GALLOPERDIX LUNULOSA. Painted Spur-Fowl. Perdix lunulosa, Valenc. (Blyth). — lunulatus, Valenc. Nouv. Dict. d’Hist. Nat.—Gray. Hardwickti, Gray in Gur An. Kingd. vol. iii. p. 48.—Gray, Ill. Ind. Zool. vol. i. pl. 52.—Frankl. in Proc of Comm. of Sci. and Corr. of Zool. Soc. part i. p. 123. | lunulata, Cuv. Mus. Paris. ________— nivosus, Deless. Rev. Zool. 1840, p. 100.—Ib. Mag. de Zool. 1840, Ois. pl. 18.—Ib. Voy. aux Indes pl. 10. Hardwickii, Jerd. Tl. Ind. Orn. pl. Ix. Francolinus lunulata, Less. Traité d’Orn. p. 504. Ithaginis lunulatus, Gray and Mitch. Gen. of Birds, vol. in. p. 504, Ithaginis, sp. 2.—Gray, List of Birds in Brit. Mus. Coll. part iii. p. 32. Galloperdix lunulosa, Blyth, Cat. of Birds in Mus. Asiat. Soc. Calcutta, p. 241. Curria Partridge, Lath. Gen. Hist. vol. viil. p. 270? Sitta Kodi, Telugu, Jerdon. Tun native habitat of this handsomely-marked species of Spur-Fowl is the jangled Ghauts of Southern India, over which, if it be not universally, it is very generally dispersed, as is evidenced by specimens received through various sources from those districts. It is said to extend its range, but in smaller numbers, as far north as Scinde. The Hon. F. J. Shore found it at Jubulpoor in April 1835 and at Sagur in 1836, and drawings of both sexes accompany the notes of that highly talented gentleman, but for whose premature death the ornithology of India would have been far better known to us. In the early part of 1853 a living example of this fine bird was brought to England, and for many months graced the menagerie of the Zoological Society in the Regent's Park, where it did not fail to attract the notice of the visitors generally; its sprightly actions and beautiful markings rendering it a conspicuous object among the other denizens of the great aviary in the South Garden. When in a state of quietude and repose, it usually stood in the attitude of the front figure in the accompanying Plate ; at other times, especially when excited or on the alert, it assumed a more sprightly air, and carried the tail higher than the line of the body, like the front figure of Galloperdia ZLeylonensis. We are indebted to Mr. Jerdon of Madras for the greatest amount of information we possess respecting this species. In his “Illustrations of Indian Ornithology,” in which the female is figured for, I believe, the first time, he says,— “Tn Southern India I have only found this very handsome Spur and in some of the spurs that jut out from them both above and below. neighbourhood of Pondicherry. I obtained many specimens from the Ghauts inland from Nellore, and I have been told that it is found near Bellary, Cuddapab, and Hyderabad. Farther north I never saw it, from Goomsoor, and it is unknown in Bengal and the Himalayas. General Hardwicke procured it, I believe, in -Fowl in the jungles of the eastern Ghauts, M. Delessert procured it in the the north-west of India. oe : : : aire ‘ king its food among “Tt associates in small flocks, keeping to the low shrubs and brushwood, and seeking g fallen leaves and low herbage. I kept several individuals of this species av for some time, and found that it is a most pugnacious and quarrelsome bird. It carries its tail erect like the Jungle Fowl, to which 1ey also do F. spadiceus. on Spur-Fowl feed much on insect food in the wild state, (Reduvius), so abundant in most of our jungles.” although in fine condition, were the natives invariably assert its affinity, as tl “T have found that both the spotted and comm especially on the larvae of two or three kinds of wood-bug The Hon. Mr. Shore mentions that some specimens he had dressed, poor in flavour, and that the female weighed barely nine ounces. The male has the head and neck black, with a streak down the stem ae each feather; upper surface rich dark chestnut, with a spot of white encircled with a spot of white near the tip of black at the tip of each