The
genus Phasianus was introduced in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist
Carl Linnaeus in the
tenth edition of his
Systema Naturae. The genus name is
Latin for "pheasant" deriving from
Ancient Greek φἀσιἀνος,
phāsiānos, meaning "(bird) of the Phasis", Phasis being the old name for the
Rioni flowing downstream the east
Colchian coast of the
Black Sea (now western Georgia), where
Argonauts set foot on its banks and found such birds there. The
type species of the genus is the
common pheasant (
Phasianus colchicus).
Species The genus contains just two species. The
common pheasant (
P. colchicus) has about 30 recognised subspecies forming five or six distinct groups; one is only found on the island of
Taiwan off the southern coast of continental
China, and the rest on the
Asian mainland, reaching west to the
Caucasus. Some
subspecies have been introduced to
Europe,
North America and elsewhere, where they have
hybridized and become well established. The
green pheasant (
P. versicolor) is a species from Japan that the fossil record suggests diverged about 2.0–1.8 million years ago from
P. colchicus. Fossil remains of a
Phasianus pheasant have been found in
Late Miocene rocks in China. Additionally, fossil material belonging to a new species of
Phasianus was described in 2020 as
P. bulgaricus. The fossils were recovered from
Miocene (
Turolian) strata in
Bulgaria. Thus, like many other phasianid genera, this lineage dates back more than 5,000,000 years. ==Sexual selection==