King
Quail
FAMILY:
Phasianidae
GENUS: Coturnix
SPECIES: chinensis
OTHER
NAMES:Chinese Quail.
Description:
Small,
quiet and unobtrusive the King Quail is commonly found in pairs or small parties
of around 5 or six, although groups as large as 40 have been recorded. Unlike th
Stubble Quail, the King Quail does not appear to follow seasonal food sources.
King Quail live exclusively on the ground and will hide in dense undergrowth
rather than fly up when disturbed. Like so many other quail, it will burst
suddenly into flight when almost trodden on.
The
body plumage of the male is brown, mottled with black and faint cream central
feather shafts on the back. Wings are grey-brown and the face, upper breast and
sides of breas slate blue. The lower face and throat bear a white bib with a
black stripe. The underside, flanks and undertail are rusty brown, the bill
black and the legs and feet a creamy yellow.
The
female differs from the male in that she is a deep brown on the upper surface
with a buff face and throat. The underside s a cream-buff with tight dusky
barring.
Juveniles resemble females and downy young are a uniform brown,
ligher on the face and have a pair of faint (lighter) lines on the back.
Length:
120-130mm.
Subspecies:
None,
but several races are found in south-east Asia and New Guinea.
Status:
In
the wild:common
to abundant
In aviculture:very common
Threats:
There
are no formally recognised threatening processes for this species, but its
abundance has been affected by human activities. The draining and clearing of
its habitat for pasture and cropping has restricted its habitat and the release
of a Chinese race by the Victorian Acclimatisation Society in the mid 1800's
have brought about the potential for interbreeding and thus affecting the
population's genetic integrity.
Distribution:
Coastal
wetlands of Northern and Eastern Mainland Australia west to the Kimberleys.
there is an isolated outlier in the Mt Lofty Ranges (SA). It is also found
throughout the Indonesian Archipelagos to the Phillipines, South East Asia,
India and China.
Habitat:
Tall
rank grass in boggy country, heaths and swamps. King Quail are rarely found in
crops except those which have heavy weed growth.
Diet:
Seeds
of grasses and insects.
Breeding:
Is
tightly bound to seasonal flushes of grass growth and seeding. May occur twice
in a season.. The nest is a shallow scrape in the ground lined with fine grass
and placed in dense cover such as under a bush or tussock.
In
captivity King Quail will readily nest on the ground. Thick shrubbery or
(preferably) tussock grasses will help to provide the shelter and security they
require.
Sexual
Maturity:
Courtship
Display:
Clutch:
4
to 5 (sometimes as many as 10) light brown eggs with brown freckles. (19x25mm).
Incubation period: 21 days.
The young leave the nest almost immediately
after hatching. Parents force the young to leave the breeding territory at about
6 weeks. At this point the young are fully feathered and about two-thirds grown.
Mutations
and Hybrids:
There
are two recognised races in Australia. One is smaller and is found in the
northwest; the other slightly larger form is found throughout the southeast.