FeatherScan logo
FeatherScan
Overview
Nahan's partridge

Nahan's partridge

Wikipedia

Nahan's partridge, also known as the Nahan's francolin, is a bird traditionally placed in the family Phasianidae. As suggested by its alternative name, it was formerly believed to be a francolin and placed either in Francolinus or Pternistis, but it is now known that its closest relative is the stone partridge and together may in fact be the only African representatives of the New World quails (Odontophoridae).

Loading map...

Distribution

Region

Central Africa (Uganda and northeastern Democratic Republic of the Congo)

Typical Environment

Occurs in lowland and foothill tropical rainforests, especially in extensive primary forest with dense understory. It also uses older secondary forest, forest edges, and well-shaded stream gullies, but generally avoids open farmland and heavily degraded habitats. The species is patchily distributed due to forest fragmentation and hunting pressure. Local occurrence can be highly localized, with birds remaining close to suitable cover on the forest floor.

Altitude Range

600–1600 m

Climate Zone

Tropical

Characteristics

Size25–28 cm
Wing Span38–45 cm
Male Weight0.33 kg
Female Weight0.3 kg
Life Expectancy6 years

Ease of Keeping

Beginner friendly: 1/5

Useful to know

Nahan's partridge (often called Nahan's francolin) was long placed with francolins, but genetic studies show it belongs with the New World quails (Odontophoridae), alongside the African stone partridge. It is a shy forest-floor bird that prefers dense understory and is most easily detected by its ringing duet calls at dawn and dusk. Habitat loss and hunting pressure have caused declines, and it survives in a patchy distribution in Central African forests.

Gallery

Bird photo
Bird photo
Juvenile

Juvenile

Behaviour

Temperament

shy and secretive

Flight Pattern

short rapid wingbeats with explosive flush

Social Behavior

Usually found in pairs or small family groups moving quietly through leaf litter. Likely monogamous, with nests placed on the ground, well concealed by vegetation. When alarmed, it prefers to run before taking a short, explosive flight to nearby cover.

Migratory Pattern

Resident

Song Description

Duet-like ringing whistles and piping notes, most frequent at dawn and dusk. Calls carry through dense forest and are often the best way to detect the species.

Similar Bird Species