Stubble
Quail
FAMILY:
Phasianidae
GENUS: Coturnix
SPECIES: pectoralis
OTHER
NAMES: None.
Description:
Medium
to large quail. Unobtrusive in its plumage and behaviour, the Stubble Quail is
nomadic and abundant. They follow the seasonally available seeds of annual
pasture crops and weeds.
Stubble 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 a fawn-brown above with dark blotches and cream
coloured stripes along the midrib of each feather. The head an nape are dusky,
with a white line running down the centre of the head and one over each eye
extending to well behind the ear. The throat and face are a light chestnut
colour, the eyes a reddish brown and the bill grey and the legs and feet creamy
yellow.
The
female differs from the male in that the face andneck are buff coloured, the
throat and chest and off white and the chest lacks a black centre. Juveniles
resemble females and downy young are buff with black stripes running from head
to tail and a pir of lateral stripes running down the length of the sides of the
back.
Length:
180-200mm.
Subspecies:
None.
Status:
In
the wild:common
to abundant
In aviculture:common
Threats:
There
are no formally recognised threatening processes for this species, but its
abundance has been affected by human activities. For example, the clearing of
forests and woodland to create pastures and cropping lands have greatly
increased its habitat. On the other hand, the introduction of pastoralism in the
inland savannah regions has exposed it to competition with sheep and rabbits.
Distribution:
Found
in most of South Australia north to the Pilbara, Alice Springs and Cen tral
Queensland. Stubble Quail have on occaision been recorded in the far north of
the Northern Territory and elsewhere outside their normal range.
Stubble
Quail were once found in Tasmania but are now extinct there.
Habitat:
Open
grasslands and crops.
Diet:
Seeds
of grasses nd herbs and occaisionally some insects and caterpillars.
Breeding:
Mainly
August to February. However in the north of its distribution this species may
breed all year round if rains are favourable.
The nest is a shallow scrape in
the ground and is prepared by the female.
Incubation is solely by the female
and pairs are thought to form for life.
In captivity Stubble 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:
This
begins with the female preparing the nest and is folowed by the male crowing to
advertise their territory. Crowing is usually done for long periods at dawn and
dusk, but may also continue during the day.
Clutch:
7
to 14 pale creamy oval eggs (22mm x 30mm). 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:
None.