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Over 50,000 color images of worldwide
plant and animal species

Over 50,000 color images of worldwide
plant and animal species

Rhynchortyx cinctus
Wood Quail - Tawny Faced
KingdomAnimal (Animalia)
PhylumBackboned Animals (Chordata)
ClassBird (Aves)
OrderFowl (Bird) (Galliformes)
FamilyQuail (Bird) (Odontophoridae)
GenusRhynchortyx
Scientific NameRhynchortyx cinctus
Common NameWood Quail - Tawny Faced
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SPECIES INFO
Tawny face wood quail (Rhynchortyx cinctus) is found from Honduras in Central America south through Panama through western Colombia to northern Ecuador. This is a small 7 inch quail with a high degree of sexual dimorphism. The male is distinctive. He has an orange face with a white throat. His upper breast is pale gray marked with pale white spots. His lower breast is pale brown-white and marked with feint horizontal brown stripes. The female is brown with a white eye stripe. Her upper breast is brown, but her middle and center breast is white marked with brown horizontal stripes. Her throat is pale. (The mainland subspecies are much darker colored.)

There are three subspecies. The nominate subspecies is found from southern Nicaragua to Panama. The subspecies pudibundus is found from Honduras south to northern Nicaragua. The darker subspecies australis is found on the mainland of South America.


The tawny faced quail (Rhynchortyx cinctus) genus contains a single species. This species is found from Central America (Honduras and Guatemala) south to the western slope of the Andes and lower lands of west Colombia and west Ecuador. The various subspecies are quite variable. The male has a brown to orange head with a gray upper breast. The female upper breast is reddish below a white throat. The female middle breast is pale, but marked with darker markings.

Quail and Pheasant Family (Family Phasianidae) contains 178 species and is usually broken down into three separate subfamilies as follows: New World quails (Odontophorinae); true pheasants (Phasianinae); and Old World quails (Perdicinae). Some authors treat these three subfamilies as full families. Here they are treated as three different families. The New World Quails (Odontophoridae Family) contains about 31 species found only in the New World.

Fowl group (Galliformes order) contains the various chickens and turkey-like birds of the world. There are about 240 different species of fowl known. Many of the wild species are endangered. Several species such as the domesticated chicken and turkey are main food sources in the world. Most fowl are grain eaters and spend a good portion of their life searching for food on the ground. Select species have been domesticated for their beauty and/or edibility, others are considered good game birds.

Aves contains about 8,650 different species of living birds known to science. Each year about one new species is discovered in some remote rain forest or remote island. In addition, scientists have been raising many subspecies to full species status which may raise the species count to 10,000. Birdlife recognizes 10,027 species as of 2011.

However, each year about one species goes extinct. The rate of extinction is increasing, and the rate of new discovery is decreasing, so that the number of bird species will soon begin to decline rapidly. Although different taxonomists would organize the birds differently, there are approximately twenty-seven orders of birds. These orders are broken down into about one hundred and fifty-five different families.

Recent research of the genetic structure of some of the shore birds and owls would indicate that the present organization of orders and families should have some modification.

The birds are a worldwide group of animals that are characterized by having the front limbs modified into wings that are used for flying. Perhaps the most unique feature of the birds is the feathers. These feathers are made up of a central support called a quill and a series of small filaments that are hooked together as barbs.

For many years it was believed that Archaeopteryx discovered in Bavaria was the oldest bird from about 150 million years ago. However, in l986, Sankar Chattterjee, a Texas paleontologist, reportedly discovered a bird in the genus Protoavis that lived about 225 million years ago.

When this project was begun in 1978, we used Austin & Singer for bird taxonomy. Since then, we have adopted many changes, but have kept some older concepts that are still found widely in the literature. Recently, we have used Clements and Howard & Moore. Very recently, we have used Monroe and Sibley for the higher taxonomy of the perching birds.

Backboned Animals (Phylum Chordata) are the most advanced group of animals on earth. These animals are characterized by having a spinal cord or backbone. Most members have a clearly defined brain that controls the organism through a spinal cord. Fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals are in this phylum.

Currently, some taxonomists believe that the fish should be divided into two groups (sharks and regular fishes) and that there are some other primitive groups in the phylum such as hagfish or lampreys.

Animal Kingdom contains numerous organisms that feed on other animals or plants. Included in the animal kingdom are the lower marine invertebrates such as sponges and corals, the jointed legged animals such as insects and spiders, and the backboned animals such as fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals.