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Influence of precipitation, on demographics of northern bobwhites in southern Texas.

Authors :
Hernández, Fidel
Herndndez, Froylán
Arredondo, Juan A.
Bryant, Fred C.
Brennan, Leonard A.
Bingham, Ralph L.
Source :
Wildlife Society Bulletin; Fall2005, Vol. 33 Issue 3, p1071-1079, 9p
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

Northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) populations in southwestern rangelands are influenced by precipitation; populations increase during relatively wet periods and decrease during drought. Understanding the demographic responses of bobwhites to fluctuations in precipitation might provide a basis for identifying mechanisms responsible for the phenomenon. We compared 10 population variables (bobwhite survival, nesting- season length, nest success, hen success, percent hens nesting and renesting, nesting rate, percent juveniles in fall harvest sample (Nov-Feb), clutch size, and egg hatchability) between a dry (Sep 2000-Aug 2001; 51 cm precipitation) and wet period (Sep 2002-Aug 2003; 93 cm precipitation) in Brooks County, Texas. We monitored radiomarked bobwhites on 3 sites during the dry (n=263 bobwhites) and wet period (n=191 bobwhites) to obtain estimates of survival and reproductive effort. Bobwhite survival curves differed between the dry period (0.30±0.04; I±SE, n=102 bobwhites) and wet period (0.60± 0.06; n=71 bobwhites; P≤0.001) during fall-winter (Sep-Feb). A lower proportion of hens nested during the dry period (95% Cl: 52.6±22.5 %; n=19 hens) compared to the wet period (100%; n=15 hens). Of hens that nested, the dry period exhibited a lower nesting rate (95% Cl: 1 .2±0.3 nests/hen) compared to the wet period (95% Cl: 2.3 ±0.5 nests/hen). The dry period also experienced a shorter nesting season (69 days) compared to wet period (159 days). Lastly, percent juveniles (Nov-Feb) was lower during the dry period (95% Cl: 69.3 ±0.3 %; n=740 harvested bobwhites) compared to wet period (95% Cl: 78.3±2.1%; n=1,415 harvested bobwhites). Our field study highlights 4 demo- graphic variables (i.e., survival, percentage of hens nesting, nesting rate, and nesting-sea- son length) that warrant further research to identify causal factors responsible for the boom-and-bust phenomenon in bobwhites. Further, our data suggest that drought negatively impacts bobwhite reproductive effort such that harvest should be reduced or ceased during drought (e.g., <50 cm annual precipitation). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00917648
Volume :
33
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Wildlife Society Bulletin
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
19526089