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Landscape‐scale greater prairie‐chicken–habitat relations and the Conservation Reserve Program

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ABSTRACTBoth the abundance of greater prairie‐chickens (Tympanuchus cupido pinnatus) and the area of grassland enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) in northwestern Minnesota, USA, have recently declined. Although wildlife conservation is a stated objective of the CRP, the impact of the CRP on greater prairie‐chicken populations has not been quantified. To address that information need, we evaluated the association between greater‐prairie chicken lek density (leks/km2), the number of males at leks (males/lek), and CRP enrollments in the context of landscape structure and composition in northwestern Minnesota. Using data from standardized prairie‐chicken surveys and land cover in 17 41‐km2 survey blocks during 2004–2016, we used a mixed‐effect model and a layered approach in an information‐theoretic framework at multiple spatial scales to identify covariates related to prairie‐chicken abundance. At the landscape scale, lek density was best explained by the amount of CRP grassland and wetland, grassland and wetland with long‐term conservation goals (state, federal, and The Nature Conservancy owned); other wetlands managed with variable or no continuity in conservation goals; the contiguity of grasslands; and the number of patches of grasslands and wetlands in each survey block each year. Increasing the amount of CRP grassland in 41‐km2 survey blocks by 1 km2 (2.4%) resulted in a corresponding increase of 6% in lek density. At the lek scale, the number of males per lek was best explained by the amount of CRP grassland and other grassland, CRP wetland and other wetland, forests, developed areas, shrubland, and the contiguity of CRP grassland. Increasing the amount of CRP grassland in the 2‐km breeding‐cycle habitat radius around a lek by 25% (3 km2) corresponded to a 5% increase in males per lek. Our results suggest that both increasing the quantity of grassland CRP and wetland CRP enrollments and aggregating CRP grassland enrollments may increase greater prairie‐chicken abundance. © 2019 The Wildlife Society.
Title: Landscape‐scale greater prairie‐chicken–habitat relations and the Conservation Reserve Program
Description:
ABSTRACTBoth the abundance of greater prairie‐chickens (Tympanuchus cupido pinnatus) and the area of grassland enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) in northwestern Minnesota, USA, have recently declined.
Although wildlife conservation is a stated objective of the CRP, the impact of the CRP on greater prairie‐chicken populations has not been quantified.
To address that information need, we evaluated the association between greater‐prairie chicken lek density (leks/km2), the number of males at leks (males/lek), and CRP enrollments in the context of landscape structure and composition in northwestern Minnesota.
Using data from standardized prairie‐chicken surveys and land cover in 17 41‐km2 survey blocks during 2004–2016, we used a mixed‐effect model and a layered approach in an information‐theoretic framework at multiple spatial scales to identify covariates related to prairie‐chicken abundance.
At the landscape scale, lek density was best explained by the amount of CRP grassland and wetland, grassland and wetland with long‐term conservation goals (state, federal, and The Nature Conservancy owned); other wetlands managed with variable or no continuity in conservation goals; the contiguity of grasslands; and the number of patches of grasslands and wetlands in each survey block each year.
Increasing the amount of CRP grassland in 41‐km2 survey blocks by 1 km2 (2.
4%) resulted in a corresponding increase of 6% in lek density.
At the lek scale, the number of males per lek was best explained by the amount of CRP grassland and other grassland, CRP wetland and other wetland, forests, developed areas, shrubland, and the contiguity of CRP grassland.
Increasing the amount of CRP grassland in the 2‐km breeding‐cycle habitat radius around a lek by 25% (3 km2) corresponded to a 5% increase in males per lek.
Our results suggest that both increasing the quantity of grassland CRP and wetland CRP enrollments and aggregating CRP grassland enrollments may increase greater prairie‐chicken abundance.
© 2019 The Wildlife Society.

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