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A meta‐analysis of lesser prairie‐chicken nesting and brood‐rearing habitats: Implications for habitat management

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2013

Year

Abstract

ABSTRACT The distribution and range of lesser prairie‐chicken ( Tympanuchus pallidicinctus ) has been reduced by >90% since European settlement of the Great Plains of North America. Currently, lesser prairie‐chickens occupy 3 general vegetation communities: sand sagebrush ( Artemisia filifolia ), sand shinnery oak ( Quercus havardii ), and mixed‐grass prairies juxtaposed with Conservation Reserve Program grasslands. As a candidate for protection under the Endangered Species Act, there is a need for a synthesis that characterizes habitat structure rangewide. Thus, we conducted a meta‐analysis of vegetation characteristics at nest sites and brood habitats to determine whether there was an overall effect (Hedges' d ) of habitat selection and to estimate average (95% CI) habitat characteristics at use sites. We estimated effect sizes ( d i ) from the difference between use (nests and brood sites) and random sampling sites for each study ( n = 14), and derived an overall effect size ( d ++ ). There was a general effect for habitat selection as evidenced by low levels of variation in effect sizes across studies and regions. There was a small to medium effect ( d ++ = 0.20–0.82) of selection for greater vertical structure (visual obstruction) by nesting females in both vegetation communities, and selection against bare ground ( d ++ = 0.20–0.58). Females with broods exhibited less selectivity for habitat components except for vertical structure. The variation of d ++ was greater during nesting than brooding periods, signifying a seasonal shift in habitat use, and perhaps a greater range of tolerance for brood‐rearing habitat. The overall estimates of vegetation cover were consistent with those provided in management guidelines for the species. Published 2013. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.

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