Obligatory disclaimer: sometimes, real life sucks. Other
times, it does not; it is just annoying and you just want to die and get over
it. Ah well, what can you do about that? Nothing, so let us talk about quails.
Pause.
Here is the thing about the quail. It is a real-life bird,
actually, quite a few of bird species, but because real life sucks, the term
‘quail’ is designated for several bird genera instead. They all belong to the superfamily of Phasianoidea, but
otherwise? They belong to different families – the Old World quails to
Phasianidae, and the New World Quails to Odontophoridae. They differ from the
grouse by preferring open spaces to woodlands, and from the ptarmigans by
avoiding the north. Pause.
…That said, the quails, the grouse, the ptarmigans are very
similar birds, science aside – they are game birds from the Galliformes order,
which is a fairly old bird order. Remember, we mentioned the Galloanseriformes
when we talked about the ratites? That is because they are about as old as the
ratites/the paleognaths are and are similar to them, especially to the
tinamous, which are also ratites, sort of.
Just like the tinamous, the birds in the Galliformes order
are poor fliers, they do not like to fly, and they prefer to run. Their chicks
hatch already ready to run and learn to feed quickly by themselves, with
minimal interference from their parents.
That is actually a divisive line, because in some wildfowl,
like the grouse (and the peacocks), the males do not readily involve with their
chicks; the females often raise the youngsters by themselves – it is called
sexual dimorphism, where the two sexes are different. (We will be getting to
that later). In other species, such as the quails, (at least in the Old World
species, but probably in the New World as well), both parents raise their
chicks.
The difference in lifestyle raised difference in appearance
– in the grouse, (and the peacocks, and the like), males and females look very
different; in others, such as the quails and partridges, they do not. Pause.
Getting back to the ratites, whose chicks also are born
mobile, somewhat independent and rely on their parents for some protection, but
aren’t as helpless as the chicks of the songbirds, where do they fit in?
Again, they are a mixed bag. African ostriches have sexual
dimorphism, though mainly in coloration, but most of the ratites – such as the
cassowaries and the rheas are not physically very different, though the
childcare falls mostly to the males there.
Pause. Here is the thing – with mammals and birds it’s two
different things. In mammals, the pregnancies are internal, (unless the mammal
is a monotreme or a marsupial, but we will talk about them some other time
instead). However, in birds, they are external, once the egg is laid.
Yes, the formation of the egg is internal and male and
female birds are built differently, but once an egg is laid, it still needs to
be incubated and hatched, which is where the differences may come in. In birds
of prey, including owls, the females are bigger and stronger because they are
the primary caretakers of the youngsters. In some of the gamebirds, and also in many of the songbirds, the
females are drabber than the males for the same reason. However, in other
birds, where both parents care for their chicks, there are not too many
physical differences between the gender – and this leads us to the
buttonquails.
Now, some Old World quail species are called button quails,
(i.e. two words), but the buttonquails (i.e. one word) aren’t really quails, or
gamebirds, but rather members of a separate bird family – the Turnicidae –
which is a part of the shorebird order, (Charadriiformes). These small birds
are found in the tropics of Africa, Asia, and Australia, (including
Australasia), and for a while were presumed to be either gamebirds or crane
relatives. Instead, apparently, they are relatives of the shorebirds,
sandpipers, plovers, woodcocks, etc., even if they do not really resemble the
latter. So what is so special of them?
A complete gender reversal, that is what. The female
buttonquails are much more colorful than the males are and do most of the
courting when it is mating time. The males, too, take care of the youngsters by
themselves, after the eggs are laid, while the female moves on to the next
male. Curiously, there is a small genera of shorebirds, call the phalaropes,
which have the same thing – the females are much more colorful than the males
are, and are also bigger; the males are the primary caretakers of the young and
eggs.
…The phalaropes are also atypical in that their lifestyle is
more like ducks and geese than the other shorebirds – they do most of their
feeding on open water than on the shore, unlike the other shorebirds, but we
digress. Where were we?
Ah yes, the buttonquails have an odd one out – the lark
buttonquail, also known as the quail-plover, which is monogamous and belongs to
a separate genus from the rest of them. Clearly, the evolution of the
buttonquails was not a straightforward thing as you might expect by looking at
most of them…
Well, this is it for now. Real life might suck, especially
for humans with COVID-19 and all, but for other lifeforms – including quails,
buttonquails, shorebirds, ostriches and what else have you – may be benefiting
from this; (certainly our friendly neighbourhood groundhogs seem to). We will
just have to wait and see.
…This is it for now. See you all soon!
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