Survival and summer habitat selection of male greater sage-grouse (Centocercus urophasianus) in Southwestern Montana

During the 20th century, Greater Sage-Grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) populations in North America have declined by 69-99%. In southwest Montana little is known about the factors leading to declines in sage grouse populations; as a result, there are strong concerns regarding sage grouse populatio...

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Main Author: Wisinski, Colleen Lyn
Language:en
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/2007/wisinski/WisinskiC0507.pdf
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spelling ndltd-MONTSTATE-http---etd.lib.montana.edu-etd-2007-wisinski-WisinskiC0507.pdf2012-03-09T15:49:06Z Survival and summer habitat selection of male greater sage-grouse (Centocercus urophasianus) in Southwestern Montana Wisinski, Colleen Lyn During the 20th century, Greater Sage-Grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) populations in North America have declined by 69-99%. In southwest Montana little is known about the factors leading to declines in sage grouse populations; as a result, there are strong concerns regarding sage grouse population trends and habitat quality. I used radio-marked male sage grouse to obtain known-fate survival data and provide locations for habitat analyses. The objectives of the study were (1) to estimate survival rates of marked birds, and (2) to characterize the habitat used by sage grouse in southwestern Montana and compare it with available habitat. I used known-fate data to estimate annual survival, and I measured habitat attributes associated with aerial locations of instrumented sage grouse (use sites) and a series of randomly chosen locations within each study site (available sites). From 2001-2005, 45 male sage grouse were instrumented and monitored. The estimated annual survival rate was 0.34 (95% CI: 0.21 to 0.47). In 2004 and 2005, I measured vegetation characteristics at 78 habitat plots (43 used, 35 available). I used logistic regression to model habitat selection; grass height was an important predictor of use, but the negative relationship between the probability of a site being used and grass height was opposite of what I had predicted. Further research is needed to determine whether this behavior is adaptive. An important predictor of use in my exploratory analysis was solar radiation index (SRI). The negative effect of SRI on habitat selection may have been a result of sampling only during summer daylight hours, and SRI may have acted as a proxy for microsite temperature. Further research is needed over a wide variety of conditions to determine how habitat components relate to or interact with each other, habitat selection by sage grouse, and survival of sage grouse. 2007-05-15 Thesis Montana State University en http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/2007/wisinski/WisinskiC0507.pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description During the 20th century, Greater Sage-Grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) populations in North America have declined by 69-99%. In southwest Montana little is known about the factors leading to declines in sage grouse populations; as a result, there are strong concerns regarding sage grouse population trends and habitat quality. I used radio-marked male sage grouse to obtain known-fate survival data and provide locations for habitat analyses. The objectives of the study were (1) to estimate survival rates of marked birds, and (2) to characterize the habitat used by sage grouse in southwestern Montana and compare it with available habitat. I used known-fate data to estimate annual survival, and I measured habitat attributes associated with aerial locations of instrumented sage grouse (use sites) and a series of randomly chosen locations within each study site (available sites). From 2001-2005, 45 male sage grouse were instrumented and monitored. The estimated annual survival rate was 0.34 (95% CI: 0.21 to 0.47). In 2004 and 2005, I measured vegetation characteristics at 78 habitat plots (43 used, 35 available). I used logistic regression to model habitat selection; grass height was an important predictor of use, but the negative relationship between the probability of a site being used and grass height was opposite of what I had predicted. Further research is needed to determine whether this behavior is adaptive. An important predictor of use in my exploratory analysis was solar radiation index (SRI). The negative effect of SRI on habitat selection may have been a result of sampling only during summer daylight hours, and SRI may have acted as a proxy for microsite temperature. Further research is needed over a wide variety of conditions to determine how habitat components relate to or interact with each other, habitat selection by sage grouse, and survival of sage grouse.
author Wisinski, Colleen Lyn
spellingShingle Wisinski, Colleen Lyn
Survival and summer habitat selection of male greater sage-grouse (Centocercus urophasianus) in Southwestern Montana
author_facet Wisinski, Colleen Lyn
author_sort Wisinski, Colleen Lyn
title Survival and summer habitat selection of male greater sage-grouse (Centocercus urophasianus) in Southwestern Montana
title_short Survival and summer habitat selection of male greater sage-grouse (Centocercus urophasianus) in Southwestern Montana
title_full Survival and summer habitat selection of male greater sage-grouse (Centocercus urophasianus) in Southwestern Montana
title_fullStr Survival and summer habitat selection of male greater sage-grouse (Centocercus urophasianus) in Southwestern Montana
title_full_unstemmed Survival and summer habitat selection of male greater sage-grouse (Centocercus urophasianus) in Southwestern Montana
title_sort survival and summer habitat selection of male greater sage-grouse (centocercus urophasianus) in southwestern montana
publishDate 2007
url http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/2007/wisinski/WisinskiC0507.pdf
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