USE AND SELECTION OF BROOD-REARING HABITAT BY SAGE GROUSE IN SOUTH CENTRAL WASHINGTON

Citation
Cm. Sveum et al., USE AND SELECTION OF BROOD-REARING HABITAT BY SAGE GROUSE IN SOUTH CENTRAL WASHINGTON, The Great Basin naturalist, 58(4), 1998, pp. 344-351
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology,"Biology Miscellaneous
Journal title
ISSN journal
00173614
Volume
58
Issue
4
Year of publication
1998
Pages
344 - 351
Database
ISI
SICI code
0017-3614(1998)58:4<344:UASOBH>2.0.ZU;2-P
Abstract
Sage Grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) brood-habitat use was examined during 1992 and 1993 at the Yakima Training Center in Yakima and Kitt itas counties, Washington. During the 2 yr we followed 38 broods, of w hich 12 persisted to 1 August ((x) over bar = approximately 1.5 chicks /brood). Food forb cover was greater at all brood locations than at ra ndom locations. Hens with broods in big sagebrush/bunchgrass habitat ( Artemisia tridentata/Agropyron spicatum) selected for greater food for b cover, total forb cover, and lower shrub heights; broods in altered big sagebrush/bunchgrass habitats selected greater tall grass cover an d vertical cover height; broods in grassland showed no preference for any measured vegetation characteristics. During the early rearing peri od (post-hatching-6 wk) each year, broods selected sagebrush/bunchgras s. Broods in 1993 made greater use of grasslands than in 1992 and sele cted grassland during the late brood-rearing period (7-12 wk). Broods selected for sagebrush/bunchgrass during midday, but 52% of brood loca tions in the afternoon were in grassland. Tall grass cover was greater at morning (0500-1000 h) and afternoon (1501-2000 h) brood locations than at midday (1001-1500 h) and random locations. Midday brood locati ons had greater shrub cover and height than morning and afternoon loca tions. Selection of habitat components was similar to the results of o ther studies, but habitat conditions coupled with a possible lack of a lternate brood-rearing cover types resulted in low survival of chicks.