Satyr Tragopan

Tragopan satyra

 
Satyr Tragopan Satyr Tragopan Satyr Tragopan
The male Satyr Tragopan at first sight is an unimpressive pheasant although its rich red coat has an intricate lace pattern dotted with white pearls.
It comes from the Himalayas through India, Nepal and Tibet in forests and undergrowth at an altitude of some 10,000 feet (+/- 3-4,000).
Satyr Tragopan Satyr Tragopan Satyr Tragopan
The name Tragopan comes from the Latin for Tragus, a he-goat, and Pan, the half-goat god. Satyrs are Pan's goat-like companions, so this pheasant has its full share of goat names
in view of the fleshy, inflatable "horns" it extends in courtship together with a blue inflatable wattle.
Satyr Tragopan hen Satyr Tragopan female Satyr Tragopans
While beautifully patterned in her own right, the hen, like most pheasants, is brown and much less showy so that she and her nest/chicks blend in with the undergrowth.
Satyr Tragopan Satyr Tragopan Satyr Tragopan wattle
The male Satyr Tragopan comes into his own in courtship when he not only inflates his blue goat-like "horns"
but extends his stunning blue- and crimson-bordered wattle with a bright blue centre and displays it like a giant tongue.

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Temmincks Tragopan
Temminck's Tragopan