(Redirected from Bronze-tailed Peacock Pheasant)
The 'Bronze-tailed Peacock-pheasant', ''Polyplectron chalcurum'' also known as 'Sumatran Peacock-pheasant' is a small, up to 56cm long, dark brown
pheasant with dark grey legs, rather small head and long, narrow tail of sixteen feathers. The tail feathers are chestnut brown with metallic purplish bars near tips. Both sexes are similar. The male has longer tail, two spurs on legs and yellow
iris while the unspurred female's is dark brown.
An
Indonesian
endemic, the Bronze-tailed Peacock-pheasant inhabits to mountain forests of west
Sumatra. As with other member in the
genus, this elusive bird is shy and very wary. But unlike other
peacock-pheasants, it has no
ocelli. Unusually for Galliformes, pairs of this species move around together not only on foot, but also in the air, in the manner of
doves.
mtDNA cytochrome ''b'' and
D-loop as well as the
nuclear ovomucoid intron G data confirms that this species belongs to a
clade together with the
Mountain Peacock-pheasant, but also the mainland species
Germain's Peacock-pheasant and
Grey Peacock-pheasant (Kimball ''et al.'' 2001).
The molecular data suggests - though not with high confidence - that this species diverged relatively recently from ancestral Grey Peacock-pheasants. This is quite spurious, since
biogeography, its peculiarly derived plumage, and the fact that it is an insular mountain endemic indicate it is derived from a comparatively small
founder population; this would confound molecular analyses. What seems clear is that the present species
evolved from mainland Southeast Asian stock, probably during the
Late Pliocene to
Early Pleistocene (3.6-1
mya[1]). The loss of ocelli thus is, contrary to long-held opinion, an
autapomorphy, and the southern species of this clade - formerly separated in the genus ''Chalcurus'' - are probably not each other's closest relatives.
The Bronze-tailed Peacock-pheasant is evaluated as Least Concern on the
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
References
★ Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
★ 'Kimball', Rebecca T.; Braun, Edward L.; Ligon, J. David; Lucchini, Vittorio & Randi, Ettore (2001): A molecular phylogeny of the peacock-pheasants (Galliformes: ''Polyplectron'' spp.) indicates loss and reduction of ornamental traits and display behaviours. ''
Biol. J. Linn. Soc.'' '73'(2): 187–198.
HTML abstract
Footnotes
1.
Note that the molecular clock calibration method used by Kimball ''et al.'' (2001) is now known to be inappropriate, yielding far too low estimates in galliform birds.
External links
★
BirdLife Species Factsheet