Thursday, October 15, 2020

The Elegant Bobwhite

 They arrived, they stayed awhile and then they left.

 Bobwhites, one of our favorite birds because of their flight characteristics and especially their call, have not been heard this year on the ranch.

All North American bobwhites (Corvus Virginiana) are catalogued in 23 subspecies and these subspecies are divided into 4 groups.  Three of the four groups (Masked, Grayson’s, and Black Breasted) live in central and south America and the fourth group , the one to which our local bird belongs is the Eastern Group.  In Texas, of the 23 subspecies, we have two different bobwhites, the  subspecies Texanus and the Taylori.  It takes an expert to tell all these subspecies apart as they are so similar in appearance.

Bobwhite, male and two females

The Texanus sub specie is our local bird, its range is from Central Texas south well into Mexico. The Taylori sub specie ranges from Central Texas up into the central plains of the states to the north.

The bobwhite has several habits which are unique.  They are insect and seed eaters, they group into coveys, they tend to be monogamous, and they fly with a wild beat of the wings when flushed from their roosts producing a sound that is memorable only second to the sound of a rattlesnake.

They roost on the ground, where they form a circle of birds all facing outward from the center of the circle and thus give the impression when flushed, that they all fly in different directions and for the first instant they do because of this roosting arrangement. They do this for protection as they have several natural enemies---like hawks, owls, coyotes and of course hunters.

Ranchers in Texas, particularly in the high plains and in south Texas find that leasing their land to hunting quail brings in more profit than running cattle on the same land----that’s not easy to pin down as it may be the difference between two low numbers.   Nevertheless, hunting bobwhite in Texas is a big thing and brings in a lot of associated revenue and taxes.

Bobwhites nest in the springtime and find the best spot to nest at the base of a clump of a typical Texas bunch grass, where the top of the bunch grass may be 18 to 20 inches tall providing seclusion and some shade at parts of the day.  Heavy underbrush is not their favorite habitat, grassland with some scattered brush is their preferred habitat.

The Bobwhite has been the focus of research for the last 80 years, probably due to the importance as a game bird and  a bird that could be raised for food. Squab farms are common, especially in the northern states. 

In the 1940s, researchers found that Vitamin A is an important component in the food they eat, and the source of Vitamin A for the Bobwhite is green vegetation.  Typically, 70 % of the food for a bobwhite is seed, but during breeding season, that changes to include more insects, and green vegetation to achieve their Vitamin A requirements.  In turn, Vitamin A was found to be critical to egg production and the overall health of the bird.  Low Vitamin A could lead to short life span but in most cases, the bird succumbed to predators because low Vitamin A caused low energy, poor eyesight, and a general inability to escape predation. Related to this dietary study was that landowners attempt to supply food for the bobwhite to augment natural foods had little effect on the population of the species.  Almost all the programs to help the bobwhite produced little positive results.  They apparently know the difference between natural food and artificial food.

In the 1970s, studies were conducted on the need for caloric intake at different ambient temperatures; this study found that egg production was peaked at temperatures between 70 and 77 degrees F.  Out of this study came the bonus information that showed that Bobwhites can tolerate heat, but just so much heat.  For females, that temperature is about 107 degrees F, males a few degrees higher.  Sustained temperatures above these levels and the birds succomb.

In our area, high temperatures usually mean low water levels in the soil—whatever rain we may get in the hot weather months evaporates quickly.  Bobwhites and for that matter, all the members of the quail family are known for their wild fluctuations in population correlating with rainfall. An intuitive conclusion is that high rainfall means more green vegetation as food (Vitamin A) and lower temperatures, both of which favor reproduction.

Populations of bobwhite appear to be decreasing by about 2-3 % per year from the best estimated of bird counts and harvest counts from hunting.  This decline in population has been linked to several factors, some old natural ones and some newly discovered. 

Regarding the established factors affecting population, all the known predators factor into the equation, but skunks and fire ants may be at the top of that list.  Raccoons follow as a distant third.

But there are new concerns for the health of the bobwhites; not new but seemingly found more often in recent years.  There is a parasite that is picked up by the bobwhite from eating grasshoppers.  Due to the heat and the drought, our grasshopper population has burgeoned this last year and again this year.  The parasite that is picked up is a thread worm that escapes from the bird crop and migrates to the nasal passages and eventually into the eyes.  These thread worms have been known to biologists for decades, but it appears that the infestation has grown to epidemic status in some parts of Texas.  The thread worms are destructive, destroying vision long before it kills the bird.  Hunters have reported birds that fly into obstacles upon being flushed and even birds with open eye sockets.  A medicine has been developed for adding to food supplies, but the problem is getting the birds to eat the medicated food.  The outlook for this problem is not good.

 Nest success is another problem with Bobwhites.  During average conditions of temperature and water availability, the success of the nest ranges around 28 % in most studies.  The nest sizes are large though, offsetting this low nest success level.  About 12 eggs are the normal nest size, so when the nest is successful, there are many baby quail.  Studies show that the skunk is the most probable cause of nest destruction.

If seeds are the main food for the bobwhite, what seeds are preferred?  Analysis of crops from birds across Texas show that their diet consists of a lot of different grass seeds, but there are some that are obviously preferred.   Here are a few:  Sorghum, both the naturalized plants  and those  planted for food production are a favorite of the bobwhite.  Among the grasses, such as the rescue grass, the paspalum and those grasses with seed heads like sorghum are favorites of the bobwhite.

From  all these studies of natural foods for the bobwhite, the data show that most of the favorite foods grow most predominantly in the eastern part of the state or the southern part of the state, leaving the hill country short of natural food for the bobwhite.

So, what about our brief encounter with the bobwhites?  The intuitive conclusion is that they did not find enough food and their time here was during those years when we had slightly higher than normal summer temperatures and lower rainfall.  Whether they died off or migrated to other areas is not known, but it could be presumed they did not reproduce well and the died out.

All this reminds me of my younger days of hunting ring-necked pheasants on my uncles farm in Hudsonville, Michigan.  The whole area was farming country then and most farms planted corn both for the corn and the corn plant.  The corn was saved for the chickens, and the corn plant, while still green was chopped up and put into silos for the winter feed of the cows.  But while the corn was still in the field, the pheasants not only ate the corn, but they found it easy to run down the corn rows to hide from whatever came along.  Every 20 acre field had several cock pheasants.  Then, progress came to the area and the farmers disappeared and so did the corn and so did the pheasants. It would be a challenge to find one pheasant there today.

All this shows that wild animals, and plants for that matter, live where they can thrive, and when those conditions turn negative, they leave or die.

Lots of Small Observations

 At the start of the year, we were apprehensive about the rain we were (not) getting.  Lake Bridlewood had gone dry, and the cattle had to b...