THAUMALEA PICTA.
Golden Pheasant.
Phasiams pictus, Linn. Syst. Na t., tom. i. p. 272.—Id . Gmel. Edit., tom. i. p. 743.—Lath. Ind. Om., vol. ii.
p. 630.—Shaw, Mus. Lev., p. 206, pi. 60.—Pall. Zoog. Ross.-Asiat., tom. ii. p. 86.—'Temm. Man.
d’O rn., 2nde 6dit., tom. i. p. xc.—Id. Hist. Nat. Gen. des Pig. e t Gall., tom. ii. p. 341, e t vol. iii.
p. 671.—Benn. Gard. and Menag. Zool. Soc. del. Birds, p. 59:
------------- sanguineus, Klein, Aves, 114. 3.
— aureus Sinensis, Briss. Orn., tom. i. p. 271.
Faisan dort de la Chine, Buff. Hist. Nat. des Ois., tom. ii. p. 355.—Id. PI. Enl. 217.
Painted, or Gold Pheasant, Lath. Gen. Syn., vol. iv. p. 717.—Edw. Nat. Hist., o f B irds, pi. 68, male, pi. 69, low.
fig., female.
Pheasant, Lath. Gen. Hist., vol. viii. p. 194.
Thaumalea picta, Wagl., Isis, 1832.—Gray, Gen. o f Birds, vol.. iiife.p. 497, Thaumalea, sp. 1 Gray, L ist of
Spec, o f Birds in Coll. Brit. Mus., p a r t iii. p. 24.—Sclat. in Proc. o f Zool. Soc., 1863, p. 117.—
Schrenck, Vog. des Amur-landes, p. 521.
Chrysolophus pictus, Gray, 111. Ind. Zool. pi.
Epomis picta, Hodgs.
A lth o u g h this beautiful bird lias been a denizen of our aviaries for upwards of a hundred years, we
know no more o f its history or o f the districts o f China it inhabits than we did when the illustrious
Swede characterized it as Phasianus p ictu s; and what Latham wrote respecting it half a century ago
is all that can he said abou|fI|t at the present day.
It is reported to frequent the northern rather than the southern portion o f China. Mr. Sclater gives as
its habitat “ Southern Dauria and the eastern p art o f the Desert of Mongolia, advancing in summer sometimes
up to the Amoor; also the provinces of Kansu and Sechuen, in the interior of China, whence, Mr. Swinboe
informs us, living examples are brought into Canton for sale.”
Latham says, “ The native place of this beautiful species is China, where it is called Kinfci or Kin/cee,
which signifies Gold-flower Fowl, or W rought Fowl. As it is a hardy bird, attempts have been made to
naturalize it in our climate, and many pairs have been turned out for this purpose, but, it is to be lamented,
without success, the birds having in every instance been shot by some greedy and improvident sportsman,
and we do not know of its breeding a t large anywhere in Europe. It bears confinement well, and there
breeds freely; hence any further importation from its native country seems needless. The flavour of its
flesh is reported to exceed that of our species. The sexes are said to be subject to considerable change of
appearance, and Edwards mentions that the females o f some kept by Lady Essex in the space of six years
gradually gained the male feathers; and we have been informed that it is not unusual for the hens, when
about four or five years old, to be neglected by the cocks and gradually to gain the plumage of the other sex.”
The head of the male is ornamented with a silky crest of fine amber-yellow feathers, those a t the back of
the head and neck being much prolonged, square a t the ends, and of a rich orange-red, with a transverse
narrow bar of blackish blue at the t ip ; at the will of the bird, these feathers are capable of being raised and
brought forward, so as nearly to meet a t the front of the n eck; the feathers of the upper half of the back
are o f a dark glossy green, bordered at their rounded tips with a narrow band of velvety black; lower part
o f the back and rump rich wax-yellow; wing-coverts mottled dark brown and chestnut; greater coverts and
spurious wing blackish brown with deep buff shafts and a line of the same hue along the margin of the
outer web; primaries dark brown, with a broad band of pale buff along the basal two-thirds of the outer
web, beyond which the apical portion of the shaft becomes o f the same t in t ; secondaries dark brown, mottled
with chestnut on their outer margins; tertiaries deep rich blue; cheeks flesh-coloured, sparingly clothed
with feathers of the same t in t; throat light orange-brown, all the under surface intense scarlet; upper tail-
coverts long, narrow, of a rich crimson, and falling down on each side of the ta il; two centre tail-feathers
deep or blackish brown, mottled with numerous irregularly shaped blotches of buffy brown arranged in a
series of diagonal rows; the remaining tail-feathers crossed diagonally with alternate wavy bands of dark
and buffy brown, which become deeper in colour and less diagonal as the feathers recede from the c en tre ;
all the tail-feathers of a light buff at their extremities; irides orange; bill yellow at the tip, horny at the
base; feet pale yellow.
The female is rusty brown, barred on the head, neck, and back with very dark brown, which markings
become much smaller and irregular on the lower part of the back and upper tail-coverts, where the lighter
hue becomes freckled with dark brown ; wings dark brown, banded with reddish buff; under surface yellowish
buff, banded on the neck with.narrow, and on the flanks with broad, bands of blackish brown ; tail
crossed by alternate and irregular diagonal bands of black and greyish buff, which are broad and conspicuous
on the central feathers, but become narrower and more regular on the lateral o n e s; irides hazel; feet like
those of the male, but somewhat paler.
The accompanying Plate, in which the figures are about two-thirds o f the natural size, will give a good
idea of the great difference in the colouring of the sexes.