30 results on '"Applegate, Roger D."'
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2. Why Are There So Many Waterfowl and So Few Northern Bobwhites? Rethinking Federal Coordination.
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Williams, Christopher K., Applegate, Roger D., and Coppola, Philip M.
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NORTHERN bobwhite , *WATERFOWL , *MIGRATORY animals , *GAME & game-birds , *MIGRATORY birds ,MIGRATORY Bird Treaty Act (U.S. : 1918) - Abstract
In this paper we ask whether we should we re‐examine the future of upland gamebird management and greater federal oversight and partnerships in the twenty‐first century. Management for waterfowl in North America has been successful because of the 1918 Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA) and the subsequent 1986 North American Waterfowl Management Plan (NAWMP). Although the MBTA included most migratory and non‐migratory species, upland gamebirds, including the northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus; bobwhite), were excluded and retained under state control. Although many waterfowl populations have been increasing, bobwhite populations have declined precipitously during much of the period. Excluding non‐migratory gamebirds from the MBTA meant that the multistate coordinating efforts that made the MBTA successful for increasing the management of waterfowl have not been applied. The National Bobwhite Conservation Initiative (NBCI) has made a strong effort to unite states within the bobwhite range but does not have the federal anchoring and financial support that were given to states by the MBTA and NAWMP and currently integrate adaptive harvest, habitat management, and financial partnerships to acquire and manage wetlands that support waterfowl production. The NBCI Coordinated Implementation Program (CIP) is designed to serve the function of developing and monitoring habitat for bobwhites but is entirely voluntary and dependent entirely on state and non‐governmental organization (NGO) funds, lacking federal grants and Federal Duck Stamp funds. To catch up with the successes of waterfowl, we discuss the implications of increasing coordination, partnerships, and funding mechanisms between the federal government, state governments, and NGOs to provide common landscape‐level population monitoring and modeling, adaptive harvest regulations, habitat management goals, and a national upland gamebird stamp. © 2021 The Wildlife Society. : This paper explores whether upland gamebirds should have increased federal coordination, like migratory gamebirds, to assure better conservation in the twenty‐first century. The authors discuss the implications of increasing coordination, partnerships, and funding mechanisms between the federal government, state governments, and non‐governmental organizations to provide common landscape‐level population monitoring and modeling, adaptive harvest regulations, habitat management goals, and a national upland gamebird stamp. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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3. Seasonal and Regional Differences in Economic Benefits of Turkey Hunting.
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Chapagain, Binod P., Poudyal, Neelam C., Joshi, Omkar, Watkins, Cristina, and Applegate, Roger D.
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TURKEY hunting ,TURKEYS ,WILD turkey ,REGIONAL differences ,OUTDOOR recreation - Abstract
Wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo silvestris; hereafter, turkey) hunting is a popular outdoor recreation activity in many states, including Tennessee, USA. Despite its cultural and social significance, economic benefits associated with turkey hunting are largely unknown. Past economic studies either focused on other big game species or provided generic value for big game, and do not offer benefit estimates specific to turkey. We estimated a demand model for turkey hunting trips in Tennessee and quantified per‐trip and statewide aggregate value of turkey hunting. We compared the net economic value of turkey hunting trips between hunting seasons (autumn and spring) and wildlife management regions that differ in many aspects including turkey population, hunting regulations, etc. Per person per trip value of turkey hunting ranged between US$34 and US$90 depending on the modeling assumption regarding hunters' opportunity cost of time. Moreover, estimated value differed among regions and between hunting seasons, with the value of a turkey‐hunting trip in the spring season being twice that of the autumn season. Many states in southern United States, including Tennessee, have recently experienced declines in turkey populations and are in need of economic justifications for investment in research and management. Our results are useful to wildlife agencies in characterizing economic benefits of turkey hunting and evaluating the welfare implications of regulations (e.g., closure, reduction in season length) restricting or expanding hunting opportunities. © 2020 The Wildlife Society. We estimated a demand model for turkey hunting trips in Tennessee, USA, and quantified per‐trip and statewide value of turkey hunting. The estimated value differed among management regions and hunting seasons, with the value of turkey‐hunting trips in the spring season being twice that of the fall season. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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4. Bobwhites are not waterfowl. Federal collaboration welcomed: a reply to Martin et al. (2022).
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Williams, Christopher K. and Applegate, Roger D.
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NORTHERN bobwhite , *MIGRATORY birds , *ANIMAL populations , *WILDLIFE management , *HABITAT conservation , *WATERFOWL - Abstract
The purpose for our essay was to help charge discussion among state agency personnel and others about the clear disparity in what has happened to northern bobwhite during the same time that waterfowl management has taken hold. Waterfowl have been supported by a century of such partnerships to build landscape-level organization, habitat conservation, and enhanced population and harvest estimation (Williams et al. 2021). Bobwhites are not waterfowl. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2022
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5. Avian occupancy response to oak woodland and savanna restoration.
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Vander Yacht, Andrew L., Keyser, Patrick D., Buehler, David A., Harper, Craig A., Buckley, David S., and Applegate, Roger D.
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OAK ,FORESTS & forestry ,FOREST restoration ,FOREST management ,RESTORATION ecology ,SAVANNA ecology ,WARBLERS - Abstract
ABSTRACT Oak ( Quercus spp.) woodlands and savannas throughout the Mid-South, USA have become closed-canopy forests through succession in the absence of fire, contributing to declines in disturbance-dependent avian species. Restoration could ameliorate these trends, but effects of such management practices on avian communities of the Mid-South are poorly understood. We implemented an experiment on the Cumberland Plateau, Tennessee with treatments involving fall (Oct) or spring (Mar) fire with woodland (14 m
2 /ha) or savanna (7 m2 /ha) residual basal area and unmanaged control stands (20 ha each). We conducted fixed-radius point counts 3 times annually (2010-2012) and analyzed trends in naïve occupancy for 41 species. For 20 species with adequate data (10 early-, 10 late-successional), we performed multiple-season, robust-design occupancy modeling and accounted for detection bias. We then used mixed-model polynomial regression to define relationships between occupancy and measures of live and dead basal area, midstory density, and herbaceous groundcover. Restoration substantially altered forest structural characteristics but did not affect the occupancy of most late-successional species. In contrast, the presence of early-successional species increased as live basal area decreased and herbaceous groundcover increased. Only 3 of 41 species (hooded warbler [ Setophaga citrina], ovenbird [ Seiurus aurocapilla], and worm-eating warbler [ Helmitheros vermivorum]) exhibited reduced occupancy as woodland and savanna conditions were approached. The presence of all other species, including 13 regionally and 2 continentally declining, remained constant or increased as restoration progressed. Woodland conditions of 10 m2 /ha live basal area and 20% herbaceous groundcover maximized occupancy of early-successional species with little consequences for late-successional species. Proceeding further toward savanna conditions negatively affected species associated with lower strata of mature-forests but further increased the presence of some early-successional species. Midstory density and dead basal area were poor predictors of occupancy and thus may be necessary but not sufficient in promoting early-successional species. Our results suggest implementing oak woodland and savanna management in the Mid-South could benefit disturbance-dependent birds of high conservation priority with minimal negative impacts on the presence of late-successional species. © 2016 The Wildlife Society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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6. Grasslands bird occupancy of native warm-season grass.
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West, Andrew S., Keyser, Patrick D., Lituma, Christopher M., Buehler, David A., Applegate, Roger D., and Morgan, John
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GRASSLANDS ,BIOMASS energy ,FEEDSTOCK ,GRASSHOPPER sparrow ,NORTHERN bobwhite ,FIELD sparrow ,AGRICULTURAL laws - Abstract
ABSTRACT Grassland birds have declined more than any other guild in the United States because of loss and degradation of native grasslands. The United States Department of Agriculture Farm Bill programs have restored some native warm-season grasses (NWSG), but populations of many grassland bird species continue to decline. Market-based NWSG uses focused on hay, pasture, and biofuel feedstock may be more appealing to landowners, and may still provide grassland bird habitat on the landscape. We examined breeding grassland bird occupancy of 102 NWSG production fields including 5 treatments (control [ n = 37], grazing [ n = 7], hay [ n = 22], seed [ n = 21], and biofuel [ n = 15] production) in Kentucky and Tennessee during 2009-2010 breeding seasons. We used a robust design model in Program MARK to determine occupancy and detection rates for grassland birds. We modeled occupancy differences among treatments and sites (i.e., KY, TN), and included covariates (i.e., field-level vegetation metrics and landscape composition at 3 scales [250 m, 500 m, and 1 km]) for eastern meadowlark ( Sturnella magna), field sparrow ( Spizella pusilla), grasshopper sparrow ( Ammodramus savannarum), northern bobwhite ( Colinus virginianus), and red-winged blackbird ( Agelaius phoeniceus). Covariates that influenced occupancy included treatment (field sparrow, 2009 only), site (eastern meadowlark, grasshopper sparrow, and northern bobwhite), percent NWSG cover (positive, red-winged blackbird), and percent forest cover within 250 m (negative for eastern meadowlark, grasshopper sparrow, northern bobwhite, and red-winged blackbird) or within 1 km (negative, field sparrow). Our results suggest that forest cover in the surrounding landscape negatively influences species occupancy, and species occupancy generally did not differ among NWSG production treatments. These treatments could be an alternative means to provide grassland bird habitat within an agriculture production landscape. © 2016 The Wildlife Society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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7. Spatial Variation in Lesser Prairie-Chicken Demography: A Sensitivity Analysis of Population Dynamics and Management Alternatives.
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Hagen, Christian A., Sandercock, Brett K., Pitman, James C., Robel, Robert J., and Applegate, Roger D.
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ENDANGERED species ,PRAIRIE chickens ,SENSITIVITY analysis ,POPULATION dynamics ,POPULATION geography ,WILDLIFE conservation ,HABITATS ,ARTEMISIA filifolia ,SIMULATION methods & models - Abstract
The lesser prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus) is currently considered a candidate for protection under the Endangered Species Act. To identify potential limiting factors for lesser prairie-chicken populations, we developed an age-based matrix model of lesser prairie-chicken population dynamics to compare the relative importance of components of reproduction and survival, and determine if various management alternatives stabilize or increase rates of population change. We based our analyses on an intensive 6-year population study from which demographic rates were estimated for each age class in Kansas. We used deterministic models and elasticity values to identify parameters predicted to have the greatest effect on the rate of population change (l) at 2 study sites. Last, we used life-stage simulation analysis to simulate various management alternatives. Lambda was ,1 for both populations (site 1: l 5 0.54, site 2: l 5 0.74). However, we found differences in sensitivity to nest success and chick survival between populations. The results of the simulated management scenarios complemented the lower-level elasticity analysis and indicated the relative importance of female survival during the breeding season compared with winter. If management practices are only capable of targeting a single demographic rate, changes to either nest success or chick survival had the greatest impact on l at site 1 and 2, respectively. Management that simultaneously manipulated both nest success and chick survival was predicted to have a greater effect on l than changes in survival of adult females. In practice, our demographic analyses indicate that effective management should be based on habitat conservation measures to increase components of fecundity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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8. Demographic Sensitivity of Population Change in Northern Bobwhite.
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SANDERCOCK, BRETT K., JENSEN, WILLIAM E., WILLIAMS, CHRISTOPHER K., and APPLEGATE, ROGER D.
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NORTHERN bobwhite ,BOBWHITES ,DEMOGRAPHIC change ,TELEMETER ,HATCHABILITY of eggs ,ECOLOGY - Abstract
The northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) is an economically important gamebird that is currently undergoing widespread population declines. Despite considerable research on the population ecology of bobwhites, there have been few attempts to model population dynamics of bobwhites to determine the contributions of different demographic parameters to variance of the finite rate of population change (λ). We conducted a literature review and compiled 405 estimates of 9 demographic parameters from 49 field studies of bobwhites. To identify demographic parameters that might be important for management, we used life-stage simulation analyses (LSA) to examine sensitivity of λ to simulated variation in 9 demographic parameters for female bobwhites. In a baseline LSA based on uniform distributions bounded by the range of estimates for each demographic parameter, bobwhite populations were predicted to decline (λ = 0.56) and winter survival of adults made the greatest contribution to variance of λ (r² = 0.453), followed by summer survival of adults (r² = 0.163), and survival of chicks (r² = 0.120). Population change was not sensitive to total clutch laid, nest survival, egg hatchability, or 3 parameters associated with the number of nesting attempts (r² <0.06). Our conclusions were robust to alternative simulation scenarios, and parameter rankings changed only if we adjusted the lower bounds of winter survival upwards. Bobwhite populations were not viable with survival rates reported from most field studies. Survival rates may be depressed below sustainable levels by environmental conditions or possibly by impacts of capture and telemetry methods. Overall, our simulation results indicate that management practices that improve seasonal survival rates will have the greatest potential benefit for recovery of declining populations of bobwhites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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9. Age-Specific Survival and Probable Causes of Mortality in Female Lesser Prairie-Chickens.
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Hagen, Christian A., Pitman, James C., Sandercock, Brett K., Robel, Robert J., and Applegate, Roger D.
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PRAIRIE chickens ,MORTALITY ,TYMPANUCHUS ,ANIMAL mortality ,ANIMAL populations ,ANIMAL ecology - Abstract
Long-term population declines and habitat reductions have increased concern over the status of the lesser prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus). Robust estimates of demographic parameters are essential for identifying population declines and planning effective management. We evaluated the effects of age and season on the survival of female lesser prairie-chickens at 2 sites in southwestern Kansas, USA. Using telemetry data from a 7-year field study (from 1997 to 2003), we estimated seasonal (Apr-Sep) and annual (Apr-Mar) survival. We also examined daily survival rates of females attending nests during the 26-day incubation period and young during the 14-day early brood-rearing period. We evaluated the probable mortality causes of radiomarked birds by examining evidence at recovery sites. We captured 227 female lesser prairie-chickens (87 yearlings, 117 ad, and 23 age undetermined) and fitted them with radiotransmitters. Estimates of 12-month survival were lower among yearlings (Ŝ
12 = 0.429, SE = 0.117) and adults at site I (Ŝ12 0.302, SE = 0.080) than among yearlings (Ŝ12 = 0.588, SE = 0.100) and adults at site II (Ŝ12 = 0.438, SE = 0.083). The patterns in timing of mortality and age-specific 6-month survival were consistent with those of 12-month estimates at site I from 1998 to 2002, with a peak in mortality during May and June. Females tending to nests or to prefledged chicks had lower daily survival (DŜRtend = 0.993, SE = 0.001) than females not involved in these activities (DŜRfailed-breeder = 0.997, SE = 0.002). We recorded 92 mortalities from April 1997 to March 2003, and 59% and 11% were attributed to predation by mammals and raptors, respectively. Our research suggests that predation during the nesting season can have a major impact on lesser prairie-chicken demography, and conservation efforts should focus on enhancing female survival during the nesting and brood-rearing seasons. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2007
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10. Genetic Composition of Wild Turkeys in Kansas Following Decades of Translocations.
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Latch, Emily K., Applegate, Roger D., and Rhodes Jr., Olin E.
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WILD turkey , *ANIMAL genetics , *CHROMOSOMAL translocation , *TURKEYS - Abstract
The lack of adequate documentation of wildlife translocations, particularly details regarding the source stock used, have potentially serious implications for wildlife management. Poor documentation of translocations may lead to unintentional mixing of distinct types, potentially causing problems for future management, design of harvest programs, and evolutionary stability. In Kansas, we employed molecular tools and assignment methods to uncover the cryptic distribution of wild turkey subspecies resulting from decades of poorly documented translocations. Pure forms of Eastern (Meleagris gallopavo silvestris) and Rio Grande turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo intermedia) remain in many portions of the state, and future translocation programs now have the option to keep these distinct by prohibiting translocations between regions containing different subspecies. In addition, we documented 3 zones of hybridization: 1) at the interface between Eastern and Rio Grande subspecies, 2) in southwest Kansas where immigrant Merriam's turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo merriami) are mixing with translocated Rio Grande turkeys, and 3) surrounding an undocumented translocation of Eastern turkeys within a region characterized primarily by Rio Grande turkeys. The DNA-based techniques employed in this study were extremely informative tools for characterizing the distribution of wild turkeys in Kansas and suggest that such tools could be applied in a multitude of similar situations in other wildlife species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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11. Radiotelemetry Survival Estimates of Lesser Prairie-Chickens in Kansas: Are There Transmitter Biases?
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Hagen, Christian A., Sandercock, Brett K., Pitman, James C., Robel, Robert J., and Applegate, Roger D.
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BIRD watching ,LESSER prairie chicken ,PRAIRIE chickens ,CHICKENS ,POULTRY ,TELEMETERING transmitters - Abstract
Radiotelemetry has provided wildlife biologists with a tool to estimate survival where fates of individuals likely are known. Analyses of known-fate data can yield accurate survival estimates if 5 assumptions are met. Two of these assumptions are rarely tested: that transmitters have no effect on survival of study animals and that right-censoring (i.e., any animal not located is as likely to be alive as dead) is random with respect to the survival of study animals. Using joint-models originally developed for live-encounter and dead-recovery data, we examined the potential for bias in survival estimates of radiomarked male lesser prairie-chickens (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus) in a 3-year study in southwestern Kansas, USA. Additionally, we examined the potential bias of right-censoring by comparing the return rates of known-fate and right-censored individuals. We captured 216 male lesser prairie-chickens and marked them with a combination of leg bands and a radio (n = 72) or leg bands only (n = 144). We applied joint-models to capture histories based on live-capture and telemetry data. The model best supported by the data indicated that 6-month survival was constant (Ŝ
c 0.679, SE 0.050) across radiomarked and banded birds. Eight of 16 (50%, SE = 12.5%) right-censored birds not detected because of radio failure were subsequently recaptured, which was not different from the return rates for known-fate birds (23 of 59; 39%, SE = 6.3%). Survival estimates of male lesser prairie-chickens in this study were not measurably biased by radiomarking, as their survival was greater than or equal to those of banded birds, and right-censored birds had similar return rates to those of known-fate individuals. Our results are encouraging because they indicate that 2 critical assumptions underlying analyses of known-fate data can be met with radiotransmitters and attachment techniques currently used in field studies of wild populations of lesser prairie-chickens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
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12. Survival of Juvenile Lesser Prairie-Chickens in Kansas.
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Pitman, James C., Hagen, Christian A., Jaimison, Brent E., Robel, Robert J., Loughin, Thomas M., and Applegate, Roger D.
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GROUSE ,LESSER prairie chicken ,PRAIRIE chickens ,ANIMAL nutrition ,CHICKS - Abstract
Juvenile survival has been identified as the most critical demographic parameter influencing grouse populations. Little information currently exists on survival of juvenile lesser prairie-chickens (Tyrnpanuchus pallidicinctus). We regularly flushed 51 individually identifiable lesser prairie-chicken broods over a 6-year period to estimate survival from hatch to 14 days post-hatch (early period) and from 15 to 60 days post-hatch (late period). Estimates of overall daily survival rates were 0.949 (95% CI = 0.932-0.966) for the early period and 0.978 (95% CI = 0.908-0.989) for the late period. Overall survival from hatch to 60 days posthatch was 0.177 (95% CI = 0.028-0.376). We used encounter histories of 31 transmitter-equipped juveniles to estimate survival from 1 August to 31 March (overwinter) using known-fate models. Juvenile overwinter survival was 0.70 (95% CI = 0,47-0.86), and chicks heavier than average for their age at 50-60 days posthatch were more likely to survive the 8-month overwinter period. Survival of juveniles from hatch to 31 March of the following year was 0.12 (95% CI = 0.01-0.32). We compared overwinter survival of juveniles and 93 transmitter-equipped full-grown lesser prairie-chickens using a second set of models. Overwinter survival rates for juveniles (0.64) and full-grown (0.63) birds were similar, but the timing of mortality events differed between age-classes. We recommend that managers in Kansas, USA, focus on improving early survival of juveniles by providing additional food resources to chicks. This can be accomplished by manipulating vegetation to increase forb cover, which will result in increased invertebrate biomass. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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13. Male Rio Grande Turkey Survival and Movements in the Texas Panhandle and Southwestern Kansas.
- Author
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Holdstock, Derrick P., Wallace, Mark C., Ballard, Warren B., Brunjes, John H., Phillips, Richard S., Spears, Brian L., Demaso, Stephen J., Jernigan, Jack D., Applegate, Roger D., and Gipson, Phillip S.
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WILDLIFE management ,WILDLIFE managers ,MERRIAM'S turkey ,WILD turkey - Abstract
Wildlife managers depend on accurate information regarding wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) survival patterns to properly manage turkey populations. Survival patterns of male Rio Grande wild turkeys (M. g. intermedia) have not been studied intensively. Wildlife managers in the Texas Panhandle, USA, and southwestern Kansas, USA, suspected that turkey populations were declining. From January 2000 through August 2002, we studied survival and movement of 107 juvenile male and 115 adult male rediomarked Rio Grande wild turkeys on 4 study sites in the Texas Panhandle and southwestern Kansas. We predicted that males would experience lowest survival during spring and that there would be no difference in survival between age classes. We also predicted that greater male movement rates would lead to lower survival rates. Juvenile males had a higher annual survival rate (0.597 [95% Cl hereafter: 0.478-0. 716]) than adults (0.364 [0.257-0.472]). Juvenile male survival did not differ among seasons, with survival rates of 0.813 (0. 736-0.891), 0.904 (0.837-0.972), and 0.917 (0.838-0.996) for spring, summer, and autumn, respectively. Adult male turkey survival was higher during summer (0.915 [0.859-0.972]) than during spring (0. 725 [0.651-0. 799]), autumn (0.671 [0.536-0.807]), and winter (0. 792 [0.732-0.851]). Males had lower survival rates during seasons when long-distance movements were common. The annual survival rate for turkeys that moved to new core-use areas (0.383 [0.282-0.484]) was lower than that for turkeys that did not (0.535 [0.460-0.609]). Also, survival rates increased with time since relocation of core-use areas. Hunting accounted for 18.5% of all mortalities. However, most (80.7%) mortality was attributed to natural causes, mostly mammalian predation. We suspected most predation was the result of coyotes (Canis latrans) and bobcats (Lynx rufus). Managers in the northern portion of the natural range of Rio Grande wild turkeys should be aware of the presence of natural mortality factors that are evident in lightly hunted populations. Managers interested in increasing the survival of male Rio Grande wild turkeys should concentrate on efforts that will provide needed resources in close proximity to roosts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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14. Lesser prairie-chicken brood habitat in sand sagebrush: invertebrate biomass and vegetation.
- Author
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Hagen, Christian A., Salter, G. Curran, Pitman, James C., Robel, Robert J., and Applegate, Roger D.
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LESSER prairie chicken ,HABITATS ,SAGEBRUSH ,BIOTIC communities ,INVERTEBRATES ,BIOMASS ,TYMPANUCHUS ,NATURE conservation ,BIOCLIMATOLOGY - Abstract
invertebrates are an important food source for grouse chicks, especially within the first 2 weeks of life, invertebrate abundance is highly patchy and dependent upon herbaceous cover and vegetation structure. We examined the relationship between invertebrate bio- mass (from sweepnet samples) and habitat structure at lesser prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus) brood-use and non-use areas during 2001 and 2002 in a sand sagebrush (Artemisia filifolia) prairie vegetation community of southwestern Kansas. We delineated use and non-use areas from paired sampling points within and outside 95% utilization distributions of radiomarked brood females, respectively, during the first 60 days post-hatch. We measured vegetation cover and invertebrate biomass (Acrididae and "other" invertebrates) at 71 paired points on 2 study sites (Site 1=4 broods, Site 11= 12 broods). Both Acrididae and other invertebrate biomasses were greater at brood areas than non-use areas on both study sites, suggesting this food source likely had a greater influence on brood habitat use than vegetation type. Vegetation structure described brood-use areas better than vegetation type because brood-use areas had greater visual obstruction readings (VORs) than non-use areas regardless of dominant cover type. We also examined the predictive relationship between vegetation type and invertebrate biomass. Sand sagebrush density was the best linear predictor of Acrididae biomass, with lower densities having the greatest Acrididae biomass. We propose experiments to deter- mine best management practices that produce abundant invertebrate biomasses for lesser prairie-chicken brood habitat, using our study as a baseline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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15. LOCATION AND SUCCESS OF LESSER PRAIRIE-CHICKEN NESTS IN RELATION TO VEGETATION AND HUMAN DISTURBANCE.
- Author
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Pitman, James C., Hagen, Christian A., Robel, Robert J., Loughin, Thomas M., and Applegate, Roger D.
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LESSER prairie chicken ,ANIMAL populations ,ASTERACEAE ,HABITATS ,PRAIRIE chickens ,WATER in agriculture - Abstract
Lesser prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus) populations have declined rangewide, and one of the principal causes is thought to be low nest success. Little is known about the relationship of vegetation structure and human intrusion to lesser prairie-chicken nest location and success. We conducted our study from 1997 to 2002 in southwestern Kansas, USA, on 2 sand-sagebrush (Artemisia filifolia) prairie areas managed for livestock production. We determined apparent nest success (26%) for 200 of 209 lesser prairie-chicken nests located. Nest sites had taller grass, greater sand-sagebrush density, and higher visual obstruction than random locations in the surrounding prairie. We recorded the distances from nests to 6 anthropogenic features (wellheads, buildings, improved roads, unimproved roads, transmission lines, center-pivot irrigation fields) to determine whether the features were related to nest location and success. Sand-sagebrush habitat around S of 6 features (all except unimproved roads) was avoided for 80 m (wellheads) to >1,000 m (buildings) by nesting lesser prairie-chickens, but distances to the features were not substantial predictors of apparent nest success. Grass height, sagebrush plant density, and sagebrush height were the most important vegetation characteristics influencing nest success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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16. The collapse of cycles in the dynamics of North American grouse populations.
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Williams, Christopher K., Ives, Anthony R., Applegate, Roger D., and Ripa, Jörgen
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GROUSE ,RODENTS ,BIRD populations ,MAMMAL populations ,GEOGRAPHICAL positions - Abstract
Cyclic dynamics of bird and mammal populations are commonly reported in northern latitudes throughout the world, and recent European observations on rodents and grouse suggest that cycle periods decline towards southern latitudes. To investigate latitudinal patterns of cyclic dynamics in North America, we assembled 27 long-term data sets collected between 1939 and 2001 for three grouse species. By fitting the data with autoregressive models to measure direct and delayed density dependence, we show that, in contrast to European studies, North American grouse exhibit period increases from north to south, with cycles collapsing via period lengthening. This occurs because delayed density dependence decreases in southern latitudes, whereas direct density dependence increases. These results show that cyclic dynamics can dissipate by period lengthening as well as the period shortening postulated for European grouse and rodents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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17. MULTISTATE ANALYSIS OF FIXED, LIBERAL REGULATIONS IN QUAIL HARVEST MANAGEMENT.
- Author
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Guthery, Fred S., Peterson, Markus J., Lusk, Jeffrey J., Rabe, Michael J., DeMaso, Stephen, Sams, Mike, Applegate, Roger D., and Dailey, Thomas V.
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HUNTING ,NORTHERN bobwhite ,QUAILS ,ANIMAL mortality ,BIRD populations - Abstract
We derived consequences (realizations of hunter efficiency, relative harvest rates) of fixed, liberal quail (northern bobwhite [Colinus virginianus], Gambel's quail [Callipepla gambelii], and scaled quail [C. squamata]) harvest regulations applied at large scales from time series on quail abundance, total harvest, and hunter participation. Data came from Kansas (1966-2001), Missouri (1983-2001), Oklahoma (1990-2001), north and south Texas (1986-2001), and Arizona (1982-1999), USA, where harvest regulations were liberal (season length 2.5-4 months, daily bag limit 8-15 birds) during the periods of record. For all study regions, hunter-days were expressible as a linear function of quail abundance, and total harvest was expressible as a linear function of hunter-days. These results implied that hunter efficiency (harvest/hunter-day/index bird) declined monotonically and curvilinearly as quail populations increased. Likewise, relative harvest rate declined monotonically and curvilinearly as abundance increased, which implied that harvest was not self-limiting; however, the rate of decline generally was low because harvest rate was the product of an increasing (hunter-days) and a decreasing function (hunter efficiency) of quail abundance. Under fixed, liberal regulations, variations in quail abundance seem to govern harvest rates at the state or regional level; the regulations per se probably are biologically inconsequential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The northern bobwhite decline: scaling our management for the twenty-first century.
- Author
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Williams, Christopher K., Guthery, Fred S., Applegate, Roger D., and Peterson, Markus J.
- Subjects
NORTHERN bobwhite ,HABITATS ,HARVESTING ,ECOLOGICAL assessment - Abstract
Northern bobwhites (Colinus virginianus) are one of the most broadly researched and intensively managed species in North America. However, we argue that a disadvantage of this status is that traditional management principles currently are incompatible with the spatial scale necessary to address the nationwide decline in bobwhite abundance. We maintain that halting or reversing this decline will entail 2 principal changes in the scale of management. Primarily we suggest that habitat oversight must switch from historical fine-scale management (promotion of edge habitat, weedy fencelines, disked strips, living hedges, and food plots) to regional management of usable space. Secondly, within these regional management areas, we should apply harvest management that employs risk-sensitive strategies that conservatively avoid undermining the primary goal. This entails narrowing the scale of harvest management from statewide to regional levels. If these ideological changes cannot be made and historical policies remain in force, we risk failing to stabilize, let alone increase, bobwhite populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Assuring the future of prairie grouse: dogmas, demagogues, and getting outside the box.
- Author
-
Applegate, Roger D., Williams, Christopher K., and Manes, Robert R.
- Subjects
- *
GROUSE , *WILDLIFE management , *WILDLIFE conservation , *TYMPANUCHUS , *BIOTIC communities - Abstract
We discuss the necessity of a paradigm shift among managers toward dealing with the recovery and management of prairie grouse (Tympanuchus spp). To assure the future of these species, we will need to test dogmatic assumptions about grouse and their management and challenge the demagogues who insist on perpetuating untested "principles." Tolerance for descriptive and qualitative studies is needed. Additionally, managers will need to remove themselves from the box and embrace landowners, theoretical biologists, economists, human-dimensions researchers, marketing and advertising specialists, and many other professionals outside the normal sphere of wildlife management. There is crucial need for a willingness to devise, test, and apply innovative ideas that are not normally considered in the management of grouse species, especially applying management to large areas within ecosystems. A comprehensive plan is needed to guide rangewide prairie grouse management. Planned management systems are needed to provide operational guidance in implementing species plans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. WINTER SURVIVAL AND ADDITIVE HARVEST IN NORTHERN BOBWHITE COVEYS IN KANSAS.
- Author
-
Williams, Christopher K., Lutz, R. Scott, and Applegate, Roger D.
- Subjects
NORTHERN bobwhite ,MORTALITY ,AGRICULTURE ,HARVESTING - Abstract
We examined how harvest affected natural mortality rates and how the dynamics of northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus, hereafter bobwhite) covey membership might affect the additive nature of harvest. We conducted repeated searches for coveys and radiomarked all coveys found on 12 259-ha study areas in east-central Kansas, USA. We simulated a harvest in 6 randomly selected areas each year during November-January, 1997-2000, by trapping and removing 60% of bobwhites in each covey. We used flush counts and radiotelemetry to measure harvest effects on natural mortality rates, overall winter survival, covey size, and densities. Observed natural mortality rates of radiomarked individuals were similar between harvested (50.6 ± 4.3%) and unharvested areas (52.1 ± 4.7%). Estimated winter survival was 47.9% on the unharvested areas and 20.9% on the harvested areas. Harvest did not affect the number of coveys, average covey size, or density of bobwhites, indicating that coveys coalesced through local movement. Our results indicate that harvest is additive to natural mortality and suggest that local movement to maintain optimal group sizes can mask the true effect of harvest on observed densities in small areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. POPULATION DYNAMICS ACROSS GEOGRAPHICAL RANGES: TIME-SERIES ANALYSES OF THREE SMALL GAME SPECIES.
- Author
-
Williams, Christopher K., Ives, Anthony R., and Applegate, Roger D.
- Subjects
COTTONTAILS ,POPULATION dynamics ,PHEASANTS ,EXTINCT animals - Abstract
Little is known about how density-independent and density-dependent processes affecting population dynamics vary geographically across species' ranges. To address this problem for three vertebrate species (Northern Bobwhite [Colinus virginianus], Ring-necked Pheasants (Phasianus coichicus], and eastern cottontails [Sylvilagus floridanus]), we examined spatially subdivided, long-term (1966-2001), seasonal (January, April, July, and October), time-series data from the Kansas Rural Mail Carrier Survey, USA. All three species have range boundaries in Kansas, with population abundances declining toward the periphery of their ranges. We quantified the strengths of density-dependent and density-independent processes affecting the dynamics of 10 populations of each species ranging from low (peripheral) to high (central) mean abundance using first-order autoregressive models that incorporate measurement error. For all three species, peripheral populations with lower mean abundance tended to have greater population variability. This pattern could potentially be explained by peripheral regions experiencing either weaker density dependence or greater environmentally driven density-independent fluctuations in per capita population growth rates. In general, density dependence did not vary among geographic regions, although there was a trend for smaller, peripheral populations to exhibit stronger density dependence. Density-independent variability in per capita population growth rates was higher in peripheral populations. Furthermore, density-independent fluctuations in per capita population growth rates were weakly correlated with temperature and precipitation and were highest for the period October through January, identifying fall as the period of greatest environmentally driven variability in population dynamics. Per capita population growth rates fluctuated in moderate synchrony among regions, especially for more abundant, nonperipheral populations in close geographical proximity. The strong density-dependent and stronger density-independent processes in smaller, peripheral populations suggest that the greater variability in peripheral populations' densities is caused by greater population sensitivity to environmental fluctuations. This may make peripheral populations more likely to go extinct and leads to the prediction that, if these species decline to the point of becoming endangered, this decline will be accompanied by a contraction in their geographical ranges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Invertebrate biomass: associations with lesser prairie-chicken habitat use and sand sagebrush density in southwestern Kansas.
- Author
-
Jamison, Brent E., Robel, Robert J., Pontius, Jeffrey S., and Applegate, Roger D.
- Subjects
INVERTEBRATES ,BIOMASS ,LESSER prairie chicken - Abstract
Presents information on a study which compared invertebrate biomass in areas used and not used by lesser prairie-chicken adults and broods in southwestern Kansas. Study area; Methodology; Results and discussion.
- Published
- 2002
23. CHAPTER FIVE: Impacts of Anthropogenic Features on Habitat Use by Lesser Prairie-Chickens.
- Author
-
Hagen, Christian A., Pitman, Jarnes C., Loughin, Thomas M., Sandercock, Brett K., Robel, Robert J., and Applegate, Roger D.
- Abstract
Suitable habitat for the Lesser Prairie-Chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus) has been reduced markedly over the past 100 years. The remaining habitat is widely used for petroleum exploration and extraction, cattle grazing, power line easements, and the generation of electricity. Given the tenuous status of the species and recent demands on land use in remaining habitat, it is imperative that Lesser Prairie-Chicken avoidance behavior of anthropogenic features be quantified for impact assessment and conservation planning. We examined the relationship of several anthropogenic features as they pertained to habitat use of radiomarked female Lesser Prairie-Chickens (is = 226) in southwestern Kansas from 1997 to 2002. We used Poisson rate regression and contingency tables to examine spatial use patterns of monthly home ranges (95% fixed kernels, is = 539) and estimated the likelihood that anthropogenic features (i.e., power lines, wells, roads, and buildings) occurred within aggregates of all monthly home ranges (monthly use ranges). We calculated the distance from the centroids of home ranges to anthropogenic features and, using Monte Carlo simulations, evaluated whether or not they were farther than would be expected at random. There was temporal variation in the average odds of each feature occurring within monthly use ranges, but generally there was a pattern of avoidance. Monte Carlo simulations of expected distances indicated that the nearest 90% of Lesser Prairie-Chicken centers of use were farther from anthropogenic features than would be expected at random. We also had the opportunity to evaluate changes in habitat use (or avoidance behavior) 1 year post-construction of a power line using a Before-After-Control-Impact design. Post-power line construction analysis indicated that Lesser Prairie-Chicken monthly use areas were less likely to include power lines than non-use areas. However, centers of use were closer to power lines than would be expected at random in the impact area. The discrepancies between shortand long-term results suggest a lag period between power line construction and avoidance by Lesser Prairie-Chickens, possibly due to site fidelity of the species. Our study provides some minimum behavioral avoidance distances for mitigating energy developments in Lesser Prairie-Chicken habitats, and we recommend clustering these features to maximize available habitats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
24. Ecology and Conservation of Lesser Prairie-Chickens.
- Author
-
Applegate, Roger D.
- Subjects
- *
ENDANGERED species , *NONFICTION - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The importance of data management in wildlife conservation.
- Author
-
Applegate, Roger D.
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL databases , *DATABASE management , *BIODIVERSITY conservation - Abstract
An introduction to articles published within the issue is presented, including one on the framework for planning ecological data management, another on a case study on developing a system that allows on-line entry of data by multiple users and one on a case study of data management challenges for a large-scale biodiversity monitoring program in Alberta.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Use and misuse of prairie chicken lek surveys.
- Author
-
Applegate, Roger D.
- Subjects
- *
PRAIRIE chickens , *ANIMAL populations , *LEK behavior - Abstract
Deals with the lek surveys involving the use and misuse of prairie chickens and other species. Information on density of animal population; Views on the problems regarding the use of lek surveys; How lek surveys are useful in detecting population trends or presence-absence in local areas; Discussion on how it can be valuable in tracking population distribution.
- Published
- 2000
27. Warren B. Ballard, Jr. 1947-2012: A personal tribute.
- Author
-
Applegate, Roger D. and Krausman, Paul R.
- Subjects
- *
EDITORS - Abstract
An obituary for editor Dr. Warren B. Ballard is presented.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Compensation Issues in Natural Resource Professions.
- Author
-
APPLEGATE, ROGER D.
- Subjects
- *
LETTERS to the editor , *NATURAL resources - Abstract
Presents a letter to the editor about the use of volunteer and intern positions by natural resources agencies.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Creating Habitats and Homes for Illinois Wildlife.
- Author
-
Applegate, Roger D.
- Subjects
- *
HABITATS , *NONFICTION - Abstract
Reviews the book "Creating Habitats and Homes for Illinois Wildlife," by D. S. Newman, R. E. Warner, and P. C. Mankin.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Book Reviews.
- Author
-
Applegate, Roger D.
- Subjects
- PRACTICAL Guide to Producing & Harvesting White-Tailed Deer, A (Book), KROLL, James C.
- Abstract
Reviews the book `A Practical Guide to Producing and Harvesting White-tailed Deer,' by James C. Kroll.
- Published
- 1994
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