Showing posts with label Colours of Coturnix quail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colours of Coturnix quail. Show all posts

Colours of Coturnix Japonica Quail Part Three - White, Panda, Tibetan, Rosetta & Tuxedo

I'm not sure why this would be, possibly hidden within the genetics of breeding these lovable creatures but along with the golden quail, discussed here in Part 2, the English White, Pandas, Tibetan and Rosetta Tuxedo, seem to be the most friendly of all the quail I have bred.  Together with this characteristic, in fact instrumental in its process, is the ability of these quail to bond to each other in monogamous pairs and thus to revert to their natural instincts to nest and hatch. Thus, if your ambition is to breed quail for companionship, gardening and free-ranging ability and the penchant for raising their own chicks then in my opinion, mixing these colours into your flock is the way to achieve your goals.

Rosetta - Colours of Coturnix Japonica Quail


It has been interesting when researching the colours of coturnix to come up against such a paucity of information. Creating a Tibetan or Rosetta quail, with their beautiful and complex feathering is surely something to crow about but the origins at present seem lost, or maybe they will be found at some time. It certainly took me some digging in my recent Cochin article to find the name of the owner of the mourning Pekinese, who were unceremoniously snatched from their mistresses' dead body and carried off as trophies to furnish the first breeds of these dogs in the West.

English White Colours of Coturnix Japonica Quail

Rosetta Tuxedo and English White Japanese Quail
English White quail chick Colours of Coturnix Japonica QuailTrying to find the history of the English White quail or in fact any of the above is a rather tortuous process and getting more so unfortunately, as for most of my origins of specific poultry breeds, I have to dig into older texts and articles. For, what presents itself on the internet tends to involve a greater proportion of cut-and-paste and a mix of confusion. For example the name English White is often used as synonymous with the Texas A&M quail. The latter is actually very easy to trace,  the clue is in the name and was a large or 'Jumbo' hybrid a cross with the  'Texas Gourmet' a quail first raised by the Texas A&M's Poultry Department in 1995 by  Dr. Fred Thornberry and trialed at the Diamond H Ranch. When
Dr Lee Cartwright joined the Faculty he began a program of breeding the Gourmet quail with the English White this too was/is mainly for commercial use but many 'backyard' breeders do raise them and I have also found organically raised Texas A&M in the UK.

Left top: English White female and Rosetta Tuxedo male.
Below left: English White chick
English White and Golden Speckled Colours of Coturnix Japonica Quail
English White Colours of Coturnix Japonica Quail
There is a sort of subset of the English White called 'Panda' where the head shows patches of 'Pharaoh' or wild quail feathering. These actually are very pretty and the markings can be in interesting shapes, I have had several with heart shapes. Sometimes the patches of colour turn up on the back and wings too. It is actually quite hard to breed a totally white quail and some breeders report that over-breeding of whites has the potential to produce albino quail. In the juveniles at the drinking fountain (left) you can see the Panda patterning beginning to appear within the distribution of the emerging feathers.

Colours of Quail English White 'Panda' and Tibetan Tuxedo
English White 'Panda' and Tibetan Tuxedo enjoy a similarly 'pied' lettuce


Colours of Quail Rosetta Tuxedo
Rosetta Tuxedo dining alone
My simple understanding of the genetics for how the different combinations of colours for feather show up and in what proportions is,  that with the pied birds, known as Tuxedos, the genes for recessive white make the 'waistcoat, 'shirtfront' and sometimes also 'sleeves'. The dominant chocolate or chestnut colour from the Tibetan or Rosetta will then make the 'tail coat' and 'trousers'. These are the two sorts of Tuxedo I have had to date but I believe you can make Tuxedos out of any combination(s) of dominant colours with recessive white.

Colours of quail Tibetan or Dark British Range


Dark British Range aka Tibetan is a beautiful bird, in which like the white the female is larger than the male. In French this colour in quail and pheasants is called 'Obscure' which is a more poetic way of saying dark.

Colours of quail Tibetan or Dark British Range


A close up of the plumage shows some incredible patterning and the birds themselves I have always found to be friendly albeit the females can become very dominant.

Feather colour Japanese quail - Rosetta
Similarly with the Rosetta, there are some amazing nuances of shades and markings when you look at the feathers in detail. At this magnification you can see the subtle influence of Pharaoh patterning but there is a lot more to it than that.

Sir John Sebright, although ultimately taking his secret to his grave viz., the genetics of the beautiful bird that bears his name, freely admitted that he would produce any given feather in three years.

Thus it would seem fitting that the person who created these should make themselves known!

Colours of Japanese quail - Rosetta


Colours of japanese quail - Rosetta Tuxedo Chick
The Rosetta (above) aka British Range, is a beautiful bird which was created from a combination of English White and Dark British Range.

Left is a Golden Italian mother with her Rosetta Tuxedo chick 

With the Rosetta, the females are larger than the males and in the ones I have, the females are more friendly, although they can get very assertive and vocal around other younger males, in the nesting season. In particular they use a very unusual sort of 'yammering' or guttural chattering, which is a vocalisation I haven't heard from other quail in relation to territory and hierarchy disputes with juveniles.

Colours of Japanese Quail - Rosetta Tuxedo


The males of both the Rosetta Tuxedo above and the Tibetan Tuxedo below are not unfriendly but just seem to be more wary of humans than the female Tuxedos.

Colours of Japanese Quail - Tibetan Tuxedo

Now here's the film of our beautiful English White and Pandas:


Looking at my quail in their Winter sleeping quarters, I can't help thinking of an exotic box of chocolates, whatever the name and whoever came up with these spectacular feather colours, they are truly beautiful.

Thanks for dropping by and do feel free to share experiences or ask for further information in the comment section. If you have enjoyed this piece and found it useful think about sharing it with your family and friends, on social media and also maybe about joining this blog and/or subscribing to my Youtube channel or even supporting us on Patreon or
It all helps to keep me going!

Until next time, all the very best from Normandie! Sue

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© 2020 Sue Cross

Colours of Coturnix Japonica Quail Part Two - The Golden

My understanding is that the Golden quail I have belong to the two main types of 'Golds', which in English are known as the Italian and the Manchurian. However,  as discussed in previous articles, some breeders insist that these are alternate names for the same golden bird! Whatever your belief, there are nuances due to patterns and markings (see the 'Italian Speckled' female below), which do seem to merit their own specific nomenclature. Equally important, is the vexed question of genetics in the golden colouring of fur and feathers; i.e. the yellow allele, which is lethal when homozygous but more of this later.

Golden Speckled Italian Female Quail

In France, life is much simpler and all the golden quail are just known under the one name of 'Isabelle' (variation Isobel or Isabela), a colour which came into being due to an oath taken by Queen Isabella of Spain. Legend has it that during the siege of Granada (1482 - 1492), the Queen declared that she wouldn't change her court dress until the battle was over and Granada was back under Spanish rule. By the end of the siege, the Queen's dress had taken on colours associated with the heat and dust of the battlefield, rust red, white and black. To commemorate the event, the colour known as Isabelle was established and is a recognised standard for cats (apparently only female felines can attain this particular shade), horses, dogs and quail. As all the original Golden quail in France, are said to descend from a small clutch of 20 eggs brought over from Portugal via Spain, this may also explain its use as a colour here.

Golden Italian Female Quail


 

The Lethal Yellow Allele

Most things associated with genetics are liable to make my eyes glaze over but I'll have a go all the same. It's important for me to try to understand this because it begs the question on both whether or not there are two types of golden quail and furthermore, on how safe or otherwise it is to breed golden to golden. My understanding of this allele is that it produces a plumage that is 'wheat-straw yellow'. In addition, this is a dominant mutation which is lethal when the embryo has two identical alleles for this trait, which can be expressed as YY. I believe this was discovered, as many genetic expressions have been, by extrapolation from abnormal birth ratios. Thus, in studies looking at mice the allele for yellow fur (Y) is dominant over that for grey (y) so when a pair of yellow furred heterozygous mice (Yy), (thus having non-identical alleles for their yellow colour), get together, they are expected to produce a much greater ratio of yellow baby mice to grey and the fact that they don't is because the YY mice babies do not survive to birth.  

Golden Quail Chicks Coturnix Japonica


This might explain why many breeders seem to have no problem producing golden chicks but there are umpteen academic papers on how Manchurian golden quail do have problems. To me therefore it would seem logical that there are two distinctively different breeds of Golden quail. Convincing or not, this is what my so-called Italian golden quail chicks (including the Italian Speckled variation) look like and why I am wary of crossing my Manchurian females with Manchurian males

If you are interested in finding out more about genetics then I can recommend this book 'Genetics of the Fowl' by Hutt, I have a copy and dip into it quite often when I'm researching specific breeds or attributes, it's not the sort of work I would want to read read at a sitting!

As with many seminal works it is quite pricey  but I see there are various sites which have a pdf version.

Italian Gold

The Golden Italian is the name used for golden plumage, lightly speckled mainly on the back and sides with rust, white and black. The males have a Zorro type mask that gets more distinctive as they get older and also in the breeding season, whereas the females have black speckled markings in bands around the back and sides of the head, emanating Cleopatra-like from the corners of the eye.

The other interesting trait of the Goldens, is that they were the first of all my quail to make nests, go broody and sit eggs. Logic dictated, that once we had provided both suitable nourishment and environment it would have been my  brown Pharaoh quail, which would have done this first, being nearer to the wild European version. Furthermore, it was my Golden quail, Tuxedo and English White that were the first to form monogamous pairs. Below is my beautiful Golden Italian Quail with a Rosetta Tuxedo and English White chick.

Golden Italian Female Quail  Coturnix Japonica




Below is one of my Golden Italian males (actually Antonio, as I can't get away from the idea of Zorro) in full Summer colours. I actually believe he is an Italian x Manchurian because his mask, now in the breeding season, is much more spectacular than the norm!

Golden Italian Male Coturnix Quail
Close up of two Italian Gold chicks.

Golden Italian Quail Chicks -  Coturnix Japonica






Golden Italian Quail Chick Sunbathing



















Left: Chick Soaking up the rays and creating some valuable Vitamin D3.

Photogenic juvenile: below.




Golden Italian Quail Chick Coturnix Japonica








 

Italian Speckled

I have quite a few of these but mostly females. The male are almost identical to the female except for the usual golden quail brown/black mask. As with the Italian Golds, the females have distinctive dark speckled banding around the back of the head. They are incredibly striking aesthetically and again as with the other Italian Quail, in my experience they make excellent bonded pairs and really caring mothers.

Golden Italian Speckled Quails Female




Above three female Italian Speckled and an English White Male. Below a juvenile Italian Speckled.

Golden Italian Speckled Juvenile Male Quail with Sebright cross bantam
As mentioned above, it was my Golden quail which were the first to nest and become broody. However as many Goldens are bred from crossing with Pharaoh my anecdotal evidence is that crosses have strong maternal instincts. For example, Lucky (left) is a Sebright cross hen, whereas Sebrights are notoriously short-term mothers. The chick she is free-ranging and teaching how to forage is a juvenile male  Italian Speckled.

Below is a whole drift of Golden Quail including male and female Golden Italian and Speckled Italian (and Manchurian).

Golden Italian, Golden Italian Speckled and Manchurian Coturnix Quail


Below, a very affectionate Italian Speckled quail chick...

Golden Italian Speckled Coturnix Quail Chick

and our very loveable 'Golden Grandma', a 5 year old Italian Speckled female.

5 year old Golden Italian Speckled Coturnix Quail

 

Manchurian

This then would be the colour I would think of as 'wheat straw'. Here below is Alphonse in full cry and in full Summer plumage.

Manchurian Golden  Coturnix Quail Male


..and here he is again at just two and a half months old.

Manchurian Golden  Coturnix Quail Male





Manchurian Golden  Coturnix Quail Female with chicks
Left is Caramel with her chicks, once again a great mother.  Unlike two of my other golden females, she did not actually pair bond with a male. She became broody only a few days before I had an emergency with a quail hatch and she obliged by accepting the chicks. She has been the most amazingly vocal of all my quail, producing what I can only think of as wild quail calls to her chicks. She has given me great hopes that eventually the original and presumed extinct (after WWI) 'Singing' coturnix quail will return!

Now here's the film: 

In Conclusion

Golden Italian Speckled  Coturnix Quail
Convinced or not, I hope I've illustrated the beauty of these Golden quail.

It was a mixture of Pharaoh and 'Isabelle' eggs which cured Andy's hay fever and eczema. The Golden quail have been instrumental in making my dreams come true, for a coturnix to raise her own chicks.

I started raising my quail with a hen, I've never used an incubator but if you are just beginning with quail and do not have a suitable bantam then that is an option. As far as I am concerned quail are wonderful little birds and a joy to keep, whatever the colour!

Thanks for dropping by and do feel free to share experiences or ask for further information in the comment section. If you have enjoyed this piece and found it useful think about sharing it with your family and friends, on social media and also maybe about joining this blog and/or subscribing to my YoutubeOdysee  or BitChute Channel or even supporting us on Patreon or

It all helps to keep me going!


Until next time when I will be discussing English White and Tuxedo, Sue

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© 2021 Sue Cross

Colours of Coturnix Quail - A Celebration of these beautiful little birds

In the pages of this site, I write mostly on practical issues and as 'The Holistic Hen', I do always hope that I am looking at the whole bird. Thus plumage colour is important but just for once I'm going to to be a frivoler and concentrate on aesthetics. There are so many wonderful words to describe a collection of creatures and probably a 'murder of crows' and its antithesis a 'charm of finches' are my firm favourites. Even so, these are followed swiftly by an 'abominable sight of monks', a 'superfluity of nuns' and a 'busyness of ferrets'. Furthermore, with this week's addition of five, I feel well on the way to announcing that I have achieved a veritable 'drift' of coloured quail.

Tibetan Tuxedo Coturnix Quail - Organically raised

I thought I'd just showcase some of the colours I have at the moment and in this first part, I'm showing the most popular and common colours of quail, in male and female adult, juvenile and chick form. In the following two articles I'll show the more unusual colours. As some of these are a first for me, I haven't obviously as yet any pictures of chicks - hopefully that will be a part four to this article!  It certainly has been quite difficult to identify some of them, so another reason for writing this article is in the hope of clarifying what I believe to be the correct descriptions. If anyone reading this finds I have incorrectly identified my quail, then please do let me know.

Sir John Sebright, friend and fellow explorer with Charles Darwin, is mentioned by the latter in Chapter One of the Origin of the Species: 
'That most skilful breeder, Sir John Sebright, used to say, with respect to pigeons, that ‘he would produce any given feather in three years, but it would take him six years to obtain head and beak.’
Having dipped into F.B. Hutt's weighty tome and seminal work and in particular, the chapters on feathers and colours, that seems pretty good going to me.

Frizzled Roosters and hen, Mille Fleur, Gold Blue Splash, Silver Spangled



My copy of F.B Hutt Genetics of the Fowl
If you want to get into the 'science' of colour then I would recommend this work, though not as light reading! I bought this book some years ago or rather it was bought for me in the US At the time we were living in the UK, where it was out-of-print but now it's available. It's complicated, as with anything concerned with genetics but it's an absorbing and useful reference book. It helped me greatly in explaining how and why incredible, gloriously coloured Frizzles kept turning up in my flock!


Pharaoh or Brown

Below is the film 'The Coulours of Quail - The Pharaoh' and below that is a female (note the spotted breast) in the typical colours we might think of when the words Coturnix japonica or common quail are mentioned. The latter does disservice to this beautiful little creature. I prefer Pharaoh or the poetic French Caille de blés, 'quail of the cornfields', used in France to denote both the japonica and the very similar Coturnix coturnix, aka the wild and migratory European quail. These birds are so named because they concentrate around the French 'bread baskets' of the South West (Aquitaine) and Central region (L'île de France). It is also sadly apposite, that the names of the wild and hybridised brown quail are used synonymously, as before the practice was banned in 2005, vast quantities of brown Coturnix japonica were released yearly by hunting societies. These birds have subsequently interbred with the wild Coturnix and resulted in hybrid chicks, which do not possess migratory genes and often perish in the Winter months. It is a similar story to that of the hundreds of thousands of farmed salmon escaping every year into rivers and seas and in turn breeding with and changing the DNA of the wild fish.


Pharaoh Coturnix Quail Female


Below, here's a juvenile male enjoying a day out free ranging...

Pharaoh Coturnix Juvenile Male Free-ranging

and here's a very little Pharaoh coming out into the World....

Pharaoh Coturnix Quail Chick hatching out


and another showing how well camouflaged he can be.

Pharaoh Coturnix Chick a few days old


This ability of the young Pharaoh, with its 'wild quail' plumage to blend into the background, particularly when out in the open, is an incredible advantage. In addition, you will observe in Part Two of this article, pictures of the golden quail with their spotted and speckled plumage and how well that harmonises them in Nature. On a further note, this is of particular advantage if you wish to free-range your quail, under supervision. Below one of my young Pharaoh free-ranges the meadow under the watchful eye of mother Ardenner bantam and ourselves.

Pharaoh Coturnix Juvenile Quail free-ranging with Bantam Ardenner

Below, one of my male Pharaohs with his chums about to start work on sifting through and spreading the compost in the greenhouse. It's a plum job as its full of woodlice and probably a few red compost worms, which quail love. As you will observe, my White-laced Chamois Polish brothers are not amused!

Using Coturnix Quail to clear greenhouses of pests and weeds


The Pharaoh is in my experience a meticulous forager, a great helpmeet in the garden and a candidate for free-range. Its plumage being flecked black and brown, coupled with striped cream markings, significantly help to break-up its outline. To reiterate though, I would always be near enough to intervene in case of predator attack.

Pharaoh Coturnix Juvenile Quail free-ranging in a meadow

So, I hope I've sold you on the idea that there is nothing common about the brown quail, in fact quite the reverse.

I am in the process of making a set of films on the different colours but in the meantime here is a film showing some of them to give you an idea of the beauty of these fabulous quail.



Golden and Pharaoh Coturnix Quail Chicks with Mother Frizzle Cochin Bantam
In  the next article, I'll look at the glistening golds and shimmering whites and how a Spanish queen's declaration on a 15th century battlefield inspired a quail colour in France.

Thanks for dropping by and do feel free to share experiences or ask for further information in the comment section. If you have enjoyed this piece and found it useful think about sharing it with your family and friends, on social media and also maybe about joining this blog and/or subscribing to my YoutubeOdysee  or BitChute Channel or even supporting us on Patreon or

It all helps to keep me going!

All the best,

Sue

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© 2018 Sue Cross