THE
JAPAN PHEASANT.
| ORIGINALLY the
Pheasant was an inhabitant of Asia Minor but has been by
degrees introduced into many countries, where its beauty
of form, plumage, and the delicacy of its flesh made it a
welcome visitor. The Japan Pheasant is a very beautiful
species, about which little is known in its wild state,
but in captivity it is pugnacious. It requires much
shelter and plenty of food, and the breed is to some
degree artificially kept up by the hatching of eggs under
domestic liens and feeding them in the coop like ordinary
chickens, until they are old and strong enough to get
their own living. The food of this bird is extremely varied. When young it is generally fed on ants eggs, maggots, grits, and similar food, but when it is full grown it is possessed of an accommodating appetite and will eat many kinds of seeds, roots, and leaves. It will also eat beans, peas, acorns, berries, and has even been known to eat the ivy leaf, as well as the berry. |
This Pheasant loves the ground,
runs with great speed, and always prefers to trust to its
legs rather than to its wings. It is crafty, and when
alarmed it slips quickly out of sight behind a bush or
through a hedge, and then runs away with astonishing
rapidity, always remaining under cover until it reaches
some spot where it deems itself safe. The male is not
domestic, passing all independent life during a part of
the year and associating with others of its own sex
during the rest of the season. The nest is very rude, being merely a heap of leaves and grass on the ground, with a very slight depression. The eggs are numerous, about eleven or twelve, and olive brown in color. In total length, though they vary considerably, the full grown male is about three feet. The female is smaller in size than her mate, and her length a foot less. The Japan Pheasant is not a particularly interesting bird aside from his beauty, which is indeed brilliant, there being few of the species more attractive. |