Field
Guide IDs: BREEDING:
Open country,
cultivated areas, marsh, woodland, forest edge. 1
brood. DISPLAYS:
Courtship: male on
"crowing territory" rises high on feet and calls
loudly while rapidly but briefly flapping wings;
struts in semicircles around female, head tucked,
tail spread, and wing toward female
drooped. NEST:
Usu concealed in
grass, weeds; shallow depression, occ barely lined
with leaves, grass. EGGS:
Brownish-olive, occ
pale blue, unmarked. 1.6" (42 mm). DIET:
Insects,
terrestrial and aquatic invertebrates, small
vertebrates; seeds, grain, fruit. CONSERVATION:
Winter resident.
Asian species widely introduced. Occ damages grain
crops. NOTES:
Females form group
that associates with, and is defended by, one male.
Strong breeding territory tenacity by male. Hens
are occ brood parasites, laying eggs in nests of
ducks or other gallinaceous birds. Female performs
distraction display. Male rarely accompanies hen
and chicks. Young independent at 10-12 weeks. Roost
in trees or on ground, occ loosely communal. Fall
and winter flocks often up to 30-40 birds, usu
sexes separate; strong dominance hierarchy in
flock. More common in
foothill and bayside areas; a few of these exotic
birds may be resident on campus. ESSAYS: Population
Dynamics;
Eye
Color;
Dominance
Hierarchies;
Brood
Parasitism;
Distraction
Displays;
Polygyny;
Site
Tenacity. REFERENCES:
Cramp and Simmons,
1980; Leopold et al., 1981; Snyder, 1984; Whiteside
and Guthery, 1983.
Phasianus colchicus Linnaeus
NG-132; G-92; PE-144; PW-pl 22; AE-pl 274; AW-pl
267; AM(I)-272
Location
Type
Mating System
Parental Care
2ndary Diet..
Strategy
I:
23-25 DAYS
PRECOCIAL
3
(6-15+)
POLYGYN
F
Except for Stanford Notes, the material in this species treatment is taken, with permission, from The Birder's Handbook (Paul Ehrlich, David Dobkin, & Darryl Wheye, Simon & Schuster, NY. 1988). |