Coturnix

Coturnix
King quail
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Galliformes
Family: Phasianidae
Subfamily: Perdicinae
Genus: Coturnix
Garsault, 1764
Species

See text.

Coturnix is a genus of eight extant species and two known extinct species of Old World quail. They are related to the francolins, jungle bush quail, snowcocks and rock partridges. Species of Coturnix and the aforementioned genera belong to their own monophyletic clade, Coturnicinae, a subfamily within the family Phasianidae. Some authors consider this clade, together with a sibling assemblage, the Gallininae (including the junglefowl, long-billed partridge and Chinese bamboo partridge) warrants classification in its own family, Coturnigallusinidae.

Quail of Coturnix live in pairs or small social groups and form larger groups during migration. Not all species migrate, but most are capable of extremely rapid, upward flight to escape from danger. Unlike related genera, Old World quail do not perch in trees. They devote much of their time to scratching and foraging for seeds and invertebrates on the ground. Typical habitats are dense vegetation such as grasslands, bushes alongside rivers and cereal fields. They are predated upon heavily by the diurnal hawks.

Species

Quail species
Common and binomial names Image Description Range
Blue quail
(Coturnix adansonii)
King quail
(Coturnix chinensis)
Rain quail
(Coturnix coromandelica)
Harlequin quail
(Coturnix delegorguei)
Common quail
(Coturnix coturnix)
Canary Islands quail
(Coturnix gomerae) (fossil)
Japanese quail
(Coturnix japonica)
New Zealand quail
(Coturnix novaezelandiae)
(extinct)
Stubble quail
(Coturnix pectoralis)
Brown quail
(Coturnix ypsilophora)

A fossil species from the Late Oligocene - Late Miocene of SW and Central Europe was described as Coturnix gallica. Another, C. donnezani, was widespread in Early Pliocene to Early Pleistocene Europe.[1]

Footnotes

  1. Mlíkovský (2002)

References

External links

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