Factors Affecting Survival of Attwater's Prairie-Chicken Broods

Author:

Morrow Michael E.1,Lehnen Sarah E.2,Chester Rebecca E.1,Pratt Aaron C.3,Sesnie Steven E.2,Kelso Jay4,Feuerbacher C. Kirk4

Affiliation:

1. M.E. Morrow, R.E. Chester Attwater Prairie Chicken National Wildlife Refuge, P.O. Box 519, Eagle Lake, Texas 77434> Present address of R.E. Chester: Division of Biological Sciences, Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge, P.O. Box 109, Sasabe, Arizona 85633

2. S.E. Lehnen, S.E. Sesnie U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, P.O. Box 1306, 500 Gold Avenue SW, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87102

3. A.C. Pratt Society of Tympanuchus Cupido Pinnatus, Ltd. and Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute, Texas A&M University-Kingsville, 700 University Blvd., Kingsville, Texas 78363 Present address: George Miksch Sutton Avian Research Center, P.O. Box 2007, Bartlesville, Oklahoma 74005

4. J. Kelso, C.K. Feuerbacher The Nature Conservancy of Texas, 3303 US Highway 59 N, Victoria, Texas 77905

Abstract

Abstract Annual population changes of most grouse, including the imperiled Attwater's prairie-chicken Tympanuchus cupido attwateri, are driven by annual reproductive success. Previous research identified poor survival of chicks as a primary bottleneck for recovery of this species. We evaluated the relative importance of 26 factors in 5 categories (weather and topography, habitat, plant phenology, time and site, hen characteristics) on Attwater's prairie-chicken brood survival to 2 wk posthatch (the period when chick mortality is highest) and on the number of chicks per brood at 6 wk posthatch (when chicks are capable of independent survival). Factors with most support for predicting brood survival to 2 wk included invertebrate dry mass, ordinal date, an index to maximum photosynthetic activity of vegetation from multispectral imagery, and proportion of brood locations within areas treated to suppress red imported fire ants Solenopsis invicta. Broods were most likely to survive if they hatched between early and late May and were located within areas 1) that were treated to suppress red imported fire ants, 2) where vegetation produced intermediate values for the maximum photosynthetic activity index, and 3) that supported high invertebrate biomass. The number of chicks per brood surviving to 6 wk posthatch was best predicted by a nonlinear relationship with a drought index during the first 2 wk posthatch, and it was maximized when average values of the drought index indicated moderately depleted soil moisture, but not severe drought. Our finding that the average drought index during the first 2 wk after hatch had more support for predicting the number of chicks per brood at 6 wk than did the average drought index for the entire 6 wk emphasizes the importance of the first 2 wk for Attwater's prairie-chickens. This comprehensive analysis of factors affecting Attwater's prairie-chicken brood survival provides valuable information to guide management and recovery efforts for this species.

Publisher

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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