CALOPHASIS ELLIOTL 



Elliot's Pheasant. 



Phasianus Elliott, Swinhoe, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 550. 



Calophasis Ellioti, Elliot, Monogr. Phasian. ii. pi. 13 bis (1873). 



If there has been one bird which has more than any other puzzled ornithologists lately, it is the remarkable 

 and beautiful species figured in the accompanying Plate ; and it must strike every one with surprise that so 

 showy a bird should have remained so long undiscovered. Still so it is ; and it has been left to Mr. 

 Swinhoe, during his last trip to China, to discover and send to England fine skins of this abnormal Pheasant. 

 To say that it is a true Pheasant would be wrong ; for although it exhibits the general form of a 

 Phasianus, its plumage partakes of the characters of several other members of the family, as has been 

 pointed out by Mr. Elliot in the account of the species transcribed below. In fact the bird is (if such a 

 thing were possible) a medley of two or three forms together, which one could have imagined to have been 

 produced by their constant interbreeding. We must, however, regard it as a true species, and one of which 

 both Mr. Swinhoe and Mr. Elliot, who have done so much to increase our knowledge of the Pheasants, may 

 well be proud — the former as the describer of, and the latter in having his name attached to, so fine a bird. 



I cannot do better than reproduce the account which Mr. Elliot has lately published in his Monograph ; 

 and I do so the more willingly as the rarity of the last-mentioned work renders it probable that many of my 

 readers have not had the opportunity of perusing the original account. 



"This magnificent species, upon which Mr. Swinhoe has done me the honour of bestowing my name, is 

 one of the most interesting, as it is also one of the most recent, novelties which that zealous and indefatigable 

 naturalist has made known to science. It is a native of the mountain-range that lies behind Ningpo, in the 

 Chinese province of Che-Kiang, where it represents, to a certain extent, such Pheasants as Phasianus 

 torquatus, which inhabit the great tract lying between the hilly regions and the sea. On discovering this 

 beautiful bird my friend immediately notified me of his good fortune, sending at the same time one of the 

 feathers from the back, by which I was enabled to perceive that the species was entirely unknown in Europe." 



"In his paper read lately before the Zoological Society of London, in which this and some other birds are 

 described, Mr. Swinhoe writes of this Pheasant as follows : — 



" ' From the mountainous region of this province (Che-Kiang) I have procured a truly beauteous Pheasant, 

 perhaps the loveliest of that lovely group. It is smaller than P. torquatus, and has comparatively shorter 

 wings and longer tail. The colouring of its head and tail recall P. Reevesii, its coppery back and breast the 

 P. Soemmeringii of Japan, and the glowing maroon on its scapulars the Euplocamus Swinhoii of Formosa; but 

 its curiously marked lower back and its white-barred wing are suggested by no other species of this family 

 to my knowledge, and its white underparts no other true Pheasant possesses." 



" ' Its mate is a smaller bird, and in coloration more of a Grouse than a Pheasant ; but in her black under- 

 neck, and in the marks of her lateral rectrices, she shows her relationship to her lord. Possessed of so 

 many striking characters, it would be easy to find an appropriate name for so marked a species ; but on 

 glancing down the list of Pheasants I find that not one bears the name of Elliot ; and it strikes me it would 

 be wrong to allow his magnificent work on the group to close without the figure of a bird dedicated to him- 

 self : I therefore propose to name this firstfruits of my researches in this province Phasianus Ellioti.'' " 



" Desiring, equally with myself, that this new species should be illustrated in this work, Mr. Swinhoe at 

 once forwarded to his agent in London the male and female, which he had with much difficulty been able to 

 procure ; and soon after their arrival they came into my possession, in perfect condition, making a most 

 valuable addition to my collection of these beautiful birds. 



"Although Mr. Swinhoe has placed this species in the genus Phasianus among the true Pheasants, I am 

 unable to agree with him (after carefully examining the specimens) in deeming that to be its correct position. 

 In many points it resembles the true Pheasants; but in many more this new form differs entirely from them. 

 The head of the male resembles somewhat those of the true Pheasants, although I doubt if the naked skin 

 would ever expand into the large conspicuous wattles which form such a striking mode of adornment in the 

 members of the genus Phasianus ; while the bill is smaller, and the nostrils are only partially covered by a 

 scale. One of the most remarkable differences perceptible is in the structure and form of the feathers on 

 the lower part of the rump. In all true Pheasants these are long, loose, split, and of a hairy-like texture, 

 very dense, and they almost, if not entirely, conceal the upper tail-coverts. Now the present species exhibits 



