Breeding Season Ecology Of Scaled Quail Callipepla Squamata And Gambels Quail Callipepla Gambelii PDF Download

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Breeding Season Ecology of Scaled Quail (Callipepla Squamata) and Gambel's Quail (Callipepla Gambelii)

Breeding Season Ecology of Scaled Quail (Callipepla Squamata) and Gambel's Quail (Callipepla Gambelii)
Author: Elizabeth Leipold
Publisher:
Total Pages: 170
Release: 2018
Genre:
ISBN:

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Scaled quail populations have declined over the last half century, with Gambel's quail populations showing signs of decline in recent decades. Current climate projections predict a temporal shift in the monsoon season of the desert southwest. This highlights the importance of understanding the relationship between seasonal rainfall patterns and population size for desert quail. I studied sympatric populations of scaled and Gambel's quail on White Sands Missile Range in the Chihuahuan Desert for two breeding seasons to better understand the mechanisms behind this relationship and to further describe their habitat use. My objectives were to examine 1) effects of precipitation and temperature on demography and nesting ecology, and 2) resource selection and habitat characteristics for nest sites and brood-rearing areas. I tracked scaled and Gambel's quail using VHF transmitters to estimate adult survival and nest survival, and to characterize nest site selection, brood habitat selection, nesting and re-nesting rates. Differences between the timing and amounts of monsoonal precipitation occurred between the two years. Seasonal precipitation models for estimating adult survival had some support but were not distinct from the null model. Adult survival during the breeding season was estimated to be 48% - 51% for scaled quail and 29% - 30% for Gambel's quail. I found support for a positive association between spring precipitation and daily nest survival for scaled quail. Re-nesting rates for both species were positively associated with more spring and summer precipitation and earlier monsoons. I found strong evidence of selection at nest sites for both species. Scaled quail selected nest sites with more grass cover and visual obstruction (100%). Gambel's quail selected nest sites with more shrub cover and less bare ground. Brood-rearing habitat was characterized by higher amounts of vegetation, cover, and visual obstruction for scaled quail, while Gambel's quail selected for more shrub cover and less bare ground. Gambel's quail preferred areas with higher shrub densities, taller vegetarion, more shrub cover, and less grass cover than scaled quail.


Ecology of Gambel's Quail (Callipepla Gambelii) in Relation to Water and Fire in Utah's Mojave Desert

Ecology of Gambel's Quail (Callipepla Gambelii) in Relation to Water and Fire in Utah's Mojave Desert
Author: Wesley R. Skidmore
Publisher:
Total Pages: 62
Release: 2016
Genre: Electronic dissertations
ISBN:

Download Ecology of Gambel's Quail (Callipepla Gambelii) in Relation to Water and Fire in Utah's Mojave Desert Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

The efficacy of providing water sources in desert ecosystems to enhance wildlife populations and their distribution continues to be debated among wildlife managers. Some argue wildlife water developments provide a direct benefit to numerous species, while others point to the potential that wildlife water developments alter competition or predation dynamics and disrupt native communities. Additionally, some have argued that the availability of water may become more important to wildlife in the face of vegetative changes associated with expansive fire and conversion of shrub or forest lands to grasslands which alters the thermal landscape available to animals. I evaluated the influence of free water and expansive fire on aspects of the ecology (habitat selection, space use and survival) of Gambel’s quail (Callipepla gambelii) in the Mojave Desert of southwestern Washington County, Utah, USA. I attached radio-transmitters to a total of 206 quail (74 adult males, 67 adult females, and 65 juvenile males and females) and monitored them from 2010 – 2013. For chapter one of my thesis, I evaluated the response of marked quail to removal of access to water in a before-after controlled impact (BACI) design. I found little influence of water removal on survival as models with this effect received little to no support and overlap in confidence intervals occurred between treatment and reference groups. Likewise, the distance from the center of the summer home range to the nearest water source did not differ by year (F = 1.63; P = 0.19) or treatment (removal of water) (F = 0.89; P = 0.35) and pairwise comparisons of distances for the treatment by year interaction were not significant (P > 0.05 in all cases). For size of home range area, however I found strong effects for year (F = 3.07; P = 0.03), treatment (F = 4.67; P = 0.03), and their interaction (F = 7.61; P = 0.01). Mean home range size for quail was 6.10 and 1.63 km2 for animals in the reference area during treatment years (2012 and 2013) compared to 5.07 and 8.99 km2 for quail in treatment area during 2012 and 2013, respectively. Removal of water influenced size of summer home ranges, but not the location of the summer home range or survival rates. I hypothesize that removal of access to free water required quail in the treatment area to expand their space patterns in 2013 in order to satisfy water demands via pre-formed water. For chapter two of my thesis, I evaluated habitat selection of Gambel’s quail in relation to vegetation type, topographic features, water, and recent (4-7 years) expansive fire. Gambel’s quail selected areas of decreased roughness which were closer to water and fire boundaries than random locations. I found that quail preferred moderate (