Elliot's pheasant


Elliot's pheasant, is a large pheasant native to south-eastern China.

Description

Males are up to long; they are brown and white with a black throat, chestnut-brown upper parts, white belly, nape and wing bars, red bare facial skin and long rusty-barred whitish tail. Females are smaller, at long; they are rufous brown with a blackish throat, whitish belly and less barred tail.

Distribution

Elliot's pheasant is endemic to south-eastern China, where it lives in evergreen and mountain forests at altitudes of. Its diet consists mainly of seeds, leaves and berries.

Taxonomy

Elliot's pheasant was first described in 1872 by Robert Swinhoe, under the name "Phasianus ellioti"; the type material was from Ningpo, Zhejiang province, China. The specific epithet ellioti commemorates the American ornithologist Daniel Giraud Elliot; Swinhoe explained his choice thus:

Conservation

Although there is ongoing habitat loss, and the species has a limited range and is hunted for food, Elliot's pheasant is evaluated as near threatened on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, as it does not appear to be declining appreciably in numbers. It is listed on Appendix I of CITES.