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First off, chickens are resistant to a great deal many more diseases than pheasants are and you are taking a risk housing the adults together from this aspect. I currently house a cochin and OE hen with a pair of Amherst. These two I use for pheasant broodies in an aviary that is 24x8x8 on the outside with an inside run that is 10x10x10, plenty of room for all to establish their own areas. The small bantam hens have shown no aggression towards the pheasants, but I have seen male Amherst harass the OE hen from time to time.
The larger breeds of chickens will bully most pheasant species and the larger species of pheasants, may bully most small bantam breeds. Observation and space is key if they must be housed together.
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The context of domestcation you are using is not the same in which Ticks is referring to. Just because an animal is in captivity, it doesn't make it domestic. There are no domestic elephants and rhinos, but there are captive elephants and rhinos. Pheasants (other than one species,
Gallus gallus), while they can be rather tame and kept like fowl, are not domesticated breeds such as chickens. Their captive counterparts (those that are not mutated or hybrids) look the same and given the chance, will behave as the wild birds.
We can almost predict behaviors in domestic animals, but cannot in wild species. Pheasants cannot be relied upon to come into a coop each night as a chicken would. Many species, no matter how much human interaction, are flighty and nervous.
The species you mentioned, the Tragopans, are rather pricey birds (for a variety of reasons) and I would never take the chance with them free range or even house with domestic fowl. My suggesstion, do some more research before you decide to keep pheasants. You can find a reference list of books, links, and info at
http://www.gbwf.org/pheasants/index.html
Dan