vast plains either covered with reeds, or else be, with the appearance of steppes where also are found troops of wild boars, hyaenas and great bustards They feed on the juniper berries ’ and many fly at night for safety to the islands in the sluggish rivers) avoid their enemies, the cheetahs and leopards. HOME OF THE PRINCE OF WALES'S PHEASAN! SOUTH TURKESTAN Phasianus colchicus principalis Sclat Tue Murghab River is muddy and turgid, of the colour of pf coffee, flowing in a channel of brown clay, between high banks which are ever crumbling. In thering the river becomes a terrible torrent, tearing through the desert with irresistible force, forcing all ng creatures far from their normal haunts along its banks. Here this pheasant makes its home. | 2 aria, eres Ser ws ‘Bipiew. sobs lh si 2 e o he: os a esinied soqinti-ods no hest.yati ast ae edgiosilo, ok gations “f: hold Bios PY: z , “yerenamUT ntvoetnAcnany Ber hie fo aSuint aut 46 ain tsbo2 candy bai ansthahos resin jo foanso s ai oniwoh- peice og lo woleo odi to" brid bas see ae sai dedi ant sidiviet « eomosed ievin adi pat od al -ontildessnrss. seve. ste doidw. adniad dgid neswied a Isarron 1isdt mon. 1 2ousESIT 2 oi Ute gaioiol sort aidiviaari dtiw si925b. ory ‘Agvouts ya 16 -smod. ati esas tases ails SoH PHOTOGRAVURE PLATE 44 PTT (sa THERN TRANSCASPIA. SOUTH TURKESTAN PHEASANT IN SOU (OEE, (PES LAN 4 HOME OF THE PRINCE. OF WALES'S PHEASANT, PRINCE OF WALES’S PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus principalis Sclater NAMES.—English: Prince of Wales’s, Murghab or Tejend Pheasant. TypPE.—Locality : Bala-Murghab, Afghanistan. Describer: Dr. P. L. Sclater. Place of Description: Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1885, p. 322. Present Location of Type: British Museum. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—Male: Has the white wing-coverts of persécus, but the rump is bronze red and the lower back, rump and upper tail-coverts usually lack the purple-lake gloss; the breast is broadly tipped with purplish-red bronze, and the flanks with dark green or purplish blue; the scapulars are widely margined with black. Female: In general much paler than the females of c colchicus and c. persicus, the ground colour of the mantle paler rufous, and the general colour of the body very pale sandy buff. It is very close to the female of chrysomelas, The birds from the western part of the range have been separated by Bogdanow as komarow7, but on a wholly variable and unstable character: the greenish instead of a purplish gloss on the blackish tips of the flank feathers. The individuals upon which this name was based were obtained in 1883 by the Russian traveller Zarudny, who explored the Turcoman country while it was in the midst of political uprisings. His notes and skins were sent to Prof. Bogdanow, who published the description in 1886, a year after Dr. Sclater had named principals, GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION NORTH-EASTERN Persia, north-western Afghanistan and southern Turkestan, including the Merv Desert. It is found in the valley of the river known in Turkestan as the Tejend and in Afghanistan as the Heri Rud. It also ranges along the lesser streams which flow from the eastern slopes of the Darah-Gaz, Kalat-i-Nadir and other Persian Mountains to the plains of Tejend, such as the Dushak, Kaahka and Lutfabad. On the Heri-Rud it has been found as far as Kafir-Kala, but has been exterminated in Ahal-Teke, and to the west reaches only to Baba-Durmas, about seventy-five kilometres east of Askhabad. It occurs in the Russian and Afghan portions of the Murghab Valley, together with the oases of Mero, Zelotan and Pandj-deh. It is bounded on the north by Repetek and the Kara-Kum sands, and on the west and south by the watershed of the Caspian and inland basins. GENERAL ACCOUNT The first specimens of this bird were obtained by members of the Afghan Delimita- tion Commission. They were the property of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, and were named in 1885 by Dr. Sclater and exhibited by him at the London Zoological Society. Dr. J. E. T. Aitchison, the naturalist of the commission, writes as follows of this form: ‘““The specimens of this pheasant were all got on the banks of the Bala-Morghab, where it occurs in considerable numbers in the tamarisk and grass jungle growing in the bed of the river. More than four hundred were killed on the march of thirty miles up this river. It not only wades through the water in trying to make from one point of vantage to another, but swims, and seems to be quite at home in these thickets, where there is 87 88 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS always water to the depth of two or three feet. These swampy localities afford good shelter. In the mornings and evenings the pheasants leave it for the more open and dry country, where they pick up their food. I believe the same species is found on the Hari-rud river, but I have seen no specimens from that locality.” The Prince of Wales's Pheasant has been introduced successfully into England, where it has done well both in the Zoo and in shooting preserves. In Tegetmeier’s “Pheasants,” Colonel Sunderland tells of his experiences with this form. ‘“‘I first tried the importation of eggs, but they proved a dismal and costly failure. In the autumn of 1902 I went to the East, and succeeded in securing several birds. No one could positively inform me whether this species of pheasant was polygamous or not; so I brought to England an equal number of cocks and hens. A useless precaution, for the cocks fought for the hens in the usual manner. The birds stood the long journey very well, and were turned down into large enclosures in Hampshire at the end of February, 1903. They did not begin to lay till the end of April, but laid very freely, those in one pen averaging over thirty eggs a hen. Virtually all the eggs proved fertile. They hatched extremely well, and the strong chicks proved fully as easy to rear as those from the ordinary pheasant. They were fed on custard and oatmeal, etc., as recommended by Tegetmeier. They were brought up in fields of standing corn and buckwheat, surrounded by wire fences ten feet high, and the farmyard hens employed as foster- mothers were at large in these fields. The birds were pinioned when five days old. I wanted them to be able to fly a little, and severed the wing joint with scissors, so as to leave them with two flight feathers. This has proved a costly blunder, for with only those two flight feathers the birds could fly over the ten feet of wire with the greatest ease. It was quite a business to catch them in October, when I moved into Sussex, and indeed I left several birds in the woods of Conholt Park. Before turning them down in Sussex I removed the two flight feathers from each bird, but despite all precautions, some of the birds still fly over the wire. In shooting my woods several were seen, and two were shot, being mistaken for ordinary wild birds, so well did they fly. Each pen consists of several acres of wood, pasture, and arable land, which will be sown with corn and buckwheat. Only five hens and one (unrelated) cock run to the acre, therefore this breed of pheasant should remain free from all civilized diseases. I may mention that I have noticed that the birds are extremely fond of the flower of the common charlock.” The Mero oasis is one of the most wonderful, if not the largest in Asia, and owes its richness to the Murghab River. This, instead of being “the fairest of all streams,” as it is called in Lala Rookh, is, so Curtis tells us, ‘‘a muddy turgid river, the colour of poor coffee, flowing in a channel of brown clay, between high banks which cave in every year during high water and always are likely to crumble. In the spring months, when the snow is melting in the mountains, the Murghab is a terrible torrent, tearing its way through the desert with irresistible force. In the fall of the year, exhausted by those exertions, emaciated by evaporation and the demands of the irrigation canals, it is a sullen, stagnant, unwholesome stream. The annual overflow usually covers the low places in the valley with water, which remains in stagnant ponds after the flood recedes, and slowly evaporates, leaving slimy acres of decaying vegetation to poison the air.” It is among such surroundings that the Prince of Wales’s Pheasant lives, and will PLATE LI PRINCE OF WALES’S PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus principals Sclater Turis splendid bird lives in southern Turkestan in the great Merv Oasis. In north-western Afghars ;tan it has been found in tamarisk and grass jungle growing in the bed of the river. It wades and even swims in the water of these marshes, but feeds in the more open, dry country. This form has been successfully introduced into England and elsewhere. 2 en itt agian, - me $reserves. In ‘Fegetmeier's Re | itl this form. OST first tied i the autumn of. “BSoone: could io Or S08 30. shanna’ fe aay did nat ee Fee Vinaally ait the: exes Se toate sees we etl, ad vie Sivdiag ‘fide pe fro: a ae att :. 2 hel we proved: fertite. rns ved fully 2 25 easy fo rear as those ° He fel are 5 Ge cic, ae: PeCOR aoe =e 4 ak oe 2 eh id anit corm. and back -wheat, « ite fences ue ae Absa Sy. seAGAT: as employed as foster~ “Bfarge in these Aelds: The birds’ were. Prive. = hen five d +852 old. tat nities’ x09 ob _2ies OQ) y79IM ear angst, asizodasT as Hey ied Lave ScISSOrs, age ain ses vse bas zabswith taayitigeda detcbadh ors ai wolwory olanwk cog bia delagag hayet siege esd at “ight jeathets ge, Sone gta Hee side endererereeadite "ew orl ai ae AG Tele * Ate, mS A Sein ee. = 4 5 ve haa! fee 4 nn PRINCE OF WALES’S PHEASANT. PRINCE OF WALES'S, PHEASANT 89 continue to live until exterminated by the constant inroads of cultivation of mankind. Zarudny found these birds in large numbers on the islands of the rivers connected with the valley of the Atrek. The islands and the neighbouring banks are covered with a dense growth of reeds, or more rarely are barren, grassy steppes, and here the pheasants make their home in company with troops of wild boar, antelopes and bustards. The chief enemies of the pheasants are jackals, wild cats and occasionally cheetahs and leopards. SYNONYMY Phasianus principal’s Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1885, p. 322, pl. XXII (Bala-Murghab, N.W. Afghanistan); Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1887, p. 502; Menzb., Ibis, 1887, p. 301 (Murghab, Tejend and Dushak Rivers and Kaakuk Dist.); Scully, M. and B. N. Afghan., 1887, p. 86; Seebohm, Ibis, 1887, p. 171; Sclater, Ibis, 1889, p. 584 (Upper Murghab); Zarudny, Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc., 1889, p. 813; Sharpe, Trans. Linn. Soc. 1889, (2), Zool. V., p. 86, pl. vii.; Radde and Walt, Ornis, 1889, pp. 89, 90, 170, 180; Zarudny, Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc., 1890, p. 309 (partim) (streams from Daragez and Kalat Mountains); Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 325; Dresser, Birds, Eur. Suppl., 1895-96, p. 321, pl.; Zarudny, Orn. F. Transcap., 1896, p. 477; Grant Hand-book Game-birds, 1897, p. 16; Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, II. 1903, p. 660; Tegetmeier, Bull. Brit’ Orn. Club, 1903, XIV., p. 33 (in England); Zarudny, Mem. Geogr. gen. I., Russ. G. Soc., XXXVI. 1903, p. 76, (Heri-rud) ; Tegetmeier, Pheasants, 4th ed., 1904, p. 192, fig.; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 388 (Murghab basin and oases of Mero, Yelotan and Pandj-deh); St. Quinton, Field, 113, 1909, p. 131 (white on cock’s neck) ; Finn, Avicultural Mag., 1910, I., p. 227; Beebe, Rec. Ind. Mus., Vol. 5, pt. iv., No. 27, p. 270; Pocock, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1911, Vol. II., p. 862 (experiments with insects); Zarudny, Journ, fiir Orn., 59, 1911, p. 204. Phasianus komarowi Bogdanow, Bull. Acad, Sci. Peters., XXX. 1886, p. 356 (Askhabad) ; Bogdanow, Mél, Biol., XII. 1886, p. 319; Zarudny, Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc. 1886, LXI., p. 322 (Tchirin-Ichai and Kizil-Kan tributaries of Atrek River). Phasianus principalis komarowz Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 388 (Tejend and Heri-Rud basins) ; Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, pp. 585, 587; Beebe, Rec. Ind. Mus., Vol. 5, pt. iv., No. 27, p. 270. Phasianus principalis typicus Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, pp. 585, 587. : Phastanus colchicus principalts Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37; Millais, Nat. Hist. Brit. Game-birds, 1909, p. 105; Hartert, Novitates Zoologicae, XXIV. 1917, p. 449. VOL. III N ZARUDNY’S PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus zarudnyt Buturlin NAMES.—Subspecific : sarudnyi, after Mr. Zarudny, a Russian traveller and collector. English: Zarudny’s or Chardjui Pheasant. TyPE.—Locality : “from Khiva to Chardjui.” Describer: Zarudny under the preoccupied name of medzus, which Buturlin changed to zarudnyz. Place of Description: Ornith. Fauna Transcasp., 1896, p. 48r. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—The terminal black of the scapulars is very narrow, not broad as in principalis ; a white collar may be present and almost complete, or represented by a few lateral traces, or wholly absent; the purple of the breast is darker, the flank tips greenish, and the feathers of the throat have greenish instead of purple edges. Three additional forms have been described, two of which, gordius and ¢schardjuensis, I heartily agree with Hartert, are to be considered as individual variations of zaruduy/, while the third jadae, may be similarly explained, or else considered as a hybrid or transition between zarudnyi and bianchiz. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION THE valley of the middle course of the Amu-Daria or Oxus River. To the north it descends to the Petro-Alexandrovsk, there almost touching the southernmost range of chrysomelas, and to the south it has been taken at Karnas, not far from the Afghanistan border, and the eastern point of occurrence of dcanchit. GENERAL ACCOUNT Of the habits of these pheasants nothing has been recorded, but Lord Curzon tells us that “the bed of the Amu-Daria—z.e. the depression which is covered in time of high water—is here between two and three miles wide, though in summer, when more swollen by the melted snows of Hindu Kush and the Pamir, the inundated surface sometimes extends five miles. In the autumn and winter, when the waters have shrunk, the channel is confined within its two banks and is then from half-a-mile to a mile in width, flowing with a rapid current of most irregular depth over a shifting and sandy bottom. Mud-banks, covered with ooze or sand, show where the current has only recently subsided. Still, however, did it merit the title ‘the great Oxus stream— the yellow Oxus.’ The colour of the water is very dirty, coffee-hued brown, the facsimile of that of the Nile, but it is extremely healthful and can be drunk with impunity. I was strongly reminded of the appearance of this great river by the formation of its bed, by the structure of its banks, and by the scenery and life which it displayed, of many a landscape on the Nile in upper Egypt. There is the same fringe of intensely fertile soil along its shores, with the same crouching clay-built villages, and even a Bokharan counterpart to the Sakkiyeh and shadoof for raising and distributing the life-giving waters of the stream. Only, on the Oxus there is no cliff like the eastern wall of the Nile at Gebel-el-Tayr, and alas, in this northern latitude there is no belt of coroneted palms.” 90 ZARUDNY S PHEASANT g! SYNONYMY Phastanus principalis Zarudny, Note on a New Variety of Pheasant, 1891, p. 2 (Daragan-Ata); Alphéraky and Bianchi, Ann. Mus. Zool. Acad. St. Petersb., XII. 1908, p. 440. Phasianus medius Zarudny, Ornith. Fauna Transcasp., 1896, p. 481 (from Khiva to Chardjui); (nec Ph. medius, Milne-Edwards, Ois. foss. Fr. II. 1870, p. 242). Phasianus principalis zarudnyi Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 390 (Valley of the middle Amu-Daria) ; Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, pp. 585, 587. Phasianus principals bogdanowi Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 390. Phastanus gordius Alpheraky and Bianchi, Ann. Mus. Zool. Acad. St. Petersb., XIJ. “1907,” p. 440; Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, p. 572; Loudon, Ornith. Jahr. Hallein, XXI. 1910, p. 45 ; Hartert, Nov. Zool., 1917, p. 450. Phasianus tschardjuensis Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, p. 571; Loudon, Ornith. Jahr. Hallein, XXI. rgro, p. 45. Phastanus michailovskt Zarudny, Semja. Ochotn., 1909, p. 129; Loudon, Ornith. Jahr. Hallein, XXI. 1910, Pp. 45. Phastanus gabae Zarudny, Semja. Ochotn., 1909, p. 128 (Amu-Daria) ; Loudon, Ornith. Jahr. Hallein, XXI. IQI0, p. 45. (Translated description.) ; Phastanus colchicus zarudnyt Hartert, Nov. Zool., XXIV. 1917, p. 450. ZERAFSHAN PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus zerafshanicus Tarnovski NAMES.—Subspecific: zevafshanicus, after its habitat, the valley of Zerafshan. English: Zerafshan Pheasant. TyPE.—Locality: Valley of Zerafshan. Describer: Tarnovski. Place of Description: The Field, LXXVII. 1891, p. 400. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—This is the most eastern of the small group of rufous-bellied pheasants. It resembles ferszcus in the colour of its breast and mongolicus in the presence of a white collar. Both of these characters separate it from birds of the principals group. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION THE Valley of Zerafshan in Bokhara; the northern boundary separating it from turcestanicus is the watershed of the Zerafshan and the Syr-Daria rivers ; on the south the Gissar Mountains separate it from dzanuchai ; to the west zaruduyi nearly meets it as at times of high water the Zerafshan floods nearly to the Amu-Daria. GENERAL ACCOUNT The only information we have concerning this pheasant is given by its discoverer, Lieutenant Tarnovski. He says: ‘The Pheasant of the Zarafshan has a mode of life totally differing from its other Asiatic brethren, owing to the high state of cultivation of the Zarafshan Valley; it breeds and nests in reed-swamps and marshes bordering on this stream, and takes its food from the neighbouring fields and gardens. The best time for obtaining it is just before sunrise, when it may be found congregated in the reed-swamps mentioned above. Mr. Klossovski shot, in November 1890, a hen of this species in male plumage.” SYNONYMY Phastanus zerafshanicus Tarnovski, The Field, LX XVII. 1891, p. 409; Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII, 1893, p. 326; Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, Vol. II. 1897, p. 17; Sharpe, Hand-list Birds, Vol. I. 1899, p. 37; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 391 ; Carruthers, Ibis, 1910, p. 472, pl. VII. Phastanus klossowskit Tarnovski, The Field, LX XVII. 1891, p. 409; Zarudny, Orn. Faun. Transcasp., 1896, p- 483. Phastanus principalis, var. Klossowskit Zarudny, Note on a new subspecies of Pheasant, 1891, p. I. Phasianus tarnovskit Seebohm, Proc, Zool. Soc. London, 1892, p. 271. Phastanus zarafshanicus Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, 1903, p. 661 (subsp. of P#. perstcus), Phasianus colchicus zerafshanicus Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37; Hartert, Nov. Zool. XXIV. 1917, p. 450. 92 BIANCHI’S PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus bianchi Buturlin NAMES.—Subspecific : dzanchii, after Dr. V. L. Bianchi, a Russian ornithologist. English: Bianchi’s or Upper Oxus Pheasant. TypE.—Locality: Upper parts of Oxus Basin. Describer: Buturlin. Place of Description: Ibis, 1904, P- 393. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—Like chrysomelas but with black margins of breast feathers wider, the black dominating the coppery red on the visible parts of the feathers. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION VALLEY of the Upper Oxus. Messrs. Grum-Grzimailo met it during their travels in 1885 in the mountains of Bokhara, in the valleys of Kafirnagan (Dschidda-bach) and Wachsch (Kurgan-Tjube). On the north, east and south the range of this pheasant is bounded by ranges of high mountains, the Gissar, Alai, Pamir and Hindu Kush respectively. Its range along the Oxus downstream is not known, nor its exact relation with zarudnyz. SYNONYMY (?) Phastanus chrysomelas Bianchi, Zur Ornis der westlichen Auslaiifer des Pamir und des Alai, in Mél. biol. XII. 1886, p. 677 (Kafirnagan, Wachsch.) ; (?) Zarudny, Orn. Faun. Transcasp., 1896, p. 480 (? partim, Karki). Phastanus chrysomelas bianchiz Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 393 (Upper Oxus); Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, p. 585, 589. Phastanus colchicus bianchic Hartert, Nov. Zool. XXIV. 1917, p. 450. 93 KHIVAN PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus chrysomelas Sewertzow NAMES.—Subspecific : chrysomelas, ypuo6s, gold, wédas, black, golden black or dark yellow, referring to the bird’s colour. English: Khivan or Northern Oxus or Aral Pheasant. _ TypE—Locality: Amu-Daria. Describer: Sewertzow. Place of Description: Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc. XLVIII. 1875 (dated 1874, but issued 1875), p. 207 (Amu-Daria). BRIEF DESCRIPTION.—Male: Breast and upper back widely margined with black, so that on the visible portion the black equals the golden ground-colour ; flank feathers simply emarginated and the'end of the feathers occupied by a black spot; dark bars on basal half of middle tail-feathers narrow, 2 mm. or less. Female : Resembles the female of shaw, but is like principalzs in having the black spots on the under plumage more strongly marked. . ) GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION THE delta of the Oxus or Amu-Daria and the lower parts of its valley and the oasis of Khiva in the district of the same name. On the west its range is bordered by the Ust-Urt Plateau; on the south by the waterless desert of Kara-Kum. On the south-east from the town of Khiva southward it is replaced by zavudnyz, and along the shores of the Aral Sea to the north it meets somewhere the broad-collared ¢urcestanicus. SYNONYMY Phasianus, nova sp. Bogdanow, Trans. Soc. Natur. St. Petersb., VI. 1875, p. LXX XVI. (Khiva). Phasianus chrysomelas Sewertzow, Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc., XLVIII. pt. iii, 1875 (dated 1874, but issued 1875) p. 207 (Amu-Daria); Sewertzow, Jour. fiir Orn., 1875, p. 225; Sewertzow, Ibis, 1875, p. 493 (Lower Amu-Daria) ; Gould, Birds Asia, VII. 1876, pl. XX XVI.; Bogdanow, Consp. Av. Ross., 1884, fasc. I. p. 20 (Amu-Daria) ; Seebohm, Ibis, 1887, p. 172; Pleske, Mem. Ac. St. Petersb., 1888 (7), XXXVI. No. 3, p. 48 (Kasalinsk) ; Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus. XXII. 1893, p. 327 ; Zarudny, Orn. Faun. Transcasp., 1896, p. 479; Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, II. 1903, p. 662 ; Sharpe, Hand-list Birds, 1899, Vol. I., p. 37; Dresser, Ibis, 1905, p. 152 (egg) ; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 392 (Delta of Amu-Daria, lower parts of its valley and oasis of Khiva). Phasianus dorrandti Sewertzow, Jour. fiir Orn., 1875, p. 225. Phastanus oxtanus Sewertzow, Jour. fir Orn., 1875, p. 225. Phasianus insignis Elliot, Ibis, 1876, p. 132 (nec Elliot, 1870). a Phasianus colchicus chrysomelas Hartert, Nov. Zool., XXIV. 1917, p, 450; Rothschild, Bull. Brit, Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37. Phasianus chrysomelas typicus Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, pp. 585, 589. 94 SYR-DARIA RING-NECKED PHEASANT Phastianus colchicus turcestanicus Lorenz NAMES.—Subspecific : turcestanicus, from Turkestan. English: Turkestan or Syr-Daria Pheasant. TyPE.—Locality: Syr-Daria. Describer: Lorenz. Place of Description: Orn. Mon., 1896, p. 189. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—Male: White collar quite or nearly complete in front ; mantle, chest and dark spots on flanks with bluish and violet gloss. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION RussIAN Turkestan, from the north-eastern shores of the Aral Sea, south-east along the valley of the Syr-Daria as far as Gulcha, a valley in the Alai Mountains, about 5,000 feet elevation, and 140 kilometres south of Osk. The range of the Syr-Daria Pheasant is bordered by parts of the Tian-Shan and Alai Mountains on the south-east, and by the Alai and Gissar Mountains on the south. These chains of mountains separate it from shaw?, bianchi? and zerafshanicus. On the west the Kysil-Kum Desert divides it from chrysome/as, although their ranges appear to meet on the shore of the Aral. On the north-east the Karatan, Alexander and Terskentan Mountains form the limits of its range, and present more or less of a barrier between it and the closely allied songolicus. SYNONYMY Phastanus colchicus Lichtenstein, Naturh. Anh. to Eversmann’s Reisen Buchar, 1823, p. 133 (Kuwan-Darja, Ian-Darja), nec Linnaeus, 1758); Eversmann, Natural History of the Orenburg Country (Russ.), III. 1866, p. 350 (var. torque colli alba, Aral). Phasianus mongolicus Sewertzow, Vertic. and Horizont. Dist. of Turkestan Animals (Russ.) in Trans. I. S.F.N.A.E., V., VIII. 1873, p. 68 (mec Brandt, 1844); Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 328 (nec Brandt) ace Stolzmann, Bull. Soc, Nat. Mosc., I. 1897, P. 78 (nec Brandt) ; Pee Manual Palae. Birds, II. qO0o; p. 665 (cum mongoltcus). Phasianus mongolicus turcestanicus Lorenz, Orn. Mon., 1896, p. 189 (Syr-Daria) ; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 396, (Russian Turkestan, along the valley of the Syr-Daria) ; Lonnberg, Arkiv. Zool., II. 1905, pp. 7-9; Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, pp. 585, 589. | : Phasianus mongolicus bergéi Zarudny, Mess. Ornith., V. 1916, p. 227. Phasianus colchicus turcestanicus Hartert, Nov. Zool., XXIV. 1917, p. 451. 95 KIRGHIZ PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus mongolicus Brandt NAMES.—Subspecific: songolicus, from Mongolia; a name given on the principle of Zcus a non lucendo as the bird barely enters the extreme western part. English: Mongolian or Kirghiz Ring-necked Pheasant. TypE—Locality: Altai. Describer: Brandt. Place of Description: Bull. Ac. Sc. St. Petersb., III. 1844 ps Sul SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—Male: Distinguished from all the red and maroon-rumped species already described except Zwrcestanicus by a broad white ring around the neck, interrupted in front. In general it resembles the Persian Pheasant, but the mantle, chest and breast are bronzy orange-red, showing purple-carmine in one light and green in another ; breast and flanks tipped with blackish green; centre of breast and sides of abdomen dark green. Female: Similar to the female of chrysomelas but with a black spot near the tip of each feather of the upper mantle, and a black bar across the middle instead of a broad, black, submarginal border. From turcestanicus it differs in the very distinct break in the forepart of the white collar, while the mantle, chest and dark spots of the flanks are glossed with green instead of blue or violet. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION THE Kirghiz country in the north-eastern part of Russian Turkestan, in the province of Semiretshensk and part of Semipalatinsk. Also the Chinese Province of Kuldja including the basins of Lakes Issyk-kul, Balkash, Ala-kul and Zaisan together with their tributaries. To the East in the Tian-Shan, it reaches high altitudes along the valleys of Tekes and Kunges, tributaries of the Ili, and thence onward, throughout southern Dzungaria as far as Guchen. GENERAL ACCOUNT On the south-east the enormous Tian-Shan serve as the boundary between the Kirghiz Pheasant and both shaw? and ¢arimensis, while on the south-west the Alexander and Karatan Mountains intervene to a less extent between it and furcestanicus. On the north-west the Altai Mountains form somewhat of a barrier between it and hagen- becki, a member of the eastern, grey-rumped group of pheasants. Mr. Douglas Carruthers (‘The Field,” Vol. CXX. No. 3112) gives a vivid account of Mongolian Pheasant shooting. Although he includes the Syr-Daria bird, yet his actual shooting experiences were in the very heart of typical Mongolian Pheasant country. “The Mongolian pheasant, which is so well known in Europe on account of its introduction as a breeding agent, has ‘the heart of Asia’ as its abode and the Ili valley as the centre of its range. Westwards, it wanders as far as the Syr-Daria and the Aral Sea, and eastwards to the Black Irtish, under the great Altai; whilst the rivers of Dzungaria—the Borotala and the Manas—also support an immense stock of these birds. The range of the Mongolian pheasant is separated from that of the Zarafshan bird by a zone of barren desert. It is barriered by the giant Tian-Shan range from the haunts of the Tarim and Varkand varieties, and the Altai Mountains separate it on 96 PLATE Lil KIRGHIZ MONGOLIAN PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus mongolicus Brandt Tuese splendid northern Ring-necks range over an amazing diversity of country in the heart of Asia, They are fast runners and high-flyers and afford magnificent sport on the steppes and sand dunes where they make their home. In the winter the Kirghiz practice falconry with enthusiasm, and their favourite sport is flying goshawks at pheasants. eeriaes stidte. except « Ee char i the upper mantle, pea ivversianigs Wafiers-at the ser ye igs? “w ee aark spots of the flake are enidsagh th green piikead. of live of Visit 7" > ie ote vatoggon ewnndabes | isgins as 19vO pte. 1G Ti R-CaStern and ae ‘ears Aug yi hes Be Al PEASE etl: id fl Loa: ge “LNVSVAHd NYITIOONOW ZIHDYIM KIRGHIZ PHEASANT 97 the east from the Chinese pheasant (P.c. ¢orguatus) and its variety (hagenbecki) of the Kobdo country. “ During a winter spent in Central Asia in company with my friend, Mr. J. H. Miller, we had many opportunities of seeing and shooting the true Mongolian pheasant in its natural haunts. Close to Kuldja—in the Ili valley—where we wintered, however, pheasants are not to be found in any considerable quantity. On the lower Ili, where immense reed beds give them the necessary cover, they exist, I believe, in great numbers ; but without a knowledge of the country and good dogs the hunter would not do very well. It is in the upper valleys, such as the Tekes and Kash, where a narrow zone of thorn scrub and thickets lines the river-banks, that the best shooting is to be obtained. “In its wild state the pheasant inhabits a great variety of country. I have shot them in Bokhara, on tamarisk-covered sand-dunes, where the birds had never seen a tree in the course of their whole existence. In other places they inhabit vast reed beds, half under water; again, in others they keep almost entirely to the cultivated oasis, and they swarm in the jungles, thickets and poplar forests which line the rivers at any altitude up to 4,000 feet. “T set out one wintry morning, with a native servant and a spare horse laden with food, cartridges and blankets to ride up into the valley of the Kash, right affluent of the Ili. Now, if in this country the shooting is free, and there are no licences to be taken out or keepers to tip, yet, on the other hand, one has to work for the sport, and the payment will probably be a couple of days’ hard riding in the cold to and from one’s shooting ground and uncomfortable nights spent in dirty caravanserais. “I rode 200 lis (or sixty-six miles) in the two short winter days, and at the dusk of the second day arrived on the south bank of the Kash river. Here, finding a Taranchi settler, I housed myself and my horses in his mud-built dwelling. In one tiny room my host and his girl wife, a baby, my servant and myself ate and slept. This, my shooting lodge for the time being, was isolated, but for two or three hovels near by, and, being far away from the villages of the middle Kash, and cut off by the swiftly flowing river from the Kirghiz and Kalmuck encampments on the northern side of the valley, was an ideal centre to shoot from. The Kash valley here was a wide steppe valley bordered on the north and south by mountain ranges, and, moreover, cut off from the Ili valley by a barrier of low but rugged hills, through which the river has cut a deep gorge. Thus the upper part of the Kash valley is more or less shut in and isolated, and the pheasant grounds do not connect with those of the Ili. On this account, too, it is somewhat more sheltered, and therefore warmer than the main valley. The river is broad and very swiftly flowing, which no doubt accounts for the fact that in mid-December it was not frozen over. High banks of ice lined the torrent, which made it most difficult to cross, and, indeed, the only possible crossings were in those places where rocks had caused the ice to jamb, and a narrow bridge had been formed by the blocks freezing together. The river-banks were fringed with a zone of wood- land, thorn scrub and small reed beds. The trees (poplars) attained a great size, and this gave the pheasant-ground an almost English aspect, and many a bit might have been in the coverts at home. A mile-wide zone of this game-haunted jungle along the river gave me almost unlimited area to hunt over. VOL. III ° 98 A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS “I may mention that the altitude of this region was higher than that of most pheasant-grounds which I have encountered before in Central Asia. It was from 3,000 to 3,500 feet above sea level, but perhaps the sheltered nature of the country compen- sated for this. Mr. Miller, however, found the pheasant extending up to as far as 4,100 feet above sea level in the narrow valleys of the Kok-su, tributary of the Tekes. For four months in the year snow lies deep here; but since the great winter food supply is above ground, in the shape of berries, this does not much matter. “The next day I started out as soon as the sun was well up, together with my man and dog. We hunted through the tree zone and then on to the river-banks, where the country was more open, and where islands on the many-channelled river, which were covered with long grass and thorn scrub, made easy ground to hunt. Most of these islands were now rendered accessible by the water channels being frozen over, and here we had the best sport. Coming through the tree belt we had killed two or three brace; but these were mostly scattered birds, and it was not until we reached the more open feeding-grounds that we found the bulk of the birds, feeding in the morning on the yellow berries of Crategus sanguinea. The fact that they were here in the islands and away from their real home and refuge, the thickets and jungle on the banks of the river, gave occasion for the most scientific sport. “With my Turki servant and Siberian dog as beaters, I had impromptu drives, which were greatly aided by the fact that the birds always flew—when put up off these insular feeding-grounds—in a bee-line for the nearest jungle on the bank of the river. I placed myself on the frozen ground in between, and at the end of these drives, when two or three, or sometimes even six and seven, gorgeously coloured birds lay on the snow, I felt that this indeed was the real thing, without artificial methods, as nature meant it to be, and, above all, without the thought that each bird had cost a guinea to rear. But it has its drawbacks. Beaters are almost impossible to get hold of, and there is no game-cart following behind to pick up the spoil. After a dozen birds have been shot, the question arises—how to carry them? Where driving was impossible I had to resort to merely walking them up, but found that the quickness with which these wild birds sprang and their speed when on the wing made the sport. quite worthy. Indeed, this trait in their character struck me so miuch that I carefully weighed and measured a series of cock and hen birds in order to compare them with the average English pheasant. All these birds were in fine condition, and were killed in December. The following table gives the results of forty specimens weighed and measured :— Maximum. Minimum. Average. Weight 3 4 lb. ‘ 5S LaR IGE oe . 5 Rly, <7 oye * eee) 3 Ib. : : Bale : Alloy 10) OYA Total length . 3 AOGIG « ; 29ein. . : 3 O25ein: oh 5 4 10) 231. = n ASH y sa, ; 5, Bote sink ‘When comparing them with English birds it will be noticed that, although about the same in size, the wild Mongolian birds do not run so heavy in weight. In all cases the ‘crosses’ run heavier. I agree with Mr. J. G. Millais’s representation of the Mongolian pheasant as a fast and high-flying bird. These birds naturally get on the wing very much quicker than the heavy English-bred pheasant, and what is more, they fly high and strong, even when not compelled to do so by tree belts. And I claim that PHOTOGRAVURE 45 HOME OF THE MONGOLIAN PHEASANT, FEEDING-GROUND IN THE TIAN SHAN MOUNTAINS, BREEDING HAUNTS IN CHINESE TURKESTAN Phasianus colchicus mongolicus Brandt Tuese hardy Ring-necks are found on tamarisk-covered sand dunes, where the birds can never even know what a tree is, or they inhabit half-floating reedy islands, or they haunt cultivated areas, while on the slopes of the mountains they range upward as high as four thousand feet, living, feeding and nesting among the conifers and poplar forests. In the summer and autumn they wander far, but in winter the birds are compelled to search for the yellow berries of the thorn scrub, and are strictly confined to the areas where this edible grows. Pomel tA enn Paso omnes ap gh ons ee 3 ® Ay TRS . “sbasidl nates ak TANS saved Hed ebyid ¥ Sd Byorkw jesnuib ‘baa Beroivoa aieitsiiay : eeor8 SoS sab ee Big Bitlet hoor ' Gittheoh Ud eeyr a ry odd ah a “fyi. as able» ogast aie Appa I : as lidw 3 ears € . aie bas HO PHOTOGRAVURE PLATE 45 HOME OF THE MONGOLIAN PHEASANT: FEEDING GROUND IN THE TIAN SHAN MOUNTAINS. BREEDING HAUNTS IN CHINESE TURKESTAN KIRGHIZ PHEASANT 99 if a dozen of these wild birds could be mixed with their English cousins, and put over the guns, a very large proportion would escape untouched. I have seen, too, cock birds put up one side of a river cross to the other side, a distance of perhaps 150 or 200 yards, at a height which would do credit to the most skilfully organised drive at home, and yet there was nothing to make these birds fly high. As far as my experience goes, this is not the case with the birds that have their abode in the reed beds or the plain lands of Turkestan, such as Aral, Balkash, with the rivers flowing into them, and the Zarafshan regions. There the birds fly low at all times, and do not trouble’ to go very far either, for their safety lies in the reedy swamps, where man cannot go. It must be remembered that a very large percentage of the pheasarits of Central Asia in their natural haunts have never so much as seen a tree, much less a wooded country of considerable area containing high trees. ‘Here, for instance, it was the first time that I had seen the wild pheasants go to roost in the trees. At a quarter to five every evening the jungle resounded with the ‘cock-cock’ of the birds as they took up their quarters for the night. This is the moment, par excellence, for the native hunter as-he creeps through the undergrowth, and he never fails to bag a bird at each shot from his old muzzle-loader. The birds are very loath to fly when once off the ground, and country, which before seemed bird- less owing to their running powers and close sitting, now showed the true number of pheasants inhabiting it. ‘Besides the native gunner, the pheasants have a great enemy in the falconer. The Kirghiz, always fond of sport, spend a good deal of their time during the winter in flying their hawks at pheasants. Their favourite hawk for this purpose is the goshawk or karchigai, a bold, fearless bird, easily able to take such game. It was with much interest that I watched a native hawk-catcher at work; his methods were so much like those of the fowlers of other far-distant countries. A circle of very light but large-meshed netting, supported on light wands, surrounded a bare space, in the middle of which was placed a captive pigeon on a block. A string attached to the pigeon’s wings made the bird flutter at the will of the fowler, who lay concealed under a heap of brushwood at a short distance. A wild hawk, attracted by the fluttering pigeon, ‘stoops’ at it, is entangled in the netting, and at the mercy of the falconer. “In the daytime, too, during the winter months one may find the pheasants off the ground, high in the thorn scrub, feeding on the yellow berries, which form their chief article of diet. If it were not for the great winter supply of frozen berries, which, by the way, the Chinese call ‘pheasant food, the birds would indeed be in a bad way. As it was, all the birds that I killed in the middle of December, in spite of a month of snow-covered ground and bitter cold, were very fat and in the best condition. I opened as many as thirty crops, and found all full of this berry, and little else besides. But they have to make use of the whole day in order to get their fill, and were busy feeding during the nine hours of daylight. “During the first day I shot twenty-six birds, and at dusk retired to the native house, where I spent most of my time in devising a method for keeping my specimens out of harm’s way. What with cats and the native child, who would pull out all the long tail-feathers, I had my work cut out. The next day I shot through the more densely timbered country, and found birds fairly numerous in certain localities— 100. A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS wherever there were berries, in fact. The runners proved a nuisance, but several were saved by my dog, who was, however, more addicted to fur than feather, for he was of the breed used by the Siberian fur-hunters, and had been trained to run sable and to “tree” squirrels. He was quite out of place at a pheasant shoot, and preferred the chasing of innumerable hares, which literally swarmed in this region. When my good cartridges began to run out, I used to put an English cartridge into one barrel and a Russian into the other, with most pleasing results to the bird at which the Russian -was fired. The comparison was so marked that my native soon saw the joke of it, and when a bird passed away untouched, to the resounding bang of a smoky Russian, he would cry out ‘Ruski, whilst ‘Inglis’ was his echo to the sharp, clean sound of a smokeless Schultze and a crumpled bird falling to earth. “T finished my supply of ammunition and returned to my quarters in the native house. Here I laid out the bag, and found that I had shot forty-one birds, and. that the proportion of males to females was twenty-seven to fourteen. This was remarkable, for although I actually needed more cocks than hens, yet I had not taken the least trouble to get them. In fact, I am sure that I put up more cock birds than hens. In one locality alone I remember finding a very great majority of hen birds, and it is possible that they have their haunts perhaps on some of the inaccessible islands, where food is plentiful and enemies scarce. The next day I packed a horse with a couple of sacks containing the birds, and, crossing the Kash by a narrow ice bridge, under which the torrent wound threateningly, rode back to Kuldja in fourteen hours. ‘The possibilities of pheasant shooting on the Kash are very great. Two guns would increase the bag to far more than double, and if a few beaters could be hired, and a man with a pony engaged to carry the spoil, shooting would become more of a pleasure and less of a labour. The birds are certainly numerous, and not likely to diminish in numbers. They have endless territory, the natives scarcely hunt them at all, and never sufficiently to make the least impression on their numbers, whilst there are but few enemies in the shape of wild cats and foxes. In spring and summer, when the foliage is out, it is scarcely possible to find or to put them up. Thus they are naturally protected during the breeding season. The climate, also, is so even, and the weather so constantly true to itself, that little or no damage is ever done to young birds. The Mongolian pheasant has, in fact, everything that nature means it to have and none of those artificial benefits which attend the life history of an English-bred bird.” SYNONYMY Phasianus colchicus Licht., in Eversm., Reise. nach Buchara, 1823, p. 133 (nec Linné), (Kuwan and Jan Darjo) ; Meyend, Voy. a Bokhara, 1826, p. 428. Phasianus torquatus Karelin, Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc., 1841, p. 561 (Tarbagatai), (nec Gmelin, 1788), Phasianus mongolicus Brandt, Bull. Acad. St. Petersb., III. 1844, p. 51 (Altai) ; Gould, Birds Asia, VII. 1858, pl. XLI. ; Sclater, List. Phas., 1863, p. 4; Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1863, p. 116; Gray, List Gall. Brit. Mus., 1867, p: 27; Gray, Hand-list Birds, II. 1870, p. 257; Elliot, Proc. Zool, Soc. London, 1870, p. 408; Elliot, Mono. Phas., II. 1872, pl. IV. (text); Sewertzow, Turkest. Jevotn., 1873, p. 68; Sewertzow, Bull. Mose., XLVIII. pt. iii, 1875, p. 208; Sewertzow, Jour. fir Orn., 1875, p. 224; Sewertzow, Ibis, 1875, p. 493 ; Dresser, Ibis, 1876, p. 323; Finsch, Verh. Ges. Wien, XXIX. 1880, p. 241; Bogdanow, Consp. Av. Ross., fasci. I. 1884, p. 20; Seebohm, Ibis, 1887, p. 173; Pleske, Mem. Ac. St. Petersb. (7), XXXVI. 1888, No. 3, p. 47 (Chinaz); Alphéraky, Kuldja and Tian-Shan (Russ.), 1891, pp. 5, 17, 19, 22, 29, 48, 89, 98, 153; Kozlow, Results of the TREG.S.) Exped: sin C. Asia in 1893-5, II. 1899, p. 5; Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 328; Sharpe, Hand-list Birds PHOTOGRAVURE 46 HAUNTS OF THE TURKESTAN MONGOLIAN PHEASANT OR SYR-DARIA RING-NECK Phasianus colchicus turcestanicus Lorenz Over the great, but little known region of Turkestan known as Syr-Daria, with its rugged gorges and snow-capped mountains, its scattered villages, fields of grain and herds of goats, the most western of all the Ring-necks is found. It drinks at tiny meandering streams, which in spring become raging torrents, it gleans from the grain in autumn or scratches in the frozen ground in winter. Among the wind-blown sturdy shrubs or the long waving reeds it roosts at night, ever seeking to avoid the hosts of enemies which threaten it on every side. the = breed us ae isc Sibe be et ‘tree " ane pels, Hew was quite: out: ‘of , i as ete ase 3 of inpumerable hares, which erally syarind Pipe ons. ad pase: poco ee te pee an eee rison was: so wake that oa away untouched, to the gee = y-out ‘Ruski, whilst * Inglis’ he. smokeless Schultze and 2 Pa lee ord fa remember sa eEy 2 scapebasoaticicoes ee: res Scarce, DEE ae iu Layee awonl nstes bd gis «3,10¢ brabus, sien 18 “The possibilities of pheasant shooting on the Kash. are’ve meow 2 2 Wirt, si} sof ensele.ci:jetasmos ygnige: erneved gainge: ai eoister! mst roj2dinde ybwie awold-baive adit geomAs | sie planpate be ita ‘Ao — ; ass 3 TAPER PHOTOGRAVURE PLATE 46. SENS eet NVTIOONOW NV Ga diy. # a an ae a J i he ; of | “i SEM OL aH dQ SLNIDV] aie Fale KIRGHIZ PHEASANT 101 1899, Vol. I. p. 37; Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, II. 1903, p. 665 (partim, cum ‘turcestanica ave); Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 395; Russel, Field, CIV. 1904, p. 982 (importation and breeding); Tegetmeier, Pheasants, 4th ed., 1904, p. 174 (coloured frontispiece); Dresser, Ibis, 1905, p. 152 (egg); Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, p. 574; Lord E. Hamilton, Country Life, XXI. 1907, p. 321 (characters and hybrids); Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XI. p. 53. Phasianus semitorquatus Sewertzow, Ibis, 1875, p. 491 (N.E. of Kuldja); Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 329; Lorenz, Orn. Monat., 1896, p. 190 (Manas, Chiho); Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, II. 1903, p. 665 (subsp. of Ph. mongolicus). Phastanus mongolicis semttorquatus Pleske, Bull. Acad. St. Petersb., XIII. 1892, p. 295; Kozlow, Results of the I.R.G.S. Exped. in C. Asia (Russ.), II. 1899, p. 286; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 396. Phastanus torquatus mongolicus Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XI. IQOI, p. 21. Phasianus brandti Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XII. 1901, p. 20 (withdrawn in 1903 by author). Phasianus colchicus mongolicus Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37; Millais, Nat. Hist. Brit. Game-birds, 1909, p. 101 (coloured figure) ; Hartert, Nov. Zool., XXIV. 1917, p. 450. Phasianus colchicus semitorquatus Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37. Phasianus mongolicus mongolicus Alphéraky and Bianchi, Ann. Mus. Zool. Ac. St. Petersb., XII. 1908, p. 443. YARKAND PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus shawi Elliot NAMES.—Subspecific : shawz, named for Robert Shaw, one of the few early English explorers who have been to Yarkand and returned alive. English: Yarkand or Shaw’s Pheasant. TypE.—Locality : Yarkand. Describer: D. G. Elliot. Place of Description : Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, Pp. 403. : SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—Male: The lesser and median wing-coverts white or whitish-buff; the lower back, rump and upper tail-coverts are orange bronze with greenish and purplish reflections; the feathers of the lower back and rump have a green spot on each side of the shaft ; the upper back and breast edged with black, often glossed with green, the golden ground-colour dominating the black on the back; dark bars on basal half of middle tail-feathers usually 3 to 4 mm. wide. Female: Very pale; ground-colour of mantle pale rufous-buff; general colour of remainder of plumage light buff. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION Tue Yarkand Pheasant has a wide range in the western part of Chinese Turkestan, including the valleys of the Khotan-Daria, Yarkand-Daria and the Kashgar-Daria, the upper reaches of the Tarim River and the lower parts of the Aksu Valley. It keeps to the lower slopes, seldom ranging high up on the mountains. The caravan-road from Sanju to Kashgar forms its south-western boundary. The impassable, snow-clad chain of the Tian-Shan almost shuts off the Yarkand Pheasant, the most easterly of the white- winged group, from its.northern and north-western neighbours, the white-collared, copper-throated, silvery-grey-winged mongolicus. From dzauchit on the upper Oxus it is separated by the great ranges of the Pamirs and Alai. Eastward the Yarkand Pheasant has no definite physical boundary and somewhere in the valley of the middle Tarim meets the sandy-winged ¢arvzmensts. SYNONYMY Phasianus shaw? Elliot, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, p. 403 (Yarkand) ; Elliot, Mono. Phas,, II. 1872, pi. I. (text); Scully, Stray Feathers, III. 1875, p. 433; Scully, Stray Feathers, 1V. 1876, pp. 75, 80, 83, 179 (Kashgar, Beshkent, Yarkand); Gould, Birds Asia, VII. 1876, pl. XX XV.; Seebohm, Ibis, 1887, p. 171; Seebohm, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, p.415 (Aksu and Khotan Darya); Sharp, Sec. Yark., Miss. Aves, 1891, p. 120 (Guma, Yarkand, Maralbashi) ; Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 326; Richmond, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus., XVIII. 1897, p. 588; Sharpe, Hand-list Birds, Vol. I. 1899, p. 37; Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, II. 1903, p. 660; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 394 (Western Chinese Turkestan); Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, pp. 585, 589. . Phastanus insignis Elliot, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, p. 404 (Yarkand) ; Elliot, Mono. Phas., 1872, pt. ii, pl. III.; Scully, Stray Feathers, III. 1875, p. 433. Phasianus chrysomelas Elliot, Stray Feathers, V. 1877, p. 198 (nec Sewertzow, 1875). Phasianus colchicus shawt Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37; Hartert, Nov. Zool., XXIV. 1917, P. 450. Phastanus shaw? chrysomeloides Lorenz,,Ornith. Mon.,,X VII. 1909, p. 171 (E. Turkestan), 102 PLATE LIII TARIM PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus tarimensts Pleske In the poplar forests along the Tarim River these birds live in covies, depending on berries for food during the hard winters and often compelled to roost on the slight branches of the poplars to avoid their enemies on the ground. Besides the foxes and smaller vermin, they look down from their perch upon troops of wild pig and wild camels, which pad softly over the sand, while overhead flocks of wild geese drive northward almost before the ice breaks from the river and pools. i a VAAL Ae ae hee ho hoe, wt} 'F TMARAMHT MInAT > ‘ ~“odeolT award awasialos. ananien sot noid ae gnibnsqob gaivo ni evil abiid: seodt 19visT minsT ods ot eisiqoqg oft Yo eodonsid’ adville“ ont no 12004 ot Bolfeqinos ‘dado bas % riod? mot awob dool yodi aimov aslleme bas '2ox0} itt eobleofl’ .bauorg si} no axtooh bssrtovo oli base ot t9v0 (oz beq doister ‘alomeo ; MIB BI ‘bliw: ais rit ori mort edeoid o9i aft owls PLATE LIII. TARIM PHEASANT. TARIM PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus tavimensis Pleske NAMES.—Subspecific : tarimenszs, after the Tarim River, the lower valley of which is the bird’s chief haunt. English: Tarim Pheasant. TypE.—Describer: Pleske. Place of Description: Reisen in Tibet by Przewalski, 1883, p. 95. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—Male: Closely resembles shawz, but the lesser and median wing-coverts are sandy-rufous instead of whitish ; breast fiery bronze red, glossed with oily green and purple, and without marginal band of black; edges of rump and upper tail-coverts greenish buff, not orange red. Female: Similar to the female of shazwz. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION EASTERN parts of Chinese Turkestan, including the lower Tarim and Cherchen-Daria and the lakes Bagrach-kul and Lob-nor. GENERAL ACCOUNT Together with the Yarkand Pheasant (skawz) the Tarim bird occupies a range enclosed, for the most part, by deserts and mountains. On the north and north-west the great wall of the Tian-Shan separates it from szougolicus, while on the east the waterless Kum-Tag desert intervenes between it and the grey-rumped satscheuensis,; and from vlangali in the south-east it is shut off by the lofty and majestic Altyn-Tag. To the west the way is more open and along the course of the Tarim River it somewhere meets the easternmost individuals of the Yarkand Pheasant. Here in Eastern Turkestan we are in the heart of the distribution of this great Asiatic genus of pheasants. The disintegrated, hairy condition of the lower back and rump feathers is one of the most salient characters of Phastanus, and here in mid-Asia we find the point of divergence in the colour of these feathers. From the Caucasus eastward we have had to do with coppery-red rumped birds. From now onward to the Pacific we shall find the rumps of the pheasants to be olive grey. The Tarim bird with its greenish-buffy rump is somewhat intermediate, but on the whole shows a dominant relationship to the western group, through the Yarkand Pheasant, while it is more clearly distinguished from its neighbours by its yellowish-brown wing-coverts. In shaw? these feathers are yellowish white, in mongolicus silvery white, in v/angali ashy grey tinged with greenish, while the wing-coverts of sat¢scheuensis are lavender grey. SYNONYMY Phastanus shaw? Przewalski, Proc. Imp. Russ. Geogr. Soc., XIII. 1877, p. 275 (Lob-nor) (nec Elliot, 1870). Phasianus tartmensts Przewalski, from Taissan through Khami to Tibet, 1883, p. 95 (descr. nulla) ; Przewalski, Reisen in Tibet, 1884, p. 59; Pleske, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1888, p. 415 (Karaschar to Lob-nor); Grant, Cat., Birds Brit. Mus., 1893, XXII. p. 327; Kozlow, Res. Imp. Russ. Geogr. S. Exped. C. Asia, II. 1899, pp. 74, 286, (Koncke-Daria) ; Sharpe, Hand-list Birds, Vol. I. 1899, p. 37; Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, II. 1903, p. 662 (subsp. of PA. perszcus) ; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 397 (Eastern Chinese Turkestan); Dresser, Ibis, 1905, p. 152, (egg); Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, pp. 585, 580. Phasianus colchicus tarimensis Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37; Hartert, Nov. Zool. XXIV, 1917, p. 451. 103 SATCHU OASIS PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus satscheuensis Pleske NAMES.—Subspecific: satscheuensis, from the bird’s home, the Satchu Oasis. English: Satchu Oasis Pheasant. TyPEe.—Locality : Oasis of Satchu. Describer: Pleske. Place of Description : Bull. Acad. St. Petersb., XIII. 1892, p. 2096. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—Male: Distinguished from its nearest neighbours ¢arimensis, vlangalizi and straucht by its very pale colour and white collar, and from ¢orguatus by the sandy-brown instead of Indian-red margins of the scapulars and secondaries, while the margins of the ventral plumage are wide and purplish green. Female: Is very much paler than zovguatus, the dorsal plumage pale buff with greatly reduced black markings. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION Tue most western portion of Kansu, north of the Nan-shan. Along the valley of the Buluzin and the marshes and lake of Khalachi-Nor; the valley of the Dankhe, the oasis of Satchu; Ansu, Shao-wan and Shanto-po, from 2,000 to 7,000 feet. SYNONYMY Phasianus satscheuensis Przewalsky, from Zaissan through Khami to Tibet (Russ.), 1883, p. 95 (descr. nulla) ; Pleske, Bull. Acad. St. Petersb., XIII. 1892, p. 296 (N. of Nan-shan Mts.); Kozlow, Res. Imp. Russ. Geogr. S. Exped. C. Asia (Russ.), II. 1899, pp. 107, 113, 286; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 398. Phasianus satscheunensis Prjevalsky, Reisen in Tibet, 1884, p. 59 (Satschen); Dedit., Jour. fir Orn., 1886, p. 527; Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 333. Phasianus shawt Seebohm, Ibis, 1888, p. 415 (partim, Satschen). Phasianus satschuensts Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, 1903, p. 667 (subsp. of c. torguatus). Phasianus colchicus satscheuensts Hartert, Nov. Zool., XXIV. 1917, p. 452. Phastanus colchicus satscheunensis Rothschild, Bull. Brit, Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37. 104 PHOTOGRAVURE 47 MONGOLIAN PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus mongolicus Brandt ZERAFSHAN PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus zerafshanicus Tarnovski TARIM PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus tartmensts Pleske Tue wildest and bleakest river basins of central Asia are inhabited by pheasants. Now and then a ragged caravan passes, hastening across the deserts from one source of water supply to the next, a line of camels bearing tea or grain. When the rivers are in flood and spread out across the deserts, the birds wander far, and roost at night among the ruins of half-buried and wholly forgotten cities. Rarely an explorer makes his way through, mapping the valleys, shooting a few specimens, and passing on never to return. sb HAUVAADOTOH | “TaReAd Ha WALIOOnOM Se Gk: setscheuer the Ss stchu Oasi shuscrtt reysons sasbshon annie SBE LES a : a ‘bleromat caiqsokitoran: ein sme GEOGR/ AMARTH WAST: Jae i+ Ey Ee Re se = LE ee F PHOTOGRAVURE PLATE 47 HAUNTS OF THE PHEASANTS IN CENTRAL ASTA=- MONGOLIAN PHEASANT. ZARAFSHAN PHEASANT. TARIM PHEASANT TSAIDAM PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus vlangalt Przewalski NAMES.—Subspecific: v/angaliz, after M. E. Vlangali, Russian Ambassador to China. English: Tsaidam Pheasant, after the great marshes, the native home of the bird. TypE,—Locality: Tsaidam. Describer: Przewalski. Place of Description: Mongolia, II. pt. ii, 1876, p. 116. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—From elegans on the south, the male bird differs in the mantle and scapulars being sandy red, and the sides and flanks golden buff, instead of dull orange red with a gloss of purple. In the female the upper plumage resembles that of colchicus, but below, the colour is pale buff. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION EASTERN TsarpDAm, extending northward to the Koko-nor Mountains and to the outlying slopes of the Tolai-Ula and Burkhan-Budda Ranges. GENERAL ACCOUNT Przewalski writes of the Tsaidam Pheasant: ‘‘ We found this bird in Tsaidam, where it inhabits the cane-groves and bush-covered localities. In autumn and winter it feeds principally on berries, which it eats while sitting on the branches, and at that time especially is very wild and wary. It does not differ in voice from P. ¢orguatus, and begins to breed very early in spring. We have heard it as early as the 13th of February.” SYNONYMY Phasianus vlangalii Prjewalski, Mongolia, II. pt. ii, 1876, p. 116; Prjewalski, Rowley’s Ornith. Missell., II. 1877, p. 386; Prjewalski, Reisen in Tibet, 1885, p. 59 (Tsaidam) ; Seebohm, Ibis, 1888, p. 315; Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 330; Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, II. 1897, p. 30; Kozlow, Res. I.R.G.S. Exped. C. Asia, II. 1899, pp. 188, 218, 286; Sharp, Hand-list Birds, Vol. I. 1899, p. 38; Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, 1903, p. 664; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 412. Phasianus colchicus vlangalii Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37; Hartert, Nov. Zool., XXIV. 1917, p. 452. VOL, III 105 P STRAUCH’S PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus stvauchi Przewalski NAMES.—Subspecific: stvauchz, after M. A. A. Strauch, the Russian Academician, English: Strauch’s Pheasant. < TypE.—Locality: Tatung, Buhuk-gol. Describer: Przewalski. Place of Description: Mongolia, II. 1876, p. I19. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—Usually to be distinguished from elegans and vlangalii by the purple-green instead of dark-green margins of the chest and breast feathers. Ogilvie-Grant also considers that from e/egans it is further distinguished by having the middle of the scapulars whitish buff freckled with black next the shaft, and from vlangaliz by the margins of these feathers being Indian red. The dorsal plumage of the female is like colchicus, but the nape and mantle feathers are indistinctly tipped with dark green, instead of violet and purple. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION SOUTHERN KAnsu, north to the Tatung River, East central Shensi, especially in the Ta-pai-shan in the Tsin-ling Range. GENERAL ACCOUNT This form, living in the very heart of China, amid a great tumbled mass of mountains, is typical of its genus in the trouble it has given to taxonomists. Only when a large series was obtained by Rothschild and Hartert was proof available that the characters were so variable and so individual that they were deserving of no subspecific recognition. Hartert writes of this form: ‘None of the characters on which the authors relied is constant, and strauchz is altogether a rather variable bird. I should not have been so confident and so sure about this if we had not received from the late Alan Owston’s Japanese collectors a series of not less than 28 adult males—from Ta-pai-shan in the centre of the Tsin-ling Range. This magnificent series, which I have been able to compare with twelve others in the Tring and British Museums, shows quite clearly how s¢vauchi varies. The crown of the head is sometimes quite brownish bronzy, but mostly of a dark green. The white collar on the hind neck is sometimes more than a centimetre wide, and only interrupted in front, more often narrower and only indicated, and also often quite absent, without a trace of it. “The whole upperside varies in colour, more or less, the rump chiefly according to season, as the green and creamy bars of the feathers become much more conspicuous after the breeding season, when the edges are worn off. The long middle rectrices are sometimes much lighter, sometimes darker, more tinged with rufous brown, and the width of the black bars is not constant. The underside is equally variable. The sides of the breast are sometimes much lighter, more ‘ buffy golden-brown,’ especially in the 106 PLATE LIV SlRAU CHS PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus straucht Prjewalski On the wooded slopes of the Kansu Mountains, up to the height of a mile and a half above the sea, Strauch’s Pheasant makes its home. It varies widely in character of plumage and on the limits of its range approaches the neighbouring forms. From six to twelve eggs are laid, and in these tumbled mountains the pheasants seem to be more strictly monogamous, the cock aiding in the care of the young, than in the great flat plains to the east, where food is more abundant and the birds are so much more ‘numerous. Vi ATAIS to. esineiit ‘SA RS Bad? Syhrce Yo t salon 3wne sstdvaus ‘edt he Bas bist (Ses ‘ages’ BAVOY sit to s189 votlt al onibis 4909, odd 2uomegonors Ki CCO SIO ME soem 92 916, hid oat bas tasbasds + s108t ab oe 919 BIPANEE LEI: STRAUCH’S PHEASANT. SURAUC INS. PHERASAN fy 107 type of bevezowskyz and in the worn plumage of summer birds. The colour of the chest and breast is also variable; sometimes these parts are so strongly washed with green and the feathers have such wide dark-green edges, that they remind one strongly of P. colchicus vlangahi—which is, of course, very different on the upperside. More often there is hardly any or very little green on the chest and breast, except along the middle of the latter. “Among the Tsin-ling males are specimens which agree absolutely with others collected in Kansu by Russian explorers and received from the museums in St. Petersburg and from the late Th. Lorenz in Moscow, others which agree with the type of berezowskyz and with chonensis, as well as with holderer’, as far as I remember, having seen the latter some years ago, and judging from the description of Schalow. With regard to that, it is remarkable that the author named a bird shot on the same day, and therefore not far away—as one does not travel fast in those mountains—P. stvaucht.” We know little of Strauch’s Pheasant, except what Przewalski tells us: ‘The bird inhabits the wooded parts of the Kansu Mountains, up to an absolute height of 10,000 feet. It appears to be most numerous in the Tetunga and Buguk-gol valleys, but higher up these rivers, where woods are scarce, it disappears. “Tn voice and habits it does not differ from P. forguatus and P. vlangalit. The breeding season commences in March or April, and lasts until the middle of July. The earliest young we obtained on the 23rd of June. The number of young varies from six to ten, and sometimes even twelve; they are always accompanied by both parents, and very often the male bird defends the young even more vigorously than the female.” SYNONYMY Phasianus straucht Przewalski, Mongolia, Il. 1876, p. 119; Przewalski, in Rowley’s Orn. Misc., II. 1877, p. 417; Przewalski, Reisen in Tibet, 1884, p. 59 (Kansu); Seebohm, Ibis, 1888, p. 314; Seebohm, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1888, p. 267 (extends south to M.); Seebohm, Ibis, 1888, p.314 ; Berezowskyi and Bianchi, Birds of the Kansu Exped., Potanin (Russ.), p. 18 (pt. Hoo-sian); Pleske, Bull. Ac. St. Petersb., XIII. 1892, p. 296 (Sining Mountains, Tatung Mts., and River, and Mts. of Amdoa) ; Grant, Cat. Game-birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 330; Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, II. 1897, p. 29; Grant, Hand-list Game-birds, 1899, Vol. I. p 38; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 410; Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, p. 575. Phasianus torquatus David et Oustalet, Ois. Chin., 1877, p. 409 (pt. var. “ C,” Chensi meridional) ; Berezowski and Bianchi, Birds of the Kansu Exped., Potanin (Russ.), p. 18 (W. and E. Ordos); Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 331 (partim); Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, 1913, p. 665 (partim). Phasianus decollatus David et Oustalet, Ois. Chin., 1877, p. 411 (partim, S. Shensi); Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893 (partim; Sinling Mts.). Phasianus holderert Schalow, Jour. fir Orn., 1901, p. 414 (N. China) ; Parrot, in Wiao, Ergb. der Exp. Tilchner, nach China u. Tibet, 1903-1908, Bond X, 1 Tiel, p. 132; Thayer and Bangs, Mem. Mus. Comp. Zool., Harvard, XL. 1912, p. 140; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 406; Alphéraky and Bianchi, Ann. Mus., St. Petersb., XII. Pp. 447. Phastanus berezowskyz Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XII. 1901, p. 20 (Hui-Tsian); Dresser, Man. Palae Birds, 1903, p. 663 (Subsp. of strauchz); Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 411. Phastanus colchicus straucht Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37; Hartert, Nov. Zool., XXIV. 1917, p. 451. Phastanus decollatus, var. Bianchi, Bull. Acad. St. Petersb., V. 1906, ser. XXIV. t.n. 1 & 2, pp. 83, 90; Bianchi, Aves Exped. Kozlowi, 1907, p. 201 (var. indiv.). Phasianus decollatus strauchi Bianchi, Bull. Ac. Sc. St. Petersb., V. 1906, ser. XXIV., t.n. 1& 2, p. go (Russ.), (pt. var. from Soho-choto ad. ped. sept. jug. Nan-Schan); Alphéraky and Bianchi, Ann. Mus. Zool, St. Petersb., XII. 1908, p. 447. Phastanus decollatus decollatus Alphéraky and Bianchi, Ann. Mus. Zool. St. Petersb., XII. 1908, p. 451. Phasianus decollatus berezowskyt Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, p. 578. Phasianus strauchi sohokhotensis Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, p. 576. Phasianus straucht chonensts Grant, Bull. Brit. Orn, Club, XX XI. 1912, p. 16. STONE’S PHEASANT Phasitanus colchicus elegans Elliot NAMES.—Subspecific : elegans, Latin, elegant, graceful. English: Stone’s Pheasant. Vernacular: Tarechi (Lola), Wucru (Kachin), Tso-ka (Tibetan). TyPE.—Locality : Yun-ling Mountains. Describer: D. G. Elliot. Place of Description: Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. (4), VI. 1870, p. 312. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—Male: Differs from v/angalii in having the flanks coppery maroon instead of golden buff, and the mantle and scapulars maroon instead of sandy red. P.c. decollatus and strauchi have the dark green of the back broken by bands of the yellow or coppery red of the chest, while in e/egans the green extends unbroken to the middle of the chest and breast. Female: Very close to the females of the neighbouring forms on the east and north, but differing from colchicus colchicus in the white throat and fore-neck, and the irregularly black-barred underparts. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION MounTAINS of eastern Tibet, south-western Szechuan, north-western Yunnan, Kachin Hills, and Northern and Southern Shan States. GENERAL ACCOUNT This is the only member of the genus which occurs within the boundaries of British India. I heard pheasants calling near Myitkyina while I was outfitting for my expedition eastward into Yunnan, but had no opportunity of searching for them. Not until I was on my way back, after studying the Gennaeus hybrids beyond Sadon, did I find elegans. A half-eaten bird taken from a Kachin dead-fall was easily identified as this form, with the unusual character of a posterior white collar, almost half an inch in width. Two days later I shot a male pheasant in nearly adult plumage, close to the slope down which the flocks of kaleege came each day to drink. I learned nothing of the habits of this bird, and the natives called them merely wild hen, Zavecht. W. R. Zappey, who has shot these birds in western Szechuan, writes me that he found them from Wa Shan, the Lolo country, to Tachien-lu, at from five to ten thousand feet altitude. They occurred more frequently in grassy and bushy places near cultiva- tion, and kept in small families. One day, while he was shooting these birds, he drove a male out from a patch of cover into a ploughed field. A golden eagle saw it and made a swoop. The pheasant squatted on a clod of earth until the eagle was very close, and then by a half-run, half-fly of a few feet to one side, avoided its assailant. The eagle rose, circled a few times, and swooped again, and again the pheasant dodged sideways. This time the eagle gave up the chase. Captain Davies found these pheasants near the summits of the ranges in Western 108 PHOTOGRAVURE 48 YUNNAN BLACK-NECKED OR STONE’S PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus elegans Elliot Tuts is the only member of the entire genus which occurs within the boundaries of British India. In Yunnan the bird is found in the same general environment as the silver kaleege pheasants. A hunter I knew drove a cock bird out of cover into a ploughed field, and a golden eagle made a swoop at it but missed. Stone’s pheasant roams over the wooded heights of the maze of mountains along the Burma-Chinese frontier, and finds its food by scratching among the dead leaves and ferns of the forest undergrowth. & SauvasooToHs 7 iw cut ISTRE r D PLATE 48 PHOTOGRAVUR te TD PHEASAN it E YUNNAN BLACK- NECKED al, HOME OF ae es STONE'S PHEASANT 109 Yunnan in long grass and fern, or in fir woods, singly or in pairs, and once in a covey of ten. Three eggs in the collection of Charles M. Inglis, apparently from a set of seven, were indistinguishable from the eggs of the common pheasant, a deep brownish olive in colour. They measured 342 by 44'1, 35 by 44°4, and 34'1 by 43°9 mm. _ I have been able to examine only a few individuals, so that I feel more certain in copying the detailed description given by E. C. Stuart Baker, as he must have access to large series. DETAILED DESCRIPTION ApuLT MaLe.—Crown from forehead to nape and hind neck bronze green, the ear tufts darker and more blue; chin and throat deep green; neck in front and on the sides deep purple blue, with purple copper reflections in some lights, this colour passing around the base of the neck as a collar behind; upper back golden chestnut, changing into deep chestnut on the back and scapulars; the feathers next the neck are centred with black and their tips are notched with the same; the feathers of the back and scapulars have black centres mottled and sub-outlined with buff, and the same notches as on the upper back, but the black obsolete. Lower back, rump and tail-feathers pale green-grey, with sub-terminal bars of lustrous emerald green, and each feather with the concealed base black with buff concentric bands. Tail-feathers rufous brown with broad black bars, narrowly edged above and below with golden buff; the central pair have wide margins of pink grey, across which the black bands are continued as dull purple marks ; on each succeeding pair the pink edges are reduced in size, and are absent on the outermost pair, and sometimes on one or two of the next pairs also. Wing coverts pale green grey with emerald green reflections, and with the innermost greater coverts splashed with maroon, broadly on the outer and narrowly on the inner webs; quills brown, the primaries barred with buff on the outer webs, and with broken bars on the inner; secondaries broadly edged with olive brown and irregularly marked with buff on both webs. Below, breast deep glossy green, each feather narrowly margined with velvety black, and those on the lower breast notched, though less conspicuously so than on the back ; flanks and sides of the breast golden copper, becoming almost purple copper next the green of the breast, each feather with a bold edging of velvet black which runs down the end of the shaft towards the green base; vest, thighs and centre of abdomen dull brown ; under tail coverts chestnut with black marks. Facial skin scarlet, legs and feet lead colour. Measurements: bill from gape, 35.5 mm.; wing, 210°8 to 2286; tail, 391° to 487°6; tarsus, 63°5 to 68°5; spur, 1o°.r mm. ApuULT FEMALE.—Crown and neck dark brown or black with narrow bars of buff, sometimes with a distinct tinge of chestnut; back and scapulars chestnut with white sub-edging, and very fine edges of black and a bold bar of the same between the chestnut and the white. Remainder of upper plumage pale grey brown with narrow buff edges and black centres, with here and there a tinge of chestnut showing very irregularly. Central tail-feathers pale olive brown with narrow paler cross-bars broadly margined on IIo A MONOGRAPH OF THE PHEASANTS either side with black; remaining tail-feathers dull chestnut with similar bars ; in all the tail-feathers the markings are irregular and somewhat mottled, giving a mottled appearance to the whole. Below, the chin and throat are pale buffish, obsoletely barred with dark brown; forehead and upper breast with bolder bars of black and black centres, and washed with a pinky reddish tinge; lower breast, flanks and abdomen dull greyish-buff, with numerous faint vermiculations of grey brown, and with visible centres of deep chestnut- brown ; under tail coverts the same marked with chestnut. Three females from Chang Youn, in China, are more richly coloured above than any of the more western birds, but at the same time have practically no dark markings on the lower breast and abdomen; the flanks and thigh coverts are, however, fully as boldly marked as the other birds. (My own notes state that the facial skin, legs and feet are pale lead-grey.—W. B.) Measurements : bill from gape, 33 mm.; wing, 198'1 to 208'3; tail, 246°4 to 271°8; tarsus, 60°9 to 66 mm. SYNONYMY Phasianus elegans Elliot, Ann, Mag. Nat. Hist. (4), VI. 1870, p. 312; Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, p. 670 (Yun-ling Mts., W. Sze-cheun) ; Elliot, Mono. Phas., II. 1872, pl. VIII. (text) ; Seebohm, Ibis, 1888, p. 315 ; Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 329; Grant, Hand-list Game-birds, II. 1897, p. 31; Blanford, Fauna Brit. India, Birds, 1V. 1898, p. 81; Oates, Man. Game-birds, I. 1898, p. 299; Styan, Ibis, 1899, p. 298; Davies, Ibis, 1901, p. 408; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 411; Harrington, Jour. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc., XIX. 1909, p. 301 ; Sclater, Ibis, 1912, p. 554; Ingram, Nov. Zool., XIX. 1912, p. 271; Bailey, Geog. Jour., XXXIX. 1912, p. 346; Bailey, Jour. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc., XXII. 1913, p. 367; Bangs and Phillips, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., LVIII. No. 6, 1914, p. 269; Baker, Jour. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc., XXV. No. 3, 1918, p. 358. Phastanus sladent Anders, MS.; Elliot, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, pp. 404-8; Anders, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1871, p. 214; Swinhoe, Proc. Zool. London, 1871, p. 387; David et Oustalet, Ois. Chine, 1877, p. 411; Anders, Birds W. Yunnan, 1878, p. 671. Phasianus colchicus elegans Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37; Hartert, Nov. Zool. XXIV. 1917, Pp. 451. Phastanus siichschanensis Bianchi, Bull. Acad. St. Petersb., V. ser. T. XXIV. No. 1 & 2c, 1906, p. 83; Buturlin, Ibis, 1908, p. 574. PLATE LV KWEICHOW PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus decollatus Swinhoe OccurRING as far south as Tongking, this pheasant ranges higher than the more northern forms, and has been observed at an elevation of nine thousand feet. It seems to prefer bushy slopes to the dense forest. It differs from the pheasants to the east and north chiefly by the lack of a white collar, although traces of this are sometimes present. Finest stl vedi. cogent, Jaszood “atic ee s vivoewisl , a “ottid “adic acnioes ob aiienodsan Pint pe PLATE LY. sVAKA bho — Uys >» + sooe- ab - Noo So NS Aire go Z, XK KWEICHOW PHEASANT. KWEICHOW PHEASANT Phasianus colchicus decollatus Swinhoe NAMES.—Subspecific : decollatus, uncollared, or lacking a collar. English: Kweichow, or Chinese Ringless Pheasant. ; Type.—Locality: Chungkin in Szechuan. Describer: Swinhoe. Place of Description: Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, p. 135. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—Close to ‘orguatus, but with white collar usually wholly absent; the crown is dark green instead of pale bronze green, and the margins of the chest-feathers very broad and dark green instead of purple. Near the Ichang gorges, in the Yangtze, where this form approaches the range of corquatus, traces of the white collar become visible. The female resembles strauchi, but the black patches on the scapulars, wing- coverts and lower back are larger and more strongly marked. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION THE south-central Chinese provinces of Kweichow, Western Hunan and Kwangsi, Eastern Yunnan, and Szechuan as far as Tatsienlu. Four birds have been secured in northern Tongking. GENERAL ACCOUNT Pratt in Szechuan tells us that this pheasant is found on the grassy slopes on the spurs of the mountains up to an elevation of 9,000 feet. It avoids the forest regions, preferring bushy fields, and in confinement it always roosted on the ground. Blackwelder found newly hatched chicks at Tahopa on 7th of May. SYNONYMY Phasianus decollatus Swinhoe, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, p. 135 (Sze-chuen); Elliot, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, p. 408; Swinhoe, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1871, p. 398; David, N. Arch. Mus. Bull., VII. 1871, p. If (Sze-cheun] ; Elliot, Mono. Phas., II. 1872, pl. vii. (text) ; David et Oustalet, Ois. Chine, 1877, p. 411, pl. 100 (partim, cum Phasianus berezowskyz); Seebohm, Ibis, 1888, p. 314; Seebohm, Ibis, 1891, p. 380; Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 331; Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, II. 1897, p. 28; Sharpe, Hand-list Birds, Vol. I. 1899, p. 38; Dresser, Manual Palae. Birds, 1903, p. 663; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 409; Blackwelder, Research in China, Vol. I, pt. ii, p. 489. Phasianus colchicus decollatus Hartert, Nov. Zool., XXIV. 1917, p. 452. G3 Ea FORMOSAN RING-NECKED PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus formosanus Elliot NAMES.—Subspecific : formosanus, of Formosa, the island home of this form, English: Formosan Ring- necked Pheasant. TypE.—Locality: Formosa. Describer: D. G. Elliot. Place of Description: Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, p. 406. SUBSPECIFIC CHARACTERS.—The only character which can be trusted in the majority of cases is the paleness of the mantle and flanks, these being deeper and warmer in ¢orquatus. I have taken two birds well up the Yangtze, which are even lighter than formosanus, but in these cases the green margins were very wide. In Formosan birds I have known this green to be almost absent. The females of the two forms are identical. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION THE island of Formosa. SYNONYMY Phasianus torquatus Swinhoe, Ibis, 1863, p. 401 (partim) (nec Gmelin). Phasianus formosanus Elliot, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1870, p. 406 (Formosa) ; Elliot, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1871, p. 398; Elliot, Mono. Phas., II. 1872, pl. VI. (text); David et Oustalet, Ois. Chine, 1877, p. 410; Seebohm, Ibis, 1888, p. 313; Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., XXII. 1893, p. 333; de la Touche, Ibis, 1895, p. 338; Grant, Hand-book Game-birds, II. 1897, p. 27; de la Touche, Ibis, 1898, p. 373; Sharpe, Hand-list Birds, I. 1899, p. 37; Buturlin, Ibis, 1904, p. 398; Tegetmeier, Pheasants, 1904, p. 160 (race of PA. torquatus) ; Grant and de la Touche, Ibis, 1907, p. 277; Grant, Ibis, 1908, p. 606. Phasianus colchicus formosanus Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, XIV. 1904, p. 37; Hartert, Nov. Zool., XXIV. 1917, p. 451. 112 PLATE LVI FORMOSAN RING-NECKED PHEASANT Phastanus colchicus formosanus Elliot As the island of Formosa is over one hundred miles from shore, and as this pheasant differs from those on the neighbouring mainland only by the usually paler plumage, it is probable that it is more or less of a recent introduction. The cocks show considerable variation among themselves and the females are quite indistinguishable from the birds of the eastern Chinese Provinces. SusseRcric | aa palences of the mantie and flanks, being Aseper dd warmer in ton the Yang tae, which are-even Tehias ee eee 2 Formosan Dinds 1 have gow nthe: grecn ta be. ‘aiaest absent: -The femates- of the pcs tnie | mot 2iohib sapenodg aida 26 bas tore sont eolien boibaud 200 19v0, aeeomat to bash»