170 PHEASANTS FOB COVERTS AND AVIARIES. 



well as I could the nature of my double-barrelled gun, and 

 the use of percussion caps, which seemed to astonish and 

 delight him yery much. A pipe of tobacco which I Offered 

 was gladly accepted; and in answer to a question that he. 

 appeared to understand, he. gave me the name of the pheasant 

 as Ki-zhi. Later in the day more people came to the hills,. 

 some for the purpose of digging roots, others to look after 

 their cattle, which appeared to be turned out to graze on th& 

 hills. The birds had taken to the bushes, where I could not 

 follow them, and so obtained no more specimens on that 

 occasion. 



" A few days after. Lieutenants Bent and Nicholson and 

 myself made another shooting excursion to the hills, but 

 although we saw many pheasants, but a single specimen was 

 shot, and the birds appeared to be very shy. We obserred 

 several .Tapanese with matchlocks about the hiUs, firing away 

 at a great rate. As we did not see either of them with 

 game, and as the game-laws of Japan are very severe, so 

 much so, indeed, that their observance has been made a 

 special article of the treaty with the United States, I con- 

 cluded that the firing was only for the purpose of driving 

 away the pheasants to places where they would be more 

 secure from the strangers." 



The three species of pheasants — the P. versicolor, 

 torquatus, and cohhicus — readily breed with each other, 

 and the mixed progeny, from whatever parentage, are 

 perfectly fertile. The effect of this introduction of foreign 

 blood in our common breed has been amazing, producing an 

 increase of size and vigour, and beautiful variations in the 

 plumage, dependent on the species whose blood predominates 

 in the cross. 



Nothing can be more interesting than the production of 

 these beautiful mongrels, which increase so rapidly that 

 Gould stated his opinion that in twenty years' time it would be 

 difficult to find a true species in this country. This, however, 

 he regarded as of little moment, as fresh birds can always be 



