Welcome to the Richard M. Kleberg, Jr. Center for Quail Research Website

The mission of the Richard M. Kleberg, Jr. Center for Quail Research is to develop a scientific basis for the sustainable management and harvest of wild quail populations throughout south Texas and elsewhere.

Our Committment

We are dedicated to conducting original research on wild quail populations in south Texas, and elsewhere when appropriate and possible. This dedication is rooted in the ecological and cultural importance of quail in this part of Texas. It is also motivated from the broader context of bobwhite populations, which have declined significantly over most of their geographic range during the past four decades or more.

Quail—primarily northern bobwhite—research is a huge priority at the Institute. We maintain a strong commitment to quail research because: (1) south Texas contains the largest remaining expanses of quail habitat in North America, (2) quail hunting is an important economic force in south Texas, especially when combined with white-tailed deer and other hunting activities, and (3) habitat management that sustains wild quail populations is likely to have widespread, positive effects on scores of other desirable wildlife populations, including grassland birds, other small game species, as well as threatened and endangered species. 

Featured News

Quail Groups Vow to Stop Quail Decline, Return to 1980 Levels

Reprinted from Livestock Weekly, article by Colleen Schreiber -Quail biologists, researchers, land managers and the like know and long ago perfected most of the tricks of the trade when it comes to managing and...

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South Texas Quail Faring Better than Surveys Indicate

Reprinted from Livestock Weekly, By Colleen Schreiber - It was a much brighter outlook, a glass way over half full kind of scenario, that Dr. Lenny Brennan, quail biologist with the Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research...

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