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  • Bobwhite Quail

    Posted on May 14th, 2009 webmaster No comments
    
    The Bobwhite, known in the south as the "partridge", is one of several 
    
    species of American quail. It is a chunky ruddy-colored bird, a little 
    larger than a meadow lark. The cock has a conspicuous white throat
    and a white stripe over the eye. In the hen these parts are buffy. The
    tail is short and dark, and the light-colored breast is flecked with dark
    bars. 
    They squat motionless and almost invisible, until a person is very
    close. When they "flush", with a startling explosive whirl, they fly
    some distance at high speed with fast-beating wings and then coast or
    "scale" with the wings curved sharply outward.
    Throughout spring and summer the male may be heard, morning and
    evening, calling from a perch on a fallen log, a fence post, or occasionally a low tree. 
    A clear whistle  "Bob-White!" or "Poor-Bob-Whoit!", with the last note loud and ringing. 

     

    The "covey call", a shrill "ka-loi-kee?", is used to call the members of a family together. 

    This is answered by a lower-pitched "whoil-kee" which can be imitated to bring quail
     within a few yards of a quiet watcher.
    In a field or near the edge of the woods, the mated pairs build a nest
    which is merely a shallow hollow in the ground, lined with dead grass
    and leaves open to the sky or under a tuft of grass. In it she lays from
    7 to as many as 28 pure-white oval eggs about an inch in diameter. 
    Although she leaves the nest on warm afternoons to feed and exercise,
    the male also brings insects and other food to her. If something
    happens to the hen at this time, the cock has been known to hatch the
    eggs and raise the young. During the day, the family devours
    enormous quantities of insects and some wild seeds and berries. 
    At night they sleep on the ground in a circle, with all heads pointed 
    outward to watch for enemies. If a feeding family is disturbed, the 
    parents give a low warning note and the well-camouflaged babies
    "freeze" to become almost invisible. The parents then pretend to be
    crippled and try to lure the enemy away by fluttering over the ground,
    just out of reach.
    As the young mature, the diet changes until in fall, winter and spring
    it consists of a variety of wild fruits, weed seeds (especially the
    common ragweed), and waste grain gleaned from fields. Because of
    the great quantity of destructive insects eaten, such as the chinch bug,
    no bird is more beneficial to the farmer. In northern regions, many
    quail die during severe winters with deep crusted snows. 
    Because quail nest, eat and sleep on the ground, they are prey for hawks, owls,
    crows, foxes, skunks, weasels, snakes, rats and roaming house cats. 
    But their most deadly enemy is man, the hunter.

     


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