Suzanne1234
Member

It had red around the beak but the rest was all white. I see a lot of pheasants on my road but this was the first time I have seen a white one. Hopefully I will see it again and get a better pictureHi Suzanne and a warm welcome to you from all the Staff and Moderators. Leucistic birds are not very uncommon but if I'm seeing this bird correctly it looks to be albino (bare parts are pink (eyes could be but I can't make them out properly).
I'll move your post to the ID forum so you can get more input.
I'm sure you will enjoy it here and I look forward to hearing your news.
I was actually thinking it was a female, if it was a pheasant. But it doesn't particularly look like the pheasants I'm usually seeing... hence I moved it here.The tail seems too short
I'm not certain it's a "pheasant" (genus phasianus, as in common pheasant phasianus colchicus). The tail seems too short (though that could be an illusion from the blurry photo). It's in the pheasant family phaisanidae, no doubt. I'm wondering if it might be a rock partridge (alectoris graeca), which would help explain the rather red beak and legs.
I'm not certain it's a "pheasant" (genus phasianus, as in common pheasant phasianus colchicus). The tail seems too short (though that could be an illusion from the blurry photo). It's in the pheasant family phaisanidae, no doubt. I'm wondering if it might be a rock partridge (alectoris graeca), which would help explain the rather red beak and legs.
I believe there's an etiquette amongst the shooting fraternity that the white birds can't be shot & shooters are fined for shooting them accidentally on commercial shoots.Oooh, the tail looks much longer in the video. And I think the red is near the eye, not the beak itself. I changed my mind, it's a white breed of pheasant. They are sometimes bred deliberately for hunting.
That’s sad if true.Oooh, the tail looks much longer in the video. And I think the red is near the eye, not the beak itself. I changed my mind, it's a white breed of pheasant. They are sometimes bred deliberately for hunting.
I read this as well.I believe there's an etiquette amongst the shooting fraternity that the white birds can't be shot & shooters are fined for shooting them accidentally on commercial shoots.
😢Yep they are bred specifically for shooting.
I also heard because they are white it makes it easier to see, and they can then lead you to find the other pheasants, hence why it's bad etiquette to shoot them.
I saw my first one like this at Oxford Island. They are pretty, but a grim hobby imo.