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Swinhoe's
Pheasant
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Lophura
swinhoii
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Taiwan
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Measurements
Length: 50 to 80cm
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Diet
Swinhoe's pheasants
have a varied diet, including acorns, berries, flower buds, leaves
and other plant material, as well as a few earthworms, millipedes,
termites and other insects. |
Identification
There is a large
white patch on the upper back, the shoulders are maroon and the wing-coverts
are metallic greenish-black. The long central tail feather is white.
Hens are mostly brown, speckled with triangular yellowish-buff markings.
First year males look similar to adult males, but are duller and the
white patch on the back is mottled brown. |
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Behaviour
During the breeding
season, from March until July, males perform impressive courtship
displays to entice females to mate (4). This involves flaunting
their brilliant metallic plumage and erecting their white crest
and red face wattles, while they bob their head up and down, jump
around and whirr their wings.
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Distribution & Habitat
Mountainous forests
of central Taiwan. |
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Reproduction
Peak egg-laying
probably occurs in March to May. Nests are built in highly secretive,
well hidden places under large shelters, such as at the foot of a
tree or under rocks. Clutches of 3 to 8 eggs are laid and then incubated
for around 25 days by the female alone. |
The bird was named after the
British ornithologist Robert Swinhoe, who first described the species
in 1862.
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Conservation
Classified as Appendix
1 under CITES. This species became critically endangered fifty years
ago but numbers have recovered after the introduction of in-situ conservation
measures. |