What should i do to stop an aggressive female without culling.

quailkeeperdavis

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Hello, I have a small group of quail, one male and five females. Recently i have one female who is being overly aggressive and I'm not sure what to do. She is pecking all my other females and the male head clean of feathers. luckily there has not been blood yet but I'm worried it will get there if i do nothing. I don't want to cull her. I read somewhere that i should maybe separate her for day and then reintroduce her. I have a secondary cage i can put her in but i also have been told that quail should not be alone. She is about 13.5 weeks old. they have water and food 24/7 and as it has been getting colder i have put up heat lamps to keep them worm. (it snowed yesterday and is suppose to stay cold for a bit.) I don't think they are over cold or hot. What should i do?
 
I don't have quail, but if they're anything like chickens, I'd definitely pull her for a couple of days - long enough to let the others reestablish their pecking order. If you can keep her cage close enough to the main one that everyone can see and hear each other, that should make reintroduction easier.
 
If you have a separate pen, you can put her in it, but the pen has to be very close to the main coop so she does not become isolated but can't cause problems, from there she will likely adapt slowly. or I can recommend a good soup recipe?
 
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Hello, I have a small group of quail, one male and five females. Recently i have one female who is being overly aggressive and I'm not sure what to do. She is pecking all my other females and the male head clean of feathers. luckily there has not been blood yet but I'm worried it will get there if i do nothing. I don't want to cull her. I read somewhere that i should maybe separate her for day and then reintroduce her. I have a secondary cage i can put her in but i also have been told that quail should not be alone. She is about 13.5 weeks old. they have water and food 24/7 and as it has been getting colder i have put up heat lamps to keep them worm. (it snowed yesterday and is suppose to stay cold for a bit.) I don't think they are over cold or hot. What should i do?
:welcome
I would pull her out for a day, then put her back in. Being alone for a day will not be pleasant for her, and will hopefully readjust her attitude. Let us know if that doesn't work.
 
Hello, I have a small group of quail, one male and five females. Recently i have one female who is being overly aggressive and I'm not sure what to do. She is pecking all my other females and the male head clean of feathers. luckily there has not been blood yet but I'm worried it will get there if i do nothing. I don't want to cull her. I read somewhere that i should maybe separate her for day and then reintroduce her. I have a secondary cage i can put her in but i also have been told that quail should not be alone. She is about 13.5 weeks old. they have water and food 24/7 and as it has been getting colder i have put up heat lamps to keep them worm. (it snowed yesterday and is suppose to stay cold for a bit.) I don't think they are over cold or hot. What should i do?
Thank you to everyone who has replied, I have separated her and will put her back in a day. I will post again with results.
 
I hate to say this but definitely consider culling if time out doesn’t work, it may work for chickens or slightly more intelligent birds but I’ve never had it work for quail and worse the behavior seems to be contagious, I lost a whole breeding pen because I couldn’t do what was best for the flock rather than one bird. She bullied, then I finally got rid of her and another hen started, repeat until every bullied bird suddenLy started when the previous model was removed. Whether the issue is behavioral or physical, you need to do what Is best for the flock, not just a favorite bird, whether it is culling extra roosters or euthanizing a deformed chick. Rehoming a cat that pees on the carpet or a dog at bites without informing the new owners is not kindness, neither is subjecting your other birds to a bully. Real love is doing the right thing for the beloved, despite the cost.
 

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