Crossbred
A crossbred ring-necked pheasant is a bird from mixed pheasant strains, subspecies lines, or color-variety backgrounds rather than a carefully maintained single line. Crossbreeding is common in gamebird production because farms may select for vigor, hatchability, flight, or appearance, and many ring-necked pheasants already carry blended ancestry. The label should describe breeding history honestly instead of implying a distinct breed.
For keepers, the crossbred label is less important than fitness for the intended setting. Release programs need strong, well-feathered birds raised under appropriate regulations and conditions, while aviary keepers need secure pens, cover, balanced diets, and sensible sex ratios. Breeders should record which lines were crossed and why, especially if color traits such as melanistic, white, or silver appear. Conservation collections should avoid using crossbred stock where pure subspecies management is the goal.
Colors: Blue Back, Common (Multicolored), Dark Throated, Dilute, Isabelle, Melanistic (Black), Red Golden, Silver, White, White Throated, Yellow Golden