Northern
Bobwhite Quail Colinus virginianus
Year round resident of the katy prairie
Description 8-11" (20-28 cm). A small, chunky,
brown bird; underparts pale and streaked; face patterned in black
and white in males, buff and white in females. Usually seen in groups
called coveys.
Voice Clear, whistled bob-WHITE or poor-bob-WHITE.
Habitat Brushy pastures, grassy roadsides, farmlands, and open woodlands.
Range Permanent resident from Kansas, Iowa, Pennsylvania, and Cape
Cod southward. Fluctuating populations farther north and west. Introduced
locally elsewhere.
Discussion The Northern Bobwhite is mainly an eastern
and Mexican bird but is also found in the foothills of the southern
Rocky Mountains.
One of our most popular game birds, the Northern Bobwhite is more
numerous now than it was when unbroken forest covered most of the
eastern United States; but in recent years the species has declined
somewhat due to the cutting of roadside brush, the trimming of farmland
borders, and the gradual replacement of former pastures with dense
stands of young trees. After the breeding period these birds live
together in a covey, huddling together at night and in cold weather.
When danger threatens they fly out in every direction, startling
the would-be predator, who often catches none of the birds.
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