May 16
Kindness

Arizona Wildlife Center Caring for Nearly 200 Baby Quail

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Adobe Stock/Joshua Daniels
Arizona Wildlife Center Caring for Nearly 200 Baby Quail

It’s officially baby bird season in Tucson — and one local wildlife center is experiencing an adorable overload.

According to the Tucson Wildlife Center, staff members are currently caring for nearly 200 baby Gambel’s quail chicks, with roughly 20 new arrivals coming in every single day.

Some chicks are brought in alone. Others arrive in small groups after becoming separated from their families in the Arizona desert.

And while the tiny birds may look fragile, wildlife experts say quail are surprisingly independent from the moment they hatch.

Built for the Desert From Day One

Unlike many birds that stay tucked inside nests for weeks, Gambel’s quail chicks can walk, run, and follow their parents within hours of hatching.

In the wild, families travel together through the desert in groups known as broods.

That strong family structure is part of what makes rescue efforts challenging.

Wildlife experts say that once chicks are removed from their parents, reuniting them can become extremely difficult.

“For that reason, giving them space from the start is one of the most important ways to help,” the center explained.

Caregivers urge people who encounter lone chicks not to rush in immediately, since adult birds often return once humans back away.

A Nursery Full of Tiny Birds

Inside the center’s Baby Bird and Small Mammal Wing, staff members are working around the clock to recreate natural conditions for the chicks.

That includes:

  • specialized heat support
  • raising the birds in social groups
  • using feather dusters to mimic the warmth and security of parent birds

Because quail are naturally social animals, keeping the chicks together helps them learn normal flock behavior before they are eventually released back into the wild.

Why Wildlife Centers Matter

Spring and early summer are among the busiest seasons for wildlife rehabilitation organizations across the country.

Baby animals often become separated from parents due to storms, predators, human activity, or accidental interference from well-meaning people trying to help.

Centers like Tucson Wildlife Center provide temporary care while also educating the public about when intervention is—and isn’t—necessary.

For now, staff members say the quail nursery remains very full, very busy, and very noisy.

But if all goes according to plan, hundreds of tiny desert birds will eventually make their way back into the Arizona landscape where they belong.


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