close-up of a bobwhite quail singing its song
Northern Bobwhite by Chad Hutchinson/Macaulay Library.

In early March, 1,350 members of the Park Cities Quail Coalition flooded Armstrong Field House on the Dallas campus of Southern Methodist University for an yearly fundraising event billed as Conservations Greatest Night. In recent years, the group of voracious quail hunters has given its T. Boone Pickens Lifetime Sportsman Awardnamed for the late oil patch tycoon who was the organizations chairman emeritusto celebrities including Ted Turner, Tom Brokaw, and country music singer George Strait.

The oil and real manor high-rollers in ubiety bid up prices on donated prizes, such as a quail venery on Texass famed King Ranch, including travel on Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Joness team plane. When the dinner dishes were cleared and the prompting concluded, Park Cities had raised increasingly than $1.5 million. Says Park Cities president Raymond Morrow, There really isnt any other wildlife organization that raises that much money in a single night.

Since 2006, the group has raised $15 million to modernize the prospects of the feathered rocket known as the Northern Bobwhite. Hunters from big-city billionaires to Midwest family farmers have long prized the rush of a covey of a dozen bobwhite taking wing at once.

But its not just hunters who love this plump bird. Though there are several quail species in the United States, there is only one east of the Unconfined Plainswhere the words bobwhite and quail are synonymous for the minion bird with a black-and-whie striped squatter and an eponymous song (poor bob-WHITE). A lot of farmers create bobwhite habitat on their property just to see and hear the bird they remember from their childhoods.

Thats a sign of spring, when you hear the bobwhite calling, says Jackie Augustine, executive director of Audubon of Kansas. Theyre very kind of comical when you unquestionably get to watch them, considering their little heads stick out when they run.

Everybody loves to hear a quail, see a quail, says Lee Metcalf, a biologist for the Missouri Department of Conservation who works with landowners on habitat conservation projects. It doesnt plane matter if youre a hunter. In this county, everybody likes quail.

But as hunters and birders both know, the bobwhite has fallen on nonflexible times. Since 1970, Northern Bobwhite numbers have dropped 77%, says Ken Rosenberg, retired scientist with the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and lead tragedian of the 2019 study that showed North America has lost 3 billion birds. Equal to Rosenberg, Breeding Bird Survey counts wideness the East, Southeast, and South show the same depressing trend for the little quail: All the surveys were showing a very steep decline.

But theres hope. Where habitat persiststhink of the mixed range and farmland of inside Kansas, or hunting plantations of the Deep Southbobwhite protract to thrive. And where habitat is restored, bobwhite return.

The big question: Can Northern Bobwhite overly regain the zillions it enjoyed decades ago?

Not Strictly a Grassland Bird

map of North America showing range and abundnace of Northern Bobwhite in purple
Relative zillions of Northern Bobwhite wideness its range. Darker colors indicate higher relative abundance. Map uses eBird data from 20062020, modeled by eBird Status and Trends.

The Northern Bobwhite, Colinus virginianus, once lived from the rangeland of Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas all the way to the Atlantic Coast. They still dorecent eBird checklists tallied bobwhites in Maryland, New Yorks Long Island, and Cape Cod in Massachusetts. But with few exceptions, quail numbers are far lower than they were just a few decades ago.

Most experts pin the long-term ripen of Northern Bobwhite on loss of habitat. Put simply, bobwhite are in the same pickle as meadowlarks, Dickcissels, and prairie-chickens. Grassland bird species are experiencing the steepest declines of any group of birds, says Rosenberg.

But bobwhites are not strictly grassland birds, which makes their predicament unique and complicated. They need a mix of grass, forbs, and yellowish ground where thumb-sized chicks can forage freely; as well as woody imbricate such as brush, thickets, and wood edges. Woody imbricate is important for protection from raptors and unprepossessed weather. But too much cover, or none at all, often ways no bobwhite.

There was an zillions of such patchwork imbricate throughout the bobwhites range a century ago. Forests had been logged and were only whence to grow back. Farms were small and diversefields of hay and grains were separated by raggedy brushy fencerows. Farmers often burned their fields.

In 1950, the typical Missouri sublet was 40 acres with a multitude of crops and livestockeverything to support a family, says Lee Metcalf, the Missouri Department of Conservation biologist.

All that stuffsmall little fields, all in variegated stages and lots of areas undisturbed. There were no chemicals to set stuff back. There was no tractor and mower to go mow off stuff so it looked pretty, Metcalf says. Posts were cut from hedgerows and firewood from woodlots. They continually kept wearing on it so it had shrubby imbricate in it all the time. It was really good rabbit and quail hunting.

The same was true throughout much of the Midwest, East, and South, says Rosenberg.

The whole region was habitat, really, he says. Agricultural areas were just full of weedy margins, roadsides, and hedgerows. Those were unconfined for birds. I undeniability it willy-nilly conservation.

According to many experts, those conditions in the early and mid-20th century unliable bobwhite to thrive at levels perhaps never matched in history.

Since then, farms have grown larger, tidier, and less varied. A single cornfield today may imbricate what had been an unshortened family farm, without any of the diversity that proved so valuable to bobwhite and other wildlife.

Clean agriculture, says Rosenberg, has just squeezed everything out of the landscape.

In some areas, bobwhite have an spare problem. Without fire or logging, clearings and x-rated sublet fields that were once unshut have now grown when into dumbo forest.

No sunlight, no grass, no firewell then, millions of acres became no longer suitable for bobwhite quail, says quail biologist Robert Perez, coordinator for the Oaks and Prairies Joint Venture in Oklahoma and Texas.

Private Lands Are the Key

The prescription for bobwhite recovery is straightforward: reintroduce patchy patterns of grass, forbs, unshut woodland, and shrub to the landscape.

Thats easy in concept, but tough in practice. As much as 85% of potential bobwhite habitat is private land. Restoration is expensive, and its nonflexible for habitat to compete with the profits from corn or soybeans.

Its an enormous private lands challenge, says John Morgan, director of the National Bobwhite & Grassland Initiative. The NBGI is a joint of 25 state wildlife agencies and conservation groups worked in 1995 to restore wild bobwhite populations wideness their range.

closeup of a tubby brown-and-black quail (Northern Bobwhite) standing on a fencepost with its peck wide open.
A male Northern Bobwhite sings his whistled “bob-white!” song from a fence post. Photo by Lynette Spence/Mcaulay Library.

Missouri has made increasingly restoration progress than most states. In the northwestern part of the state, Lee Metcalf works with landowners in the 2C Quail Restoration Landscape to set whispered marginal farmland for quail and create suitable habitat through practices such as prescribed burning. In wooded areas, landowners cut trees to unshut the canopy, permitting sunlight to reach wildflowers and grasses. Along the whet of fields, he recommends farmers edge-feather by felling mature trees and leaving them lie to provide woody cover.

The work isnt easy or cheap, and sometimes it takes land out of production. Metcalf often points farmers to conservation subsidies in the federal Sublet Bill, such as the Conservation Reserve Program and Environmental Quality Incentives Program, to recoup for expenses and lost income.

Where habitat has been restored, bobwhite have responded. Compared with tenancy areas nearby, the quail restoration landscape has two to six times as many quail, equal to surveys by the state conservation department.

Since most of the land suitable as bobwhite habitat is private, landowner participation is crucial, says Metcalf.

It doesnt work if you dont have landowners cooperating with you and getting it washed-up on the ground, he says.

One of those landowners is Richard Phillips, who left his familys sublet in Missouri for higher and a career in education, but came when as his brothers health declined. Says Phillips, I had two choiceseither to wilt increasingly involved or to watch the property deteriorate.

While his brother had put some land into conservation programs, Phillips decided to forsake yield production and convert the unshortened 300 acres into wildlife cover. He established native forbs and brush, opened up woodlands, planted blackberry and sumac thickets, and grew wildlife supplies plots of wheat, sunflowers, corn, soybeans, and sorghumall under Metcalfs direction.

When we do the burning, its a family affair. We try to shrivel well-nigh a fourth of the property off each year, says Phillips, who like Metcalf is a lifetime member of the hunting and conservation group Quail Forever. I told my grandkids, the quail are just a barometer. It gives us a reading on how the property is stuff cared for.

Unlike Phillips, most farmers dont have the luxury of devoting all their working land to quail. But so-called precision threshing can help identify unprofitable acres that are largest put to wildlifeturning red acres green.

David McCutchan raises Angus cattle and row crops on the family sublet in northeastern Missouri. As a kid, you  comcould go out without school and skiver your limit of quail without any problem, he says. That reverted by the mid-1990s.

McCutchan wanted to see bobwhite again, so he decided to convert some cropland to quail habitat, and the digital yield maps from his GPS-guided sublet machinery showed him exactly where to find iton acres that chronically underproduced considering of shade, soil type, flooding, or lack of water.

He enrolled 20 acres of his field confines in a federal program that provides yearly payments plus forfeit sharing for seeding. He edge-feathered some of his field confines and draws, and planted seven acres in a wildflower mix for pollinators such as bees and butterflies.

A combination of federal Sublet Bill conservation incentives, Quail Forever donations, and state matching funds pays for the work. And it worked.

When we harvested this fall we saw the most coveys that weve seen in years, McCutchan says.

A Northern Bobwhite with brown and woebegone soul and a white-and-black squatter flies wideness a field.
Fire is a commonmany would say indispensableelement of bobwhite management in the pine woodlands of the Southeast. Photo by Justin Watts/Macaulay Library.

Where Bobwhite Still Fly High

In the pine savannas of northern Florida, the bobwhite has unfurled to thrive considering of keen interest in the bird and warlike use of prescribed fire.

We undeniability quail the fire bird, says Alex Jackson, game bird research and extension biologist at the Tall Timbers Research Station north of Tallahassee. Fire is a commonmany would say indispensableelement of bobwhite management in the pine woodlands of the Southeast, vital to keeping the understory from growing too thick and the unshut savannas from maturing into closed-canopy forest.

Tall Timbers sits in a region straddling the Florida-Georgia line where quail created an industry, a way of life, and an ecosystemwhere they flourished plane as they vanished elsewhere. Considering of intense management of bobwhites as a game species, I would say that lanugo here they are at historical highs, says Jackson.

The quail era began in the late 1800s, with the demise of antebellum cotton plantations. Virtually the same time, shotguns became sufficiently lightweight and reliable so that upland hunting became popular. In bobwhite, sportsmen discovered a quarry that would sit for a pointing dog. And northern industrialists had money to spend on a fashionable sport.

Historical black-and-white photo of a man posing in a field, holding a shotgun, wearing a hunting jacket, hat, and tie, with a hunting dog.
In 1958, Henry Beadel turned his family’s hunting manor into Tall Timbers Research Station, which has conducted landmark research on prescribed fire and wildlife. Image courtesy Tall Timbers archive.

In the late 1800s, rich hunters gobbled up unshortened plantations on either side of the state line, stately antebellum homes intact, and conglomerate hunting grounds by the thousands of acres devoted to the pursuit of Gentleman Bob. Teams of pointers or English setters ranged superiority in search of coveys as hunters followed in mule-drawn wagons. Among the weightier known of these bobwhite barons was financier and philanthropist Jeptha Homer Wade II from Cleveland, who in 1906 assembled 10,000 acres for hiswinter retreat tabbed Millpond at the end of the rail line in Thomasville, Georgia.

Beginning in the 1920s, ecologist and ornithologist Herbert Stoddard, a friend and colleague of Aldo Leopold, came to the zone to study bobwhite and their habitat. Stoddard realized that bobwhite numbers declined as these new landowners protected habitat by preventing fires. So he began working with landowners to maximize quail numbers through selective logging and prescribed fire, a formula that worked magic on bobwhite. In 1958, Stoddard worked with the Beadel family from New York to convert their familys hunting plantation into the Tall Timbers Research Station, a nonprofit organization defended to studying the role of fire in wildlife management.

Today much of Tall Timberss work is consulting and managing other private lands in the area. The Tall Timbers tideway involves urgent spots here and there until you get a patchwork of different-aged vegetation structure that birds need to fulfill their requirements throughout their life, says Jackson.

The early-successional habitat that benefits quail moreover helps other birds, such as Bachmans Sparrows, Henslows Sparrows, and Red-cockaded Woodpeckers.

We have veritably the weightier longleaf pine systems on these private properties, says Jim Cox, vertebrate monitoring program director at Tall Timbers. You cant find anything that matches it on the public lands.

To make sure the habitat endures, Tall Timbers acquires conservation easements on the private lands where it conducts habitat management. A conservation easement protects a plot of land from conversion to threshing or any kind of development, by purchasing the minutiae rights from the landowner.

Its one of the most constructive tools we can possibly use, says Cox. It provides families with a tax benefit, but it moreover maintains the land use the property is currently in. We have well-nigh 150,000 acres now in easements in the region that will be permanently well-managed pine forest quail-hunting areas into perpetuity.

Tall Timbers has moreover wilt the go-to validity in translocating wild bobwhite to other areas where habitat is suitable, but quail themselves have vanished. In Pennsylvania, where wild bobwhites disappeared 20 to 30 years ago, the Tall Timbers station is working with the U.S. Unwashed and Pennsylvania Game Commission to restore habitat and reintroduce quail to the Letterkenny Unwashed Depot in the Cumberland Valley. Andrew Ward, quail biologist for the Pennsylvania Game Commission, plans to move birds whence in spring 2023 and alimony introducing quail until the population numbers well-nigh 1,000.

Again, the restored bobwhite habitat is proving salubrious to several other bird species. Ward says that hes once seen increasingly Dickcissels, Eastern Meadowlarks, Indigo Buntings, and Yellow-breasted Chatsas well as a five-fold increase in American Woodcockbecause of the increased stubble of woody imbricate created for quail.

Research Pays Off

Of the millions of dollars raised by the Park Cities Quail Coalition in Texas, most of their money goes into research.

We want to have a magnifying effect with our dollars, says coalition president Raymond Morrow.

Much of Park Cities largesse goes to the Rolling Plains Quail Research Ranch northwest of Abilene, which studies everything that points toward quail, says executive director Brad Kubecka.

Staff have banded or radio-tagged thousands of bobwhite and compiled the most comprehensive quail data set in the Lone Star State. The birds are tracked for survival and production, key information that can be tied into ranch management, says Kubecka.

The ranch moreover reintroduces quail through translocation, but only for landowners who have optimized large acreages of quail cover. Says Kubecka, Its kind of an incentive to get your habitat in shape.

Gary Price, who raises cattle on a ranch south of Dallas, had his habitat in shape. We really wanted to bring when quail considering we did have good habitat, Price says.

Working with federal programs and at his own expense, he established native grasses on his 2,250 acres in Texass Blackland Prairie. The draws are filled with thickets of Texas ash and mesquite, and scattered trees provide shade for his cattle. Price installed fencing to rotationally graze cattle through a series of small paddocks. As a result, he has a profitable ranch with a reputation for sustainability. In 2018, Price was recognized with McDonalds Flagship Farmer Award.

Price had all the components of bobwhite habitat. But few bobwhite. So he worked with Texas Parks and Wildlife Department on a bobwhite translocation project, using birds secured from Rolling Plains Quail Research Ranch and livetrapped near the Mexican border. Bobwhite were released on two subsequent springsabout 150 birds in all. Price moreover joined with several nearby landowners in the Western Navarro Bobwhite Restoration Initiative to build up the vineyard of good quail habitat in Navarro County.

Weve got well-nigh 35,000 acres now of somewhat first-hand habitat, he says. The project has been very successful. These birds have stayed. Theyre reproducing.

six bobwhite quail are released into the wild into a stand of scattered pine trees and dry grasses
Wild Northern Bobwhite are released from a temporary holding box in Baker County, Georgia, without stuff fitted with small transmitters. The Tall Timbers Research Station is tracking these radio-tagged birds to study their habitat use and inform land management practices that goody bobwhite. Photo by Justin Rectenwald.

Boots on the Grass

To see success on a single sublet is one thing. To meaningfully restore bobwhite habitat on farmlands wideness the birds range is quite another.

More Well-nigh Bobwhite Conservation

To get it washed-up youve got to have boots on the grass, says Robert Perez, the coordinator for the Oaks and Prairies Joint Venture in Texas and Oklahoma. The Oaks and Prairies JV is a partnership of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, American Bird Conservancy, and other groups that work with private landowners to modernize habitat for struggling species such as bobwhite.

Boots on the groundthats expensive. Personnel is expensive, says Perez. We need an unwashed of biologists to be out there, door knocking and developing those relationships.

Even the millions in conservation funding misogynist for the minion bobwhite is too little to restore much increasingly than a fraction of the hundreds of millions of acres that once supported well-healed populations of quail. Investments in bobwhite habitat havent kept up with the need. For example, the vineyard enrolled in the flagship program of the Sublet Bills Conservation Titlethe Conservation Reserve Programhas declined from 36.7 million acres in 2007 to virtually 22 million acres today.

CRP is just not at a scale that will work long term, says Rosenberg, the retired Cornell Lab scientist. Without some permanently set whispered and protected habitat, like there is for wetlands and waterfowl and wildlife refuges, without that kind of habitat system for grassland birds, I think the prognosis is pretty dismal.

With that in mind, several conservation groupsincluding Quail Forever, the National Wildlife Federation, and American Bird Conservancyare imploring Congress to pass a North American Grasslands Conservation Act that would prioritize grassland protection and provide funding incentives to restore grasslands on farms and ranches. Proponents say it would goody open-country wildlife the way the North American Wetlands Conservation Act protected waterfowl habitat and helped restore continental populations of ducks.

The politics and projects that promote grassland restoration are often led by hunting organizations willing to requite money and effort to restore populations of upland game birds, whether pheasants, prairie grouse, or bobwhite. And that creates the potential for powerful partnerships with birding organizations, says Jackie Augustine, executive director of Audubon of Kansas.

Theres lots of opportunities to be synergistic, Augustine says. Who is on the front lines of conservation? Its the hunters that are seeing declines, and the birders that are seeing declines. I think both types of organizations are seeing where the conservation needs are. And there are opportunities to work together.

The bobwhite fan club needs to get worthier than just hunters and birders, says John Morgan, director of the National Bobwhite & Grassland Initiative. Equal to Morgan, passing a big piece of legislation like a North American Grasslands Act will require promoting grasslands restoration benefits vastitude quailsuch as soil health, water quality, and stat sequestration.

If we can start coupling the wildlife message with all those other environmental benefits plus the uncontrived human benefit, says Morgan, now were talking to unbearable people where we can make bobwhite an icon for environmental health.

Freelance writer Greg Breining is a frequent freelancer to Living Bird. He writes well-nigh wildlife, the environment, health, and science.