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Mountain peacock pheasant

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Subfamily
  
Argusianinae

Scientific name
  
Polyplectron inopinatum

Higher classification
  
Peacock-pheasant

Order
  
Galliformes

Family
  
Phasianidae

Genus
  
Polyplectron

Phylum
  
Chordata

Rank
  
Species

Mountain peacock-pheasant wwwliewwkphotocomblogwpcontentuploads20160

Similar
  
Peacock‑pheasant, Bird, Bronze‑tailed peacock‑pheasant, Malayan peacock‑pheasant, Germain's peacock‑pheasant

Mountain peacock pheasant


The mountain peacock-pheasant (Polyplectron inopinatum) also known as Rothschild's peacock-pheasant or mirror pheasant is a medium-sized, up to 65 cm long, blackish brown pheasant with small ocelli and long graduated tail feathers. Both sexes are similar. The male has metallic blue ocelli on upperparts, green ocelli on tail of twenty feathers and two spurs on legs. Female has black ocelli on upperparts, unspurred legs and tail of eighteen feathers. The female is smaller and duller than male.

Contents

Mountain peacock-pheasant Mountain peacockpheasant videos photos and facts Polyplectron

A shy and elusive bird, the mountain peacock-pheasant is distributed and endemic to montane forests of the central Malay Peninsula. The diet consists mainly of berries, beetles and ants.

Mountain peacock-pheasant liewwkphotocom Let39s Dance Mountain PeacockPheasant liewwk

Mitochondrial DNA 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 bronze-tailed peacock-pheasant, Germain's peacock-pheasant and grey peacock-pheasant (Kimball et al. 2001).

Mountain peacock-pheasant Mountain PeacockPheasant Polyplectron inopinatum Google Search

The molecular data suggests - though not with high confidence - that this species diverged from mainland stock earlier than the bronze-tailed peacock-pheasant. This is quite spurious, since its biogeography and derived plumage, and the fact that it is a peninsular mountain endemic indicate it is derived from a fairly 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 myr). The unique pattern of wings and tail 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.

Mountain peacock-pheasant Mountain peacockpheasant photo Polyplectron inopinatum G21244

Due to ongoing habitat loss, small population size and limited range, the mountain peacock-pheasant is evaluated as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. It is listed on Appendix III of CITES in Malaysia.

Mountain peacock-pheasant Mountain PeacockPheasant PhotoMalaysia Community

Mountain peacock pheasant


Mountain peacock-pheasant Mountain Peacock Pheasant photo 996sps photos at pbasecom

Mountain peacock-pheasant

References

Mountain peacock-pheasant Wikipedia