Chestnut-necklaced partridge


The chestnut-necklaced partridge is a species of bird in the family Phasianidae. It is found in forests in the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra and Borneo. It is threatened by habitat loss and trapping. The International Union for Conservation of Nature has assessed it as vulnerable.

Taxonomy

This species was described by Thomas Campbell Eyton as Perdix Charltonii in 1845. The IOC World Bird List recognises the subspecies T. c. charltonii found in the Malay Peninsula, T. c. atjenensis in Sumatra, and T. c. graydoni in Borneo. The Handbook of the Birds of the World considers graydoni to be a separate species. Some authorities have considered the green-legged partridge to be conspecific with this species.

Description

The chestnut-necklaced partridge is long. The male weighs about and the female weighs about. The crown and nape are brown, with dark speckles. The whitish supercilium, throat and neck have brown streaks. The upper breast is chestnut, with a blackish collar above it. The lower breast is brown, and the belly and flanks are buff. There are dark scales on the lower breast and flanks. The upperparts are brown, finely marked blackish and buff. The beak is greenish yellow, and the legs are yellow. The female bird is smaller and a little duller than the male. The subspecies atjenensis has brighter plumage, and graydoni has greenish-yellow legs.

Distribution and habitat

This partridge is found in the Thai-Malay Peninsula, Aceh, South Sumatra and Sabah. Its habitat is lowland evergreen forest and secondary forest.

Behaviour

This partridge probably forages in small groups, eating seeds, berries and termites. Its breeding has not been recorded. Its call is loud, steady couplets and triplets of whistles, and pairs often duet.

Status

The number of mature individuals is probably less than 10,000 and may be less than 2500. On Sumatra, the species has rarely been recorded recently. It is suspected to be declining because deforestation, logging and forest fires have destroyed much habitat and it is trapped and traded. The IUCN has assessed it as a vulnerable species. The IUCN considers T. c. graydoni a separate species and has assessed it to be of least concern.