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Alectoris is a genus of in the family , closely related to Old World quail ( and relatives), snowcocks ( ), partridge-francolins ( ), bush quail ( ), and sand and see-see partridges ( ). Members of the genus are known collectively as rock partridges (a name that also refers to one species in particular, ). The genus name is derived from the , meaning "" or "farmyard fowl".

Their fossils date back to the early Pleistocene, with extant representatives in southern , North and , and across in to and western .


Taxonomy
The genus Alectoris was introduced in 1829 by German naturalist Johann Jakob Kaup to accommodate a single species Perdrix petrosa, a of Perdix barbara Bonnaterre, 1790, the Barbary partridge, which is therefore the by . The genus name is from αλεκτορις/ alektoris, αλεκτοριδος/ alektoridos meaning "hen" or "chicken".


Description
These are birds of dry, open and often hilly country. They nest in a scantily lined ground scrape laying up to 20 eggs. They feed on a wide variety of seeds and vegetation. are a very important source of nutrition for the birds as are , and .

As is typical of many galliform birds, Alectoris partridges are relatively round-bodied and small-headed. They typically have a light brown or grey back, grey breast, buff belly, and barred flanks. Several species have a whitish throat with a black border. Their specialized flank coverts give them the appearance of being more rotund than they actually are. Their legs are red, with well-developed, -like spurs. When disturbed they run very rapidly, often uphill, taking to the wing if pressed. Their wings are long and fairly sharp, shaped rather like those of and , suggesting that the birds sustain themselves in flight over substantial distances to find food. This probably occurs most often during winter.


Introduced species and hybridisation
Some members of the genus, notably the and red-legged partridge, have been introduced to many locations outside their natural range; there are now established populations of chukar in western , , and the of , and of red-legged partridge in the , the , , and the .

The readily interbreeds with the red-legged partridge and . The practice of breeding and releasing captive-bred chukar and hybrids between chukar and red-legged partridge has been banned in the United Kingdom, as it is a threat to red-legged partridge populations.


Species
The genus contains seven species:
North Africa, and is also native to Gibraltar and the Canary Islands
southern Saudi Arabia, Yemen and western Oman.
Iberian Peninsula, France, Italy and Balearic Islands
Cyprus, Jordan, Israel, Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Uzbekistan, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Pakistan and India
Serbia, Albania, Italy, and France to Greece and Bulgaria
Saudi Arabia and Yemen
China (Gansu, Qinghai)

A prehistoric species, A. peii, is known from . Another one, A. baryosefi, has been described from Early Pleistocene found at El-`Ubeidiya (Jordan valley), .


See also

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