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		Chukar - Alectoris chukar  
		
		
		
		
Non-native Species Global Rank : 
G5 
			State Rank : 
SNA 
			
			
			
			Agency Status USFWS : 
USFS : 
BLM : 
PIF : 
				
			 
			
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			    Copyright by: The Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, NY, all rights reserved. 
			 
		
		 
	 
	
	 
		General Description
		Sexes are identical in appearance, with white cheeks and throat separated from the breast by a necklace of black. Adults are grayish brown to olive above, grading to gray on the chest. The sides are buff, with conspicuous black and chestnut vertical stripes, and the belly is buff. The outer tail feathers are reddish-brown. The bill, feet, and legs are red. Adult males and females range from 13 to 15 inches in length; adult males average 19.6 ounces in weight, and adult females, 15.7 ounces.
For a comprehensive review of the conservation status, habitat use, and ecology of this and other Montana bird species, please see 
Marks et al. 2016, Birds of Montana. Diagnostic Characteristics
		Gray (Hungarian) Partridges are somewhat smaller than Chukars, and have grayish-brown bodies with cinnamon-colored heads.
		
	
	Species Range
	
		
			Montana Range 
		Range Descriptions 
			
				
					Non-native 
				 
			
				
					
			 
			
			
			Western Hemisphere Range 
			 
		
	 
	
		Observations in Montana Natural Heritage Program Database
		Number of Observations:  443
		
		
(Click on the following maps and charts to see full sized version) 
		Map Help and Descriptions 
				Relative Density 
				 
		
			
				Recency 
				 
		
				
					SUMMER (Feb 16 - Dec 14) 
				
				
					
						Direct Evidence of Breeding
						
						Indirect Evidence of Breeding
						
						No Evidence of Breeding
						
					WINTER (Dec 15 - Feb 15) 
				
				
					
						Regularly Observed
						
						Not Regularly Observed
						 
		
			
				(Observations spanning multiple months or years are excluded from time charts) 
		 
		
			
		
		
	
		Habitat
		Habitat consists of steep, rocky, semi-arid country with an abundance of cheatgrass and brushy draws.  In western Montana they used brushy areas all year; were near springs late in summer; and grain fields in winter. Semi-arid lands with shrubby cover near steep, rocky hills is used (Davis 1961). They are most successful in sagebrush-juniper or sagebrush-bitterbrush with cheatgrass and bunchgrasses (Mussehl 1971).
		
		
	
		Food Habits
		In western Montana they prefer green grass leaves, cheatgrass seeds and grains. In early spring the diet is green grass and forb leaves; in summer it is seeds and insects; in late summer and fall it is chokecherries; and in winter waste grain, seeds, and grass and forb leaves are eaten (Mussehl 1971).
		
	
		Reproductive Characteristics
		In western Montana broods average 8.1 young and the average hatching date is June 29. In Washington nesting begins in early April, and hatching begins in late May and June (Johnsgard 1986). Nesting chronology may be much the same in Montana.
		
	
		Stewardship Responsibility
		
		
	
	References
	
		
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