158 PHEASANTS FOB COVEBTS AND AVIABIES. 



was then confined with a common hen pheasant, and there 

 were a few of the chicks pied. Lastly, a pied cock and a pied 

 hen were confined together, and invariably every one of the 

 •chicks was pied. I have tried the experiment frequently 

 with the same results." And a third states : — "I deny that 

 the cross between the white and common pheasant will 

 produce pied, when both are pure bred. I have tried the 

 ■cross in confinement for years, and never produced one pied 

 bird from it; and before the pied breed were introduced 

 into the preserves here, we had an abundance of white cocks 

 and white hens, and, believing at that time that the pied was 

 the result of p, cross between the white and common pheasant, 

 I used to watch the nides of every white hen, and was 

 surprised that in no instance was there one pied chick, though 

 .some were white." 



The explanation of the difficulty of breeding pied birds 

 irom a white and a coloured parent, and the ease with which 

 ring-necks are produced and perpetuated, is soon given. 

 Eing-necks are derived more or less directly from the 

 P. torquatus, a permanent race, that has a strong tendency to 

 reproduce its like ; but white and pied birds are merely 

 .accidental variations, and not even a thoroughly established 

 breed, and therefore are not prepotent in propagating their 

 like, but have a strong tendency to throw back to the 

 .stock from which they were derived. 



