COMMON PARTRIDGE. 



Perdix cinerea, Lath. 

 La Perdrix grise. 



So exclusively European is this celebrated bird, that as far as our own observations go, and these have not 

 been circumscribed, we have never seen an example either from Asia or Africa ; although M. Temminck 

 states that it visits Egypt and the shores of Barbary. In affinity it appears to us to rank directly intermediate 

 between the Quails and Redlegs, and with some species from India to form an independent genus to the 

 exclusion of the Quails on the one hand and the Redlegs on the other ; and as the Quails have been already 

 separated, it is to us very evident that the Redlegs ought to be separated also. 



We do not propose to enter into any details respecting the circumstances that render the Partridge so 

 interesting to sportsmen, as the subject has already engaged the attention of numerous writers, to whose 

 accounts we have nothing to add. 



The Partridge pairs early in spring, when fierce contests ensue between the males for the possession of the 

 females. They rear one brood in the year, consisting of from ten to eighteen young, which generally make 

 their appearance about the end of June, and continue associated during the autumn and winter, forming what 

 the sportsman calls a covey, and in the ensuing spring separate, each selecting its mate. The eggs are 

 deposited on the ground in a small hollow, scratched for the purpose under the cover of a tuft of grass or 

 any similar material, and is not unfrequently found in fields of clover or standing corn. The males are 

 distinguished from the females by being larger in size, by possessing a brighter colour about the face, by 

 having a large chestnut-coloured mark on the breast, and by wanting the transverse bars of brown on the 

 upper surface so conspicuous in the plumage of the female. 



The Partridge prefers wide tracts of rich corn land to more barren and uncultivated districts, and in bleak 

 and mountainous situations is almost unknown. 



The male has the cheek, throat, and a stripe over each eye pale buff; the neck and breast bluish 

 grey ornamented with fine zigzag black lines ; on the breast a large horseshoe-shaped patch of chestnut 

 brown ; flanks grey, banded with pale brown ; back, wings, rump, and upper tail-coverts brown transversely 

 barred and spotted with black ; shafts of the scapularies and wing-coverts yellowish white edged with black ; 

 quills blackish grey barred with brown ; tail reddish orange ; bill, legs, and toes bluish grey ; irides brown ; 

 naked skin behind the eye red. 



The particulars in which the female differs having been pointed out above, it will be unnecessary to repeat 

 them here. 



We have figured male and female of the natural size. 



