EUPSYCHORTYX PARVICRISTATUS, Gould. 
Short-crested Partridge. 
Specific Character. 
Eups. cristce plumis brevibus, rectis, ad apicem rotundatis,ftiscis ; plumis auricularibus Juscis; 
pectore vinaceo vel rubescenti-cinereo, et fusco minutissime guttato. 
Male.- —Crest short, straight, light brown tipped with buff; forehead buff; throat and a broad 
stripe down each side of the head, above and behind the eye, rusty red ; ear-coverts brown ; 
collar surrounding the neck, narrow in front and broad behind, black, spotted with white 
and stained with chestnut; centre of the back, between the shoulders, minutely freckled 
grey, brown and black; remainder of the back blackish brown, each feather freckled 
on the margin with grey; scapularies freckled grey and brown, and ornamented on their 
inner webs with large patches of dark brown; wing-coverts freckled, and with a large 
spot of dark brown and another of white near the extremity of each feather; primaries 
light brown fringed with greyish white, and a few indistinctly barred with freckles of the 
same on their outer webs; tail brown, crossed by narrow freckled bands of whitish and 
darker brown; across the breast a band of greyish red blotched with a darker tint; 
breast rufous, each feather with six spots of light buff encircled with dark brown, the 
spots gradually increasing in size on the flanks and lower part of the abdomen, and the 
rufous tint changing into blackish brown; vent buff; under tail-coverts like the abdomen, 
but the markings less distinct; bill black ; feet black. 
Female. —Crown of the head and crest very dark brown, the tips of the latter reddish brown ; 
throat and stripe over the eye sandy buff, streaked with black ; feathers of the chest buff 
at the tip and crossed in the middle with an arrow-shaped mark of black; flanks spotted 
as in the male, but less brilliant; the upper surface is also similar but paler. 
Total length, 8 inches; bill , > ; wing, 3f ; tail, ; tarsi, lx ; middle toe and nail, lx. 
Ortyx parvicristatus, Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc., Part XI. p. 106.—List of Birds in Brit. 
Mus. Coll., Part III. p. 44. 
This species is very nearly allied to E. Sonninii, but is of a much larger size, and may, moreover, be distin¬ 
guished from that bird by the brown colour of the ear-coverts, by the short, straight, broad and flat form 
of its crest-feathers, and by the bolder style of the markings of the flanks. Numerous examples have lately 
been imported into this country, but nothing has yet been recorded of its habits or economy. 
Habitat. The Columbian Andes. 
The figures represent the two sexes of the natural size. 
