PERDICULA ARGOONDAH.
Argoondah Bush-Quail.
Cotumix Argoondah, Sykes, Proc. of Comm, of Sci. and Corr. of Zool. Soc., p a rt ii. p. 153.—Id. Trans. Zóol. Soc.,
vol. ii. p. 17, pi. 2.—Burg, in Proc. Zool. Soc., p a r t xxiii. p. 31.—Gray and Mitch. Gen. of Birds,
vol. iii. p. 507, Cotumix, sp. 8;—Jerd. Madras JoUrn. o f Lit. and Sci., vol. xii. p. 6.
Perdix rubiginosa, Valenc. ? (Blyth).
Perdicula Argoondah, B lyth, Cat. of B irds in Mus. Asiat. Soc. Calcutta, p . 254, and app. p. 342 (app. to no. 1518).
—Id . Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., vol. xx. p. 322.—Layard, Ann. and Mag. N at. Hist., 2nd ser. vol. xiv.
p. 107.
Lauwau Partridge, Lath. Gen. Hist., vol. viii. p. 304 (Blyth).
Geerza, Hind, Blyth.
I t will be seen by the following extract from Colonel Sykes’s paper “ On the Quails and Hemipodii of India,”
published in the second volume of the ‘ Transactions of the Zoological Society of London,’ that the remark
I have made in my account of Perdicula asiatica, as to the infinite variation in the colouring and markings of
the Bush-Quails, is fully borne out by the observations of that gentleman.
“ There are so many trifling variations in the markings of the plumage of the upper surface of this bird,
that it is difficult to fix upon the exact type. The male is readily distinguished by the numerous transverse
narrow black bars upon the b rea s t; but the young males and the females want these bars, aud vary so much
in the markings on the back, that, with those disposed to manufacture species from plumage alone, the
eleven specimens before me, from Dukhan, would furnish at least four new species. The varieties in these
eleven specimens consist in the adult male birds being destitute of the black blotches on the upper surface,
black bars on the tail, and black tips to the feathers on the back o f the neck, but having the tawny bars.
One adult male exactly resembles the female, on the upper surface, in the absence of distinct markings, but
has a more rufous shade of plumage. A female has faint black bars on the breast. Had these birds come
to hand as isolated specimens, they would probably have been considered as distinct species. There is
scarcely any difference in the size of the males and females.
“ These birds do not frequent cultivated lands, but are found all over Dukhan on the general level of the
country, amidst rocks and low bushes; they rise in coveys of from ten to twenty, or more, from under the
feet, with a startling suddenness and b ustle; and the young sportsman is perplexed in selecting his bird.
They are gregarious and, I infer, polygamous, as I never saw them solitary or in pairs. Flesh perfectly
white.
“ This is the species used for Quail-fights by the natives, and not Cotumix dactylisonans, or C. lexti/is.”
In the ‘ Proceedings o f the Zoological Society,’ Colonel Sykes says that this bird is also found “ on the
most elevated table-lands and slopes o f the mountains, amidst reeds and grass; specimens procured at
4000 feet above the sea.”
“ This pretty little Quail,” says Captain Burgess, “ is an inhabitant of stony hills and bushy sides of
streams and nullahs. I t lives in bevies, and is to be met with in company with the grey and black-breasted
Quails. It breeds generally during the months o f November and December; but I have had its eggs
brought to me as late as March, and have procured a young bird, well fledged, as early as the 20th of
November. It does not, I believe, lay more than four eggs, as on three different occasions I have had that
number brought to me, and on a fourth, four young ones, just fledged, when out Quail-shooting. They
were covered with down, and had the appearance of being powdered. The eggs are of a pale buff colour,
1 foth inch in length, by ^ths of an inch in width.’’
Mr. Layard, speaking of the bird as seen by him in Ceylon, says, “ I have only seen one pair of these
elegant little Partridges; they were caught alive at Cotta, near Colombo, in Ceylon. I have an egg which
can only belong to this bird, also found in the same locality; axis 12 lines, diam. 9 lines. It precisely
resembles a diminutive Partridge egg.”
The male has the forehead, a broad stripe above the eye, and the throat-gorget rich reddish chestnut; a
line along the lores of buffy white; above the red superciliary stripe a second stripe of buffy white, bordered