Mixed Breed
A mixed breed common quail is a Coturnix coturnix recorded without a single named line or with ancestry from more than one keeper's stock. The wild common quail is a compact, streaked, ground-dwelling bird, best known as a migratory gamebird rather than a standardized domestic poultry breed. White birds occur in captive coturnix-type quail, but many birds labeled common quail are actually Japanese quail or intergraded domestic lines, so the name may describe appearance more than verified species.
For smallholders and hobby breeders, the useful questions are age, sex, fertility, temperament, and source, not the breed label. Mixed Coturnix need secure housing that prevents escapes and head injuries, with hiding cover to reduce panic. They are fast-growing, high-metabolism birds that require a proper gamebird starter when young and a balanced layer or maintenance ration as adults. Avoid using mixed-breed birds for release or wild supplementation, and separate them from any conservation or research stock where ancestry matters.
Colors: White, Wild‑Type