LOPHOPHORUS IMPEYANUS. Monaul. Phasianus Impejanus, Lath. Ind. Orn., vol. ii. ps Go25 curvirostris, Shaw, Mus. Lev. pl. p. 103. Lophophorus refulgens, Temm. Pig. et Gall.—Ib. Pl. Col. 507, male ; Zool., vol. xi. p. 249. pl. 15. Impeyan Pheasant, Lath. Gen. Syn., Supp. p- 208. pl. 114.—Th. Gen. Hist., vol. viii. p. 210. pl. cxxv Phasianus Impeyanus, Vieill. et Bonn. Ency. Méth. Orn., Part I. p. 186. pl. 88. fig. 1. ee Le Monaul Impeyan, Vieill. et Bonn. Ency. Méth. Orn., Part I. p. 366. Monaulus Impeyanus, Vieill. Gall. des Ois., tom. ii. pl. 208. Lophophorus Impeyanus, Gould, Century of Birds, pl. 60, male; 61, female. Impeyanus refulgens, Less. Traité d’Orn., p. 488; Atlas to ditto, pl. 85. Monaul; Ghur Monaul; Murgh-i-zari (Golden Fowl). Murgh Muhshor ; 513, female.—Steph. Cont. of Shaw’s Gen. male Ratteeah; female Monaulee. Tue native habitat of this fine bird is the hilly regions of Upper India generally; but chiefly in those portions of the Himalayas which range between seven and ten thousand feet above the level of the sea. Although it has been described and figured in nearly every work of any importance, no account whatever of its habits had been published until the following interesting details were given “By a Mountaineer,” in the “India Sporting Review,” the greater portion of which I take the liberty of transcribing, “The Monaul is found on almost every hill of any elevation from the first great ridge above the plains to the limits of the wooded district, and in the interior it is the most numerous of the game birds. When the hills near Mussooree were first visited by Europeans, it was found to be common there, and a few may still be seen on the same ridge eastwards from Landour. In summer, when the rank vegetation which springs up in the forest renders it impossible to see many yards around, few are to be met with, except near the summits of the great ridges jutting from the snow, where in the morning and evening, when they come out to feed, they may be seen in the open glades of the forest and on the green slopes above. At that time no one would imagine they were half so numerous as they really are; but as the cold season approaches, and the rank grass and herbage decay, they begin to collect together, the woods seem full of them, and in some places hundreds may be put up in a day’s walk. In summer the greater number of the males and some of the females ascend to near the limits of the forests where the hills attain a great elevation, and may often be seen on the grassy slopes aconsiderable distance above. In autumn they resort to those parts of the forest where the ground is thickly covered with decayed leaves, under which they search for grubs ; and descend lower and lower as winter sets in, and the ground becomes frozen or covered with snow. If the season be severe and the ground covered to a great depth, they collect in the woods, which face to the south or east, where it soon melts in the more exposed parts, or descend much lower down the hill, where it is not so deep, and thaws sufficiently to allow them to lay bare the earth under the bushes and sheltered places. Many, particularly females and young birds, resort to the neighbourhood of the villages situated high up in the woods, and may often be seen in numbers in the fields. Still in the severest weather, when fall after fall has covered the ground to a great depth in the higher forests, many remain there the whole winter; these are almost all males, and probably old birds. In spring all in the lower parts gradually ascend as the snow disappears. “In the autumnal and winter months numbers are generally collected together in the same quarter of the forest, though often so widely scattered that each bird appears to be alone. Sometimes you may walk for a mile through a wood without seeing one, and suddenly come to some part, where, within the compass of a few hundred yards, upwards of a score will get up in succession ; at another time or in another forest they will be found dispersed over every part, one getting up here, another there, two or three further on, and so on for miles. The females keep more together than the males; they also descend lower down the hills, and earlier and more generally leave the sheltered woods for exposed parts or the vicinity of the villages on the approach of winter, Both sexes are often found separately in considerable numbers. On the lower part or exposed side on the hill, scores eas and young birds may be met with, without a single old male; while higher up, or on the sheltered side, none but me es may be in individual pairs, several being often found together. It may be found. In summer they are more separated, but do not keep in in Pp : ea thatthe anions questioned whether they do pair or not in places where they are at all numerous ; if they do, it ane See cae ia pet ule dissolved as soon as the female begins to sit, for the male seems to pay no attention whatever to her whi st si pan i i Me oy brood when hatched, and is seldom found with them. The call of the Monaul is a loud plaintive whistle, which is often hear : f : eo I f the day. In severe weather numbers may be in the forest at daybreak or towards evening, and occasionally at all hours o J rather elaucholy eounglonamete heard calling in different quarters of the wood before they retire to roost. The call has ae 4 ae ee cat, pc en be, that as the shades of a dreary winter’s evening begin to close on the snow-covered hills around, the a Pp of nature, with which it seems quite in unison, makes it appear So. ey “From April to the commencement of the cold season, the Monaul is rather wi 16a) 20. HILO Belgreen taming influence of winter’s frosts and snows; and from October it gradually becomes ‘ess so, a aoe it j i 7 i derwood, and never attempts to escape observation by concealing itself reverse ; but as it is often found in places nearly free from un , a than other gRensanGt andesite eee Bo fe pertaps sooner alarmed, and 2 @ coe a es it is difficult to get near it when it again alights, all times a little wild and timid. In spring it often rises aoe Dae a A ‘oached within gun-shot on the ground, and when if it does not at once fly too far to follow ; but in winter 1t may often be appr iis daite-clode toil before 1s Genie cal enmt flushed it generally alights on a tree at no great distance, and Oe ie Mee far on the ground ; but on the open glades or “In the forest, when alarmed, it generally rises at once without ieee i et run or walk slowly away in preference to grassy slopes, or any place to which it comes only to feed, it will, if ja ar pe vddin anid dolenne cali nie reire getting up ; and a distant bird when alarmed by the rising of oa ‘ noe of shrill alone whistles, often continued till it while on the ground. It gets up with a loud fluttering and a rapid ae continues it for some time. In winter when one alights, when it occasionally commences its ordinary loud and plaintive call a lected together, they get up in rapid succes- or two birds have been flushed, all within hearing soon get alarmed j if a Es wa ee alarming others still further off, sion ; if distantly scattered, bird after bird slowly gets up, oi ae oe a where they are often collected in numerous bodies, till all in the immediate neighbourhood have misens fy the chestuut oe : tripped of their leaves, allow of an extensive view where there is little underwood, and the trees, thinly dispersed and ee ae ce «die durrompditie ease cok wee en through the wood, I have often stood till twenty or thirty have got up ane @ 1S and shy, but this soon gives way to the all-