After its discovery in 1927, the orange-necked partridge was "lost" until its 1991 rediscovery in
Cát Tiên National Park. Subsequent surveys have found it in several sites in Vietnam, possibly because of improved survey techniques. It was first recorded in Cambodia in 2002, using a
camera trap, and later records in Cambodia have all been in the same site. The IUCN assessed it as a critically endangered species, downlisting to endangered in 2000 and to
near threatened in 2009. The population is estimated to be nearly 10,000. It is threatened by logging, forest clearance and hunting. The population is declining, but the decline is probably not rapid because the bird seems to tolerate some
forest degradation, so it is assessed as near threatened even though its population and range are both small. In 2000, the orange-necked partridge appeared on a national stamp of Vietnam. ==References==