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How did it get here? Mystery surrounds flightless east-coast quail sightings on Island

A Comox Valley wildlife photographer didn’t have to go far to get what might be the first evidence of a rare east coast bird reproducing on Vancouver Island.

Catherine Babault recently photographed a male and female northern bobwhite in Courtenay, after a lucky encounter.

“I could hear those birds from my office. I was working on processing photos and I could hear them,” she says. “I thought, this is weird, I never heard that call before. So I went downstairs with my camera, and I saw a male and female, and they had chicks with them.”

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She believes the pair have been in the area since at least last year, and were spotted in Millerd Park in July 2023. She says it’s a mystery how they got here, since they can’t fly. Others who have seen them suggested to her the birds might have escaped from a farm.

The northern bobwhite is a type of quail native to the eastern United States. They were introduced in Washington for hunting more than a century ago but have only been seen rarely since 1992.

A female Northern Bobwhite, Colinus virginianus, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, rights-managed, stock images, © Catherine Babault
A female Northern Bobwhite spotted in the Comox Valley. Photo by Catherine Babault Photography
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