It is a large pheasant, up to 76 cm long and greyish brown with finely spotted green eyespots, an elongated bushy crest, bare pink or yellow facial skin, white throat, and grey iris, bill and legs. The sexes are rather similar, but the female is smaller, darker and less ornamented than the male. The young resemble the female.
Distribution and ecology
The grey peacock-pheasant is distributed in lowland and hill forests of Bangladesh, Northeast India and Southeast Asia, but excluding most of Indochina as well as the entire Malayan Peninsula. The diet consists mainly of seeds, termites, fruits and invertebrates. The female usually lays two eggs.
Three subspecies are recognized today as good, while an additional one is of unclear validity:
P. b. bicalcaratumLinnaeus, 1758 - Common grey peacock-pheasant
P. b. ghigiiDelacour & Jabouille, 1924 - Ghigi's grey peacock-pheasant
P. b. bailyiLowe, 1925 - Lowe's grey peacock-pheasant
P. b. bakeri Lowe, 1925 - Northern grey peacock-pheasant
One previous subspecies, the Hainan peacock-pheasant, has since been given approved species status by the IOC. Lowe's grey peacock-pheasant was described from a captive bird of unknown provenance. Similar examples have turned up on occasion, but the validity and - if distinct - home range of this taxon remains unknown. It was theorized to inhabit western Assam or the eastern Himalayas, but this is based on conjecture. The phylogeny of this species is fairly enigmatic. mtDNA cytochrome b and D-loop as well as the nuclearovomucoidintron G sequence data confirms that it belongs to a largely Continental Asian clade together with Germain's peacock-pheasant, but also the "brown" southern species bronze-tailed peacock-pheasant and mountain peacock-pheasant. The ovomucin sequence seems to have evolved convergently or with a decreased mutational rate on the grey and the bronze-tailed peacock-pheasant. Though they are quite similar on the molecular level, the distance and interspersed populations of their closest relatives argue against a much more recently shared common ancestry between them versus the other two "northern" peacock-pheasants. Also, the cytochrome b and D-loop data does not support a closer relationship between P. bicalcaratus and P. chalcurum; overall, as it seems the four species' ancestors separated during a very short timespan. Note however that in the absence of dedicated phylogeographic studies, the molecular data is only of limited value in this species, the most morphologically diverse and widespread peacock-pheasant: There is no data on the origin and number of specimens, but it is unlikely that more than one or two individuals - possibly of captive origin and undeterminable subspecific allocation - were sampled. All that can be reasonably assumed is that the grey peacock-pheasant evolved on mainland Southeast Asia, probably during the Late Pliocene to Early Pleistocene 3.6-1 million years ago.