DOI: 10.32469/10355/94342
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Environmental drivers of Northern bobwhite fall and winter survival and resource selection in Southwest Missouri

Abstract: Northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) populations have declined over the last 50 years throughout the majority of their historical range, primarily due to habitat loss and degradation caused by modern farming practices, increased urbanization, succession of native grasslands to forests, decreases in native pasture acreage and increases in grazing intensity. Recent questions regarding conservation grazing and prescribed burning management regimes and extensive grassland management suggest further information … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 63 publications
(93 reference statements)
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“…Rotational fire and grazing can prevent succession and sustain native grasslands that benefit nest and adult breeding season survival while providing recently disturbed patches preferred by broods. Burning on a 3‐year cycle also provides for dispersed low shrub cover that adults prefer in winter (Mosloff 2020, Mosloff et al 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Rotational fire and grazing can prevent succession and sustain native grasslands that benefit nest and adult breeding season survival while providing recently disturbed patches preferred by broods. Burning on a 3‐year cycle also provides for dispersed low shrub cover that adults prefer in winter (Mosloff 2020, Mosloff et al 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Predation is a substantial source of mortality for bobwhite chicks in summer and juveniles and adults in fall and winter in Missouri (Mosloff 2020, Sinnott et al 2022). Land cover composition and land management practices influence the suitability of landscapes for predators, and consequently predation risk and demographic rates of bobwhite occupying those landscapes (Rectenwald et al 2021, Peterson et al 2022).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This cover type is variable across our study extent and includes old fields, native grass plantings invaded by Sericea Lespedeza (Lespedeza cuneata), and other herbaceous cover not dominated by native grasses or tall fescue. Furthermore, sites that had burned in previous 12 months had lower survival for bobwhites from November through January than sites that had not burned that recently on our study areas (Mosloff 2020), demonstrating the seasonality of some of these relationships.…”
Section: Local Cover and Managementmentioning
confidence: 60%
“…We found a nearly credible positive relationship between juvenile survival and percent shrub cover within 50 m of an individual. Shrubs provide bobwhite broods important thermal cover during peak daytime summer temperatures and proximity to shrub cover positively affected survival of bobwhites on our sites November-January (Mosloff 2020). We expected to find a negative relationship between juvenile survival and proximity to trees and percent tree cover as trees provide habitat and perches that may result in increased predator density or activity (Dinkins et al 2012), but we did not detect a credible relationship.…”
Section: Local Cover and Managementmentioning
confidence: 78%