Nocturnal movements and habitat selection of mesopredators encountering bobwhite nests

ABSTRACT Northern bobwhites (Colinus virginianus) represent a valuable resource for upland game‐bird hunters and the rural economies they support; however, bobwhite populations are declining across the United States. As ground‐nesting birds, bobwhites are highly susceptible to mammalian predation du...

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Main Authors: Susan M. Cooper, Shesh Jhala, Dale Rollins, Rusty A. Feagin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2015-03-01
Series:Wildlife Society Bulletin
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/wsb.499
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author Susan M. Cooper
Shesh Jhala
Dale Rollins
Rusty A. Feagin
author_facet Susan M. Cooper
Shesh Jhala
Dale Rollins
Rusty A. Feagin
author_sort Susan M. Cooper
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Northern bobwhites (Colinus virginianus) represent a valuable resource for upland game‐bird hunters and the rural economies they support; however, bobwhite populations are declining across the United States. As ground‐nesting birds, bobwhites are highly susceptible to mammalian predation during the breeding season. We placed global positioning collars on 6 coyotes (Canis latrans), 4 bobcats (Lynx rufus), and 11 raccoons (Procyon lotor) in Texas, USA, during the nesting season of bobwhites (April–August of 2009–2011) to assess their habitat selection and use, as well as determine the relative frequency with which they may encounter bobwhite nests. Overall, nightly encounter rate of predators with known bobwhite nest sites was low. Coyotes encountered nest sites 3 times more frequently than male raccoons and 7 times more frequently than bobcats. Female raccoons did not come within 50 m of any nest locations. The higher encounter rate of coyotes with bobwhite nest sites was associated with the similarity of habitat preference of coyotes and bobwhites for grasslands and grass–shrub habitats and the wide‐ranging nocturnal paths of coyotes. Bobcats and raccoons had shorter nightly paths and mainly used habitats providing a greater degree of cover than is typically suitable for nesting bobwhites. Male raccoons were more mobile than females and made greater use of the grass–shrub habitat, and thus were more likely to encounter quail nests. Despite having lower individual encounter rates with bobwhite nest sites than did coyotes, male raccoons remain important predators of quail nests because they have the behavioral ability to attain greater population densities than those of the more territorial coyotes and bobcats. © 2014 The Wildlife Society.
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spelling doaj-art-d91accaae0874d6494329f79f0a902c82025-08-20T01:56:53ZengWileyWildlife Society Bulletin2328-55402015-03-0139113814610.1002/wsb.499Nocturnal movements and habitat selection of mesopredators encountering bobwhite nestsSusan M. Cooper0Shesh Jhala1Dale Rollins2Rusty A. Feagin3Texas A&M AgriLife Research1619 Garner Field RoadUvaldeTX78801USADepartment of Wildlife and Fisheries SciencesTexas A&M University210 Nagle HallCollege StationTX77843USATexas A&M AgriLife Research7887 United States Highway 87San AngeloTX76901USADepartment of Ecosystem Science and ManagementTexas A&M UniversityB221C Centeq Research PlazaCollege StationTX77845USAABSTRACT Northern bobwhites (Colinus virginianus) represent a valuable resource for upland game‐bird hunters and the rural economies they support; however, bobwhite populations are declining across the United States. As ground‐nesting birds, bobwhites are highly susceptible to mammalian predation during the breeding season. We placed global positioning collars on 6 coyotes (Canis latrans), 4 bobcats (Lynx rufus), and 11 raccoons (Procyon lotor) in Texas, USA, during the nesting season of bobwhites (April–August of 2009–2011) to assess their habitat selection and use, as well as determine the relative frequency with which they may encounter bobwhite nests. Overall, nightly encounter rate of predators with known bobwhite nest sites was low. Coyotes encountered nest sites 3 times more frequently than male raccoons and 7 times more frequently than bobcats. Female raccoons did not come within 50 m of any nest locations. The higher encounter rate of coyotes with bobwhite nest sites was associated with the similarity of habitat preference of coyotes and bobwhites for grasslands and grass–shrub habitats and the wide‐ranging nocturnal paths of coyotes. Bobcats and raccoons had shorter nightly paths and mainly used habitats providing a greater degree of cover than is typically suitable for nesting bobwhites. Male raccoons were more mobile than females and made greater use of the grass–shrub habitat, and thus were more likely to encounter quail nests. Despite having lower individual encounter rates with bobwhite nest sites than did coyotes, male raccoons remain important predators of quail nests because they have the behavioral ability to attain greater population densities than those of the more territorial coyotes and bobcats. © 2014 The Wildlife Society.https://doi.org/10.1002/wsb.499animal movementsbobcatcoyoteGPShabitat selectionnorthern bobwhite
spellingShingle Susan M. Cooper
Shesh Jhala
Dale Rollins
Rusty A. Feagin
Nocturnal movements and habitat selection of mesopredators encountering bobwhite nests
Wildlife Society Bulletin
animal movements
bobcat
coyote
GPS
habitat selection
northern bobwhite
title Nocturnal movements and habitat selection of mesopredators encountering bobwhite nests
title_full Nocturnal movements and habitat selection of mesopredators encountering bobwhite nests
title_fullStr Nocturnal movements and habitat selection of mesopredators encountering bobwhite nests
title_full_unstemmed Nocturnal movements and habitat selection of mesopredators encountering bobwhite nests
title_short Nocturnal movements and habitat selection of mesopredators encountering bobwhite nests
title_sort nocturnal movements and habitat selection of mesopredators encountering bobwhite nests
topic animal movements
bobcat
coyote
GPS
habitat selection
northern bobwhite
url https://doi.org/10.1002/wsb.499
work_keys_str_mv AT susanmcooper nocturnalmovementsandhabitatselectionofmesopredatorsencounteringbobwhitenests
AT sheshjhala nocturnalmovementsandhabitatselectionofmesopredatorsencounteringbobwhitenests
AT dalerollins nocturnalmovementsandhabitatselectionofmesopredatorsencounteringbobwhitenests
AT rustyafeagin nocturnalmovementsandhabitatselectionofmesopredatorsencounteringbobwhitenests