Like other pheasants, the silver pheasant was placed in the genusPhasianus when described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae. Since then, it – or at least some of the subspecies associated with it – have been placed either in Euplocamus or Gennceus. Today all major authorities place the silver pheasant in Lophura. The silver pheasant is closely related to the kalij pheasant and the two are known to hybridize. The placement of the taxaL. n. lineata and L. n. crawfurdi has been a matter of dispute, with some treating them as subspecies of the kalij pheasant and others as subspecies of the silver pheasant. They have greyish legs as in the kalij pheasant, but their plumage is closer to that of some subspecies of the silver pheasant. Additionally, as the silver pheasant, L. n. lineata and L. n. crawfurdi are found east of the Irrawaddy River, a major zoogeographic barrier, while all other subspecies of the kalij pheasant are found west of the river. Based on mtDNA, it was recently confirmed that L. n. lineata and L. n. crawfurdi should be regarded as subspecies of the kalij pheasant. With these two as subspecies of the kalij pheasant, the silver pheasant has 15 subspecies. However, while some subspecies are relatively distinctive, several others are likely part of a cline, which if confirmed, would result in them being junior synonyms of the nominate subspecies. Several other taxa, for example L. n. andersoni, are now considered invalid by all major authorities. Once considered a very rare species, the imperial pheasant is actually a naturally occurring hybrid between the silver pheasant and the Vietnamese pheasant.
Subspecies
The 15 recognized subspecies of the silver pheasant are, in taxonomic order:
L. n. occidentalis – western silver pheasant – south central China and northeastern Myanmar
L. n. rufipes – ruby mines silver pheasant – northern Shan State of northern Myanmar
L. n. ripponi – Rippon's silver pheasant – southern Shan State of northern Myanmar
L. n. jonesi – Jones's pheasant – Myanmar to southwestern China and central Thailand
L. n. omeiensis – Szechwan silver pheasant – southern Sichuan in south central China
L. n. rongjiangensi – Kweichow silver pheasant – southeastern Guizhou in south central China
L. n. beaulieui – Lao silver pheasant – south central China to northern Laos and northern Vietnam
L. n. nycthemera – nominate – southern China to northern Vietnam
L. n. whiteheadi – Hainan silver pheasant – Hainan in southern China
L. n. fokiensis – Fokien silver pheasant – southeastern China
L. n. berliozi – Berlioz's silver pheasant – western slopes of Annamite Range in central Vietnam
L. n. beli – Bel's silver pheasant – eastern slopes of Annamite Range in central Vietnam
L. n. engelbachi – Boloven silver pheasant – Bolaven Plateau of southern Laos
L. n. lewisi – Lewis's silver pheasant – mountains of southwest Cambodia and east Thailand
L. n. annamensis – Annam silver pheasant – montane forests of southern Vietnam
Description
This is a relatively large pheasant, with males of the largest subspecies having a total length of, including a tail up to, while the males of the smallest subspecies barely reach in total length, including a tail around. The body mass of males can range from. Females of all subspecies are notably smaller than their respective males, with a size range of in total length, including a tail of. The body mass of females can range from. Males of the northern subspecies, which are the largest, have white upperparts and tail, while their underparts and crest are glossy bluish-black. The males of the southern subspecies have greyer upperparts and tail with extensive black markings, making them appear far darker than the northern subspecies. The adult male plumage is reached in the second year. Females are brown and shorter-tailed than the males. Females of some subspecies have whitish underparts strongly patterned with black, and in L. n. whiteheadi this extends to the upper mantle.