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Estimating Greater Sage-grouse Juvenile Survival in Utah Utah State University David Dahlgren Terry Messmer David Koons
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Introduction Info Need
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Study Area Parker Mountain
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Methods
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Methods – Burkepile et al. 2002
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Methods Hen Behavior
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Methods Monitoring
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Methods Veg and Arthropod Sampling
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Brood Mixing
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Methods Cause of mortality Handling Exposure Predation Avian/Mammalian Unknown
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Methods Modeling Manly and Schmutz 2001 - JWM Maximum Likelihood Estimation (Version of the Mayfield Estimator) Heterogeneity - D Brood ID No. chicks start No. chicks end Age (days) Start Age (days) End Covariates 8076523Year etc. 8075536Year etc. 8075569Year etc. 80755911Year etc. 807551113Year etc. 807551315Year etc. 807541517Year etc.
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Methods Modeling Survival First Age Structure (weeks 1 to 6) Used to assess covariates AIC Second Assess covariates Temporal Brood hen characteristics Vegetation data Arthropod data
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Methods Modeling Survival Assumptions Brood-mixing and right censoring Missing chicks Brood-mixing and missing chicks
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Methods Modeling Survival First Covariates Year Brood Type Hen Behavior (restricted data set) Hen Age (restricted data set) Hatch Date
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Methods Modeling Survival Second – Vegetation Covariates (restricted data set) Shrub cover and height Grass cover and height Forb cover and height Third – Arthropod Covariates (2006, restricted data set) Hymenoptera (ants separate), Coleoptera, Lepidoptera, Orthoptera, miscellaneous, and total arthropods
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Results Sample sizes Total 2005 n = 89 chicks in 21 broods (mean = 4.24) 2006 n = 61 chicks in 21 broods (mean = 2.91) Handling Death (2.6%) 2005 n = 3 2006 n = 1 Excluded from the survival analysis
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Results Sample Sizes Chick mass Mean = 29.5g (SE = 0.16) Transmitter averaged 5.1% (SE = 0.0003) of chick weight Hen Behavior 43% Very protective (18/42) 38% Moderately protective (16/42) 19% Non-protective (8/42)
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Results Sample Sizes Brood Mixing 21% of marked chicks (31/146) 43% of marked broods (18/42) 45% of mixing events involved >1 chick (9/20) Occurred weeks 1 to 6 70% (14/20) in weeks 2 and 3 Radio-marked hen mortality (n = 2)
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Results Sample Sizes Chick Mortality n = 44 documented deaths n = 26 missing (assumed depredated) n = 6 exposure Predation 91% (64/70) Unknown 75% (48/64) Mammalian 12.5% (8/64) Avian 12.5% (8/64)
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Results ModelKAICwiwi Age Specific Models (no covariates) age = (week1)+(week2)+(week3)+(week4)+(weeks5-6)6345.890.000.99973 age = (weeks1-2)+(weeks3-4)+(weeks5-6)4362.4716.580.00025 age = (week1)+(week2)+(week3)+(weeks4-6)5368.9523.060.00000 age = (weeks1-2)+(weeks3-6)3372.6726.780.00000 age = (week1)+(week2)+(weeks3-6)4374.6428.75 0.00000 age = (week1)+(weeks2-6)3398.4052.51 0.00000 age = (weeks1-2)+(weeks4-6)3400.4854.59 0.00000 age = (weeks 1-6)2408.5262.63 0.00000 Covariate Models age* + brood type (regular or mixed)7253.600.000.99999 age* + hen age (yearling or adult)7279.4225.820.00003 age* + year (2005 or 2006)7332.2678.660.00000 age* + hen behavior (protectiveness)8335.0781.470.00000 age* + hatch date (Julian days)7343.0789.470.00000 First – Age parameterization : AIC difference between a model (i.e., model i) and the best performing model (i.e., model with the lowest AIC among the set of models examined). wi: Akaike model weight. * The best model of age = (week1) + (week2) + (week3) + (week4) + (weeks5-6) Second – Temporal and hen characteristics
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Results ModelKAICwiwi Age Specific Models (no covariates) age = (week1)+(week2)+(week3)+(week4)+(weeks5-6)6345.890.000.99973 First – Age parameterization
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Results ModelKAIC wiwi Covariate Models age* + brood type (regular or mixed)7253.600.000.99999 Second – Temporal and hen characteristics
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Results Mean Survival to 42 days = 0.41 (SE =0.046) Chick Survival in Regular broods = 0.38 Chick Survival in Mixed broods = 0.61
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Results Heterogeneity (D) Chicks/brood = 3.5 For best model D = 1.10 (SE = 0.22)
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Results ModelKAIC wiwi age* (NULL)6-19.480.000.99999 Vegetation Covariates Null Model is best
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Results ModelKAIC wiwi age* + Ants7-115.160.000.59508 age* (NULL)6-114.390.770.40492 Arthropod Covariates Entire 42 days Ant model
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Results ModelKAIC wiwi age* + Orthoptera5-24.030.000.99999 Arthropod Covariates Early brood-rearing (day 1-21) Orthoptera (grasshopper) model Estimates not significant
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Take Home Predation major cause of chick mortality However, survival was good (mean = 0.41) Our data suggested low dependence among brood mates for sage-grouse chicks Brood-mixing may be important to survival, needs further investigation There is evidence that Arthropods (especially Orthoptera) may aid chick survival, needs further investigation (> sample size)
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Thanks PARM USU Extension Parker Mtn. Grazing Association Jack H. Berryman Institute UDWR USFS BLM NRCS SITLA Farm Bureau County Commissioners People Technicians Nathan Burkepile Jack Connelly Volunteers
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Any Questions?
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