Publication | Closed Access
The northern bobwhite decline: scaling our management for the twenty-first century
107
Citations
33
References
2004
Year
Historical GeographyTwenty-first CenturyLand UseSustainable DevelopmentSpatial ScaleHabitat ManagementSocial SciencesResource EconomicsConservation Management SystemConservation BiologyPublic PolicyEconomicsColinus VirginianusAbstract NorthernCommodity FrontierGeographyConservation PolicyBusiness HistoryMan-land RelationshipNatural Resource ManagementBusinessWildlife ManagementNorthern Bobwhite DeclineAnthropology
Abstract Northern bobwhites (Colinus virginianus) are one of the most broadly researched and intensively managed species in North America. However, we argue that a disadvantage of this status is that traditional management principles currently are incompatible with the spatial scale necessary to address the nationwide decline in bobwhite abundance. We maintain that halting or reversing this decline will entail 2 principal changes in the scale of management. Primarily we suggest that habitat oversight must switch from historical fine-scale management (promotion of edge habitat, weedy fencelines, disked strips, living hedges, and food plots) to regional management of usable space. Secondly, within these regional management areas, we should apply harvest management that employs risk-sensitive strategies that conservatively avoid undermining the primary goal. This entails narrowing the scale of harvest management from statewide to regional levels. If these ideological changes cannot be made and historical pol...
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