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Leg length and slender proportions indicate wild rather than any of the bronze domestic breeds. Based on the pale buff ends of the tail feathers and tail coverts, they look most like wild Merriams.
They sure do look like merriams birds.
I'd bet your correct doublelung
Quote from: jasnt on January 02, 2016, 03:11:43 PMI'd bet your correct doublelungDisagree....there are still Easterns that have not been compromised. Perhaps Rio's in some parts of the Southeast and Merriams in Klickitat. Most hybridization occured in NE and central NE.Unfortunately there are always those who think they can help the local population by turning game farm stock out.
Quote from: Wacenturion on January 03, 2016, 04:56:21 PMQuote from: jasnt on January 02, 2016, 03:11:43 PMI'd bet your correct doublelungDisagree....there are still Easterns that have not been compromised. Perhaps Rio's in some parts of the Southeast and Merriams in Klickitat. Most hybridization occured in NE and central NE.Unfortunately there are always those who think they can help the local population by turning game farm stock out. You may well be right. You definitely are about the game farm stock, wild birds are pretty easy to trap in the winter too. I know of no confirmed unauthorized transplants, but have sure heard a bunch of stories about the birds baited into a horse trailer "on my buddy's place in Eastern WA" and driven west over the crest or up the Methow - some of which seem to coincide with the appearance of new flocks like this one (though the ones I'm thinking of in particular are in eastern Lewis County and eastern Snohomish).Back in the late 80s I worked on a telemetry study of Eastern behavior in northern New England - heavily forested country in NH and VT. When a clutch was predated those hens typically undertook a 20-50 air mile relocation, and found new areas with local birds - often pockets of wild turkeys we didn't know existed (this was about 14 years after the birds were reintroduced in NH after being extirpated in NH and ME). That behavior and migratory capability, in dense forest habitat similar to western WA, is the basis of my suspicion there are few, if any, uncompromised Eastern flocks.