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Difference between revisions of "Gambel's Quail" - BirdForum Opus

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;[[:Category:Callipepla|Callipepla]] gambelii
 
;[[:Category:Callipepla|Callipepla]] gambelii
[[Image:Gambels_Quail.jpg|thumb|500px|right|Male.  Photo by Dave Hawkins<br>Location: Stateline Road, Portal, [[Arizona]], USA.]]
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[[Image:Gambels_Quail.jpg|thumb|500px|right|Male.  Photo by Dave Hawkins <br> Location: Stateline Road, Portal, [[Arizona]], USA.]]
[[Image:d07_2442.jpg|thumb|500px|right|Female.  Photo by Nomdeploom.<br>Location: Gilbert Ray Campground, near Tucson, [[Arizona]], USA.]]
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[[Image:d07_2442.jpg|thumb|500px|right|Female.  Photo by: {{user|nomdeploom|nomdeploom}}<br> Location: Gilbert Ray Campground, near Tucson, [[Arizona]], USA.]]
 
==Identification==
 
==Identification==
 
10-11 1/2" (25-29 cm). A stocky, mainly gray quail with a curved black head plume. Male has bold black face and throat, chestnut crown, rusty sides with diagonal stripes, and unscaled buff-white belly with black patch in center.
 
10-11 1/2" (25-29 cm). A stocky, mainly gray quail with a curved black head plume. Male has bold black face and throat, chestnut crown, rusty sides with diagonal stripes, and unscaled buff-white belly with black patch in center.

Revision as of 00:40, 14 February 2009

Callipepla gambelii
Male. Photo by Dave Hawkins
Location: Stateline Road, Portal, Arizona, USA.
Female. Photo by: nomdeploom
Location: Gilbert Ray Campground, near Tucson, Arizona, USA.

Identification

10-11 1/2" (25-29 cm). A stocky, mainly gray quail with a curved black head plume. Male has bold black face and throat, chestnut crown, rusty sides with diagonal stripes, and unscaled buff-white belly with black patch in center.

Distribution

Resident in southwestern deserts from California east to Texas. Introduced in Idaho and western New Mexico.

Taxonomy

Habitat

Desert thickets; arid country.

Behaviour

10-20 buff-colored eggs, spotted with brown, in a depression lined with grass and twigs at base of tall shrub or mesquite. Voice: A ringing puk-kwaw-cah, with second syllable highest in pitch.

These desert-dwelling quail are attracted to water and gather in large numbers, often representing several coveys, to drink at stock tanks maintained for cattle. The ringing call of the male, heard even in the heat of day, is one of the characteristic sounds of the desert Southwest.

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