[obol] Feather structure, MOUNTAIN QUAIL
Pat Waldron
puma at smt-net.com
Fri Jun 6 13:22:25 PDT 2008
Dear Folks,
Finding feathers after a hawk attack, especially when a MOUNTAIN
QUAIL was the victim, has been interesting because of the difference
in their feather structure. I have seen this enough now, that it is
definitely MOUNTAIN QUAIL (MOQU). The flank feathers are two feathers
in one. The proximal end, the point of attachment to the body, is one
shaft, but two different feathers emerge. The longest feather a has
soft dark gray downy structure, and the distal end has the rich red
rufous color from their flanks. The second feather coming from the
same shaft is 3/4 as long and is all downy, dark gray, and there is a
slight twist to it.
I have seen this structure in only one other bird, the EMU. All the
feathers I found in a friend's pasture ( a rescue operation) had this
structure, 2 feathers, one shaft.
Questions:
Is this a winter time downy coat that is shed in summer?
Does this define some genetic association?
Does this occur with other birds?
Thank you,
Pat Waldron
East of Scio
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