The Chukar is the most widely distributed and the most numerous of all the partridges that scientists assigned to the genus Alectoris. All these factors combined make for a great bird. Its range is not difficult for an Old World birder to visit, and once there the bird is not hard to find – for a partridge. Then there is the fact that its plumage (the original to the copy-cat New World quails) can easily rival many a spring’s warbler, and there you have it:  just look up “marvelous” on wikipedia and the first thing you see is a full-sized image of a Chukar grinning at you. Oh, in case you do, you know, look up “marvelous” on wikipedia and can’t find a picture of a Chukar: it was recently edited away on the grounds that birds can’t grin.

Then of course, Chukars have style as they’ve chosen landscapes like this for them to roam…

landscape 2

Kazakhstan’s Mangghystau province. If your place doesn’t look anything like this, then you shouldn’t be seeing Chukars!

And the caption of the picture above is the point of this post: sometimes the choice of where to roam isn’t theirs. Indeed, the Chukar was and is being widely introduced to many parts of North America (not necessarily always for birding purposes), where it is regularly found out West but pops up here and there in the East as well.

Chukars of North America can tell you a lot about the mind-set of birders roaming that particular continent. Because birders like Chukars. They don’t like House Sparrows and they sure feel no sympathy whatsoever for Starlings. But Chukars are okay. You may argue that they don’t wreak the same havoc with the indigenous species as do the two aforementioned invasives, but that would be a rather avicentric view. If you were a botanist, or a seeding tuft of grass out West, you’d certainly disapprove.

chukar1

Seed eaters looking for the next kill.

 

chukar2

Willets used to nest here. Then came the Chukars.

 

So, where is the difference between a flock of Chukars and a flock of Starlings to the heart of a North American birder? Well, I can only guess (and you can decide whether that’s because I am not North American or don’t have a heart), but in my opinion, it’s all in the Chukar’s numbers: it is an ABA Code 2. This means it is not that easy to see, as in “more difficult than looking out of you kitchen window” as is the case for Starlings and House Sparrows. I’ve even met birders who went somewhere especially to see Chukars,  and have yet to meet anyone who did the same for House Sparrows. In particular, I remember this one Chukar situation down South in Tennessee* a while ago. I stood there at the edge of a green meadow, looked at the bird and thought to myself that Tennessee was not in Asia, and that a lush green meadow was not within what the Chukar’s normal ecological parameter’s range should be, and that this was indeed a sorry sight to see. Then this car pulled up, a birder jumped out, ran towards me and called:

 

Pardon me, boy
Is that the Chattanooga Chukar?
An ABA Code 2
Boy can I look at it, too?
I can’t afford
To miss the Chattanooga Chukar
I’m doin’ a big year
With not a species to spare

 chukar3

I left my Pennsylvania home ’bout a quarter to four
Checked my BirdAlird when I was in Baltimore
Tell me where the bird is
Nothing is of more bliss
Than to tick if off and have it on my year list

 chukar4

And I said:

When you see the mistle growing left from the barn
Then you know the Chukar’s perch is not very far
This is where you should be
looking at the pear tree

Wooo, wooo, Chatta’ Chukar there you are!

 chukar5

There’s gonna be
A party at the observation
High Fives and cheers
A lifer dance and some beers
I’m gonna cry
Until I yell that it should not here roam!
So Chattanooga Chukar
won’t you shoo-shoo back home?
Chattanooga Chukar
won’t you shoo-shoo back home?

 landscape mangghystau 3


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* I might have never been to Tennessee and might or might not have made this up for the sake of a story to tell.

Written by Jochen
Jochen Roeder was born in Germany and raised to be a birder. He also spent a number of years abroad, just so he could see more birds. One of his most astounding achievements is the comprehension that Yellow-crowned Night-herons do not exist, as he failed to see any despite birding in North America for more than two years. He currently lives near Heidelberg, one of the most boring places for a birder to live, a fact about which he likes to whinge a lot. When he is not birding or trying to convince his teenage son that patiently scanning some fields for migrants is more fun than staring at a smartphone, he enjoys contemplating the reasoning behind the common names of birds. He first became famous in the bird blog world on Bell Tower Birding.