Demography, habitat use and movements of a recently reintroduced island population of Evermann’s Rock Ptarmigan

Master of Science Department of Biology Brett K. Sandercock Translocations are a useful management tool for restoring wildlife species to their native ranges, but require post-release monitoring to determine project success. We report results of a 4-year effort to reestablish a breeding population o...

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Main Author: Kaler, Robb S.A.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Kansas State University
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/382
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spelling ftkansassu:oai:krex.k-state.edu:2097/382 2023-05-15T13:07:23+02:00 Demography, habitat use and movements of a recently reintroduced island population of Evermann’s Rock Ptarmigan Kaler, Robb S.A. August application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2097/382 en_US eng Kansas State University http://hdl.handle.net/2097/382 rock ptarmigan reproductive success Agattu Island translocation Biology Ecology (0329) Thesis ftkansassu 2022-03-05T18:34:13Z Master of Science Department of Biology Brett K. Sandercock Translocations are a useful management tool for restoring wildlife species to their native ranges, but require post-release monitoring to determine project success. We report results of a 4-year effort to reestablish a breeding population of Evermann's Rock Ptarmigan (Lagopus mutus evermanni) on Agattu Island in the Aleutian Archipelago, Alaska. This endemic subspecies of ptarmigan was extirpated from most of the Near Islands by introductions of arctic fox by fur traders, and natural recolonizations did not occur after fox eradication. All females surviving the 2-week post-release period attempted to nest but initiated clutches later in the season and laid fewer eggs than resident females. Nest success was similar for resident and translocated females. Brood survival was greater for translocated than resident females and differed significantly; however, brood survival varied among years and was reduced by adverse weather conditions in 2006. Seasonal survival of radio-marked birds during the breeding season was 100% for translocated and resident ptarmigan. Over-winter mortality resulted in a low return rate in 2006. Returning birds in 2006 showed strong site fidelity and nest locations in two consecutive years were closely spaced. We examined nest site selection and determined brood movements and home range size of recently translocated and resident females. Nest sites of translocated females averaged 4.2 km from their respective release location and were not different from nest locations of resident females with regard to topographical features. Female nest site selection was influenced by percent composition of rock and forb coverage but was unaffected by slope, aspect, or general habitat. Broods of both resident and translocated females made movements to higher elevations after hatching. While size of brood home range was similar for resident and translocated females, distances traveled between the nest site and the arithmetic center of the brood home range were greater for translocated females. Overall, we conclude that translocations are an effective technique for reestablishing island populations of Rock Ptarmigan. Our study provides successful methods which may benefit future projects to reestablish endemic populations of ptarmigan and landbirds elsewhere in the Aleutian Islands. Thesis Agattu Archipelago Arctic Fox Arctic Lagopus mutus rock ptarmigan Alaska Aleutian Islands Kansas State University: K-State Research Exchange (K-REx) Agattu Island ENVELOPE(173.601,173.601,52.435,52.435) Arctic Near Islands ENVELOPE(173.132,173.132,52.801,52.801)
institution Open Polar
collection Kansas State University: K-State Research Exchange (K-REx)
op_collection_id ftkansassu
language English
topic rock ptarmigan
reproductive success
Agattu Island
translocation
Biology
Ecology (0329)
spellingShingle rock ptarmigan
reproductive success
Agattu Island
translocation
Biology
Ecology (0329)
Kaler, Robb S.A.
Demography, habitat use and movements of a recently reintroduced island population of Evermann’s Rock Ptarmigan
topic_facet rock ptarmigan
reproductive success
Agattu Island
translocation
Biology
Ecology (0329)
description Master of Science Department of Biology Brett K. Sandercock Translocations are a useful management tool for restoring wildlife species to their native ranges, but require post-release monitoring to determine project success. We report results of a 4-year effort to reestablish a breeding population of Evermann's Rock Ptarmigan (Lagopus mutus evermanni) on Agattu Island in the Aleutian Archipelago, Alaska. This endemic subspecies of ptarmigan was extirpated from most of the Near Islands by introductions of arctic fox by fur traders, and natural recolonizations did not occur after fox eradication. All females surviving the 2-week post-release period attempted to nest but initiated clutches later in the season and laid fewer eggs than resident females. Nest success was similar for resident and translocated females. Brood survival was greater for translocated than resident females and differed significantly; however, brood survival varied among years and was reduced by adverse weather conditions in 2006. Seasonal survival of radio-marked birds during the breeding season was 100% for translocated and resident ptarmigan. Over-winter mortality resulted in a low return rate in 2006. Returning birds in 2006 showed strong site fidelity and nest locations in two consecutive years were closely spaced. We examined nest site selection and determined brood movements and home range size of recently translocated and resident females. Nest sites of translocated females averaged 4.2 km from their respective release location and were not different from nest locations of resident females with regard to topographical features. Female nest site selection was influenced by percent composition of rock and forb coverage but was unaffected by slope, aspect, or general habitat. Broods of both resident and translocated females made movements to higher elevations after hatching. While size of brood home range was similar for resident and translocated females, distances traveled between the nest site and the arithmetic center of the brood home range were greater for translocated females. Overall, we conclude that translocations are an effective technique for reestablishing island populations of Rock Ptarmigan. Our study provides successful methods which may benefit future projects to reestablish endemic populations of ptarmigan and landbirds elsewhere in the Aleutian Islands.
format Thesis
author Kaler, Robb S.A.
author_facet Kaler, Robb S.A.
author_sort Kaler, Robb S.A.
title Demography, habitat use and movements of a recently reintroduced island population of Evermann’s Rock Ptarmigan
title_short Demography, habitat use and movements of a recently reintroduced island population of Evermann’s Rock Ptarmigan
title_full Demography, habitat use and movements of a recently reintroduced island population of Evermann’s Rock Ptarmigan
title_fullStr Demography, habitat use and movements of a recently reintroduced island population of Evermann’s Rock Ptarmigan
title_full_unstemmed Demography, habitat use and movements of a recently reintroduced island population of Evermann’s Rock Ptarmigan
title_sort demography, habitat use and movements of a recently reintroduced island population of evermann’s rock ptarmigan
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/382
long_lat ENVELOPE(173.601,173.601,52.435,52.435)
ENVELOPE(173.132,173.132,52.801,52.801)
geographic Agattu Island
Arctic
Near Islands
geographic_facet Agattu Island
Arctic
Near Islands
genre Agattu
Archipelago
Arctic Fox
Arctic
Lagopus mutus
rock ptarmigan
Alaska
Aleutian Islands
genre_facet Agattu
Archipelago
Arctic Fox
Arctic
Lagopus mutus
rock ptarmigan
Alaska
Aleutian Islands
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/382
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