GAMBEL QUAIL
(Lophortyx gambeli).
A handsome species found
in arid canyons and
river bottoms of the
southwestern states,
north to Colorado and
east to western Texas.
In fall they gather into
flocks sometimes
numbering fifty or a
hundred birds, spreading
over the country to feed
during the daytime and
returning to huddle
together at night. The
experienced pot hunter
or trapper can get
quantities, but, hunted
in a legal and
sportsmanlike way, it
requires a lot of hard
fast work to make a fair
bag. No quail is more
nimble of foot than
these; they go through
the mesquite and cactus
with a speed few men can
follow. Yet if one sits
quietly down, he may
often see numbers of
them at close range, for
unless they are being
hunted they are far from
wild.
They pair in
February, at which time
much vegetation is in
bloom, and during March
or early April sets of
their eggs, numbering
about a dozen, may be
found in a slightly
lined hollow beside a
bunch of grass or under
concealing bushes; they
are buffywhite, with
large spots of brown and
lavender. The call of
the male during the
mating and breeding
season is a shrill cha-chaa.
CALIFORNIA QUAIL
(Lophortyx
californica californica).
Of the same size, nearly
10 in. in length, as the
last and differing as
shown. The curved
feathers forming the
handsome crest are
ordinarily carried in a
single packet, but they
can be separated at will
and thrown forward so
that the first, or all
of them, nearly touch
the bill. These birds
are locally abundant in
the humid regions of the
Pacific coast states.
While they are shy when
hunted persistently,
they are very tame in
parks where they are not
molested.
MEARNS QUAIL
(Crytonyx montezumae
mearnsi), otherwise
known as Massena Quail
or "Fool Quail," this is
the most strikingly
marked bird of which I
know. It is found in
upper arid regions of
Mexico and north to
Arizona and western
Texas
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