TURNIX DUSSUMIERI, Temm.
Little Hemipode.
Hemipodius Dussumieri, Temm. PI. Col. 454. fig. 2.—Sykes, Proc. of Comm, o f Sci. and Corr. of Zool. Soc., p a rt
ii. p. 155— Id. Beng. Sport. Mag., 1836, pi. i. fig. 5.—Id . Trans. Zool. Soc. o f Lond., vol. ii. p. 23.
T umix Dussumieri, G. R. Gray, L ist of Spec, o f Birds in Coll. Brit. Mus., p a r t iii. Gallirue, See., p. 41.—Id . p a rt v.
Gallince, p. 67 Jerd. Birds of India, vol. ii. p a rt ii. p. 599.—Blyth, Ibis, 1867, p. 161.
Hemipodius varidbilis, Hodgs. Beng. Sport. Mag., 1837, p. 345.
Tumix SyJcesi, Smith, Zool. o f S. Africa.—Jerd. Birds of Ind., vol. ii. p a rt ii. p. 600.—Blyth, Ibis, 1867, p. 161.
Dabki of some Hindoos, Tura of others.
Chininaj of the Hindoos a t Muttra.
Libbia of the Hindoos a t Purneah.
Tata battera in' Scinde.
Chinna, tella, o r pedda daba gunalu, in Telegu.
This little Tumix has been for a long time a sad puzzle to ornithologists, and much confusion consequently
exists respecting its synonymy. Mr. Blyth is, I believe, convinced that there is only one species of
these little Button-Quails, as they are called by many Indian sportsman, and that the birds named Tumix
Dussumieri and T Syfcesi are identical; and I may remark that I have never seen a bird with characters
sufficiently different to induce me to regard them as otherwise. Probably the great variation in the size
and' colouring of the sexes may have been the cause of Dr. Smith and Mr. Jerdon considering them to
constitute two species. Colonel Sykes, in his valuable paper “ On the Quails and Hemipodii of India ”
published in the second volume of the ‘ Transactions of the Zoological Society of London,’ states that
the Tumix Dussumieri “ affects short grass and fields of pulse of Dolichos bijlorus, Phaseolus max, and
Ermrn tens,” that he “ never found the bird otherwise than solitary,” and that “ it is so difficult to flush that
it not unfrequently rises from beneath the fe e t; and when on the wing its flight is so abrupt, angular,
and short that it is generally down ere the gun is well up to the shoulder.”
This “ Button-Quail,” as it is called by sportsmen in India, says Mr. Jerdon, “ is found in open grassy
glades in forests or jungles, both on the plains and more especially in hilly districts, and is also found in
grass jungles throughout Bengal and the countries to the eastward. It occurs throughout India in suitable
localities, is rare in the bare Deccan and North-western Provinces, and is not uncommon in open glades of
the upland districts of Malabar, in the Eastern Ghats, and in lower Bengal. It is always seen singly, in
patches of long grass, cornfields, and wherever there is thick herbage. I t is flushed with great difficulty,
often, getting up a t your very feet, flies but a few yards, and drops down again into the grass, not to be
re-flushed but after a most laborious search, and sometimes allowing itself to be caught by the hand or by a
dog. Its name of Dabki, signifying ‘ squatter,’ is given from this habit. It emits a low plaintive moan of
a single note. I regret that I know nothing of its habits as to breeding, &c.”
Feathers o f the crown light brown, with dark margins ; line over the eye and the ear-coverts light
fulvous; back of the neck bright rust-red; upper surface reddish brown, barred with dark brown, these
bars being most conspicuous on the lower part of the back and the rump; scapularies, and some of the
contiguous back-feathers margined with yellowish cream-colour; wing-coverts pale sandy brown, with a
black spot near the pale-yellowish-margined tip ; primaries dark brown, narrowly margined with yellowish
white; chin and upper part of the throat white, remainder of the under surface rusty red, richest on the
upper half o f the abdomen and the b rea st; bill yellow ; irides yellowish white ; legs and feet deep yellow.
The plate represents the two sexes of the size of life.