I'm not saying it isn't posable but those wild bobs could be lucky so far or going off somewhere to die also. Without a way of tracking & testing there is no way to know for sure. I only know what I've seen & what I've read so I try to put the two together for best practices. I have set my own rules based on this knowledge. So far I've made an exception to these rules three times. I must be the person that hits on the lest of odds because eveytime I've made an exception it cost me money.
I've read that ducks are immune to almost everything by truthfully even after raising them I know nothing about them or geese ether. I don't know if geese & quail can be raised together. I wouldn't try it to see tho. Animals in the wild aren't as likely to infect others as is those that are always kept close together but they do still make others sick. Most animals don't allow the same species in their territory which protects them form spreading sickness to each other.
Oh i totally gotcha... We run a closed herd of red Angus, and we wouldn't DREAM of bringing a foreign animal, even another bull, without quarantine and health check, so I can see where the species probably each have their own niche... The bobs are usually running the perimeter of the creek; they don't meander up by the coops, so they are most likely avoiding any area that might cause them distress...
A big one being if the bobs aren't native to here; mine came from Iowa or wherever McMurray is... No adaptation to Colorado yet, so I wouldn't risk it for THEM. But I'm hoping down the line to be able to give some back to the wild, help out with native populations of quail, pheasant, and wild turkey; I'm saving a nice chunk of pasture for a preserve of sorts, but chickens won't be included

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