Mountain quail primarily move about by walking, and can move surprisingly quickly through brush and undergrowth. In the late summer, fall and winter, the adults and immature young congregate into family groups of up to 20 birds. The birds' habits can be secretive. Any flight is usually short and explosive, with many rapid wingbeats followed by a slow glide to the ground.
Feeding Its
diet consists primarily of plant matter and
seeds. The chicks are decidedly more
insectivorous than adults, gradually consuming more plant matter as they mature.
Breeding Breeding among mountain quail is
monogamous and rarely gregarious. The female typically lays 9–10
eggs in a simple
scrape concealed in vegetation, often at the base of a tree or
shrub, usually close to water.
Incubation lasts from 21 to 25 days, usually performed by the female and rarely by the male. However, preliminary research by the University of Nevada suggests that males have successfully incubated chicks on their own, which creates the possibility of a pair of mountain quails raising two broods in one breeding season. The chicks are
precocial, leaving the
nest with their parents within hours of hatching. ==Status and conservation==