- Title Pages
- Contributors
- Preface
- Foreword
-
Greater Sage-Grouse and Sagebrush: an Introduction to the Landscape
-
Chapter One Historical Development, Principal Federal Legislation, and Current Management of Sagebrush Habitats: Implications for Conservation -
Chapter Two The Legal Status of Greater Sage-Grouse: Organizational Structure of Planning Efforts -
Chapter Three Characteristics and Dynamics of Greater Sage-Grouse Populations -
Chapter Four Characteristics of Greater Sage-Grouse Habitats: A Landscape Species at Micro-and Macroscales -
Chapter Five Molecular Insights into the Biology of Greater Sage-Grouse -
Chapter Six Predation on Greater Sage-Grouse: Facts, Process, and Effects -
Chapter Seven Harvest Management for Greater Sage-Grouse: A Changing Paradigm for Game Bird Management -
Chapter Eight Parasites and Infectious Diseases of Greater Sage-Grouse -
Chapter Nine West Nile Virus Ecology in Sagebrush Habitat and Impacts on Greater Sage-Grouse Populations -
Chapter Ten Characteristics of Sagebrush Habitats and Limitations to Long-Term Conservation -
Chapter Eleven Pre-Euro-American and Recent Fire in Sagebrush Ecosystems -
Chapter Twelve Ecological Influence and Pathways of Land Use in Sagebrush -
Chapter Thirteen Influences of the Human Footprint on Sagebrush Landscape Patterns: Implications for Sage-Grouse Conservation -
Chapter Fourteen Influences of Free-Roaming Equids on Sagebrush Ecosystems, with a Focus on Greater Sage-Grouse -
Chapter Fifteen Greater Sage-Grouse Population Dynamics and Probability of Persistence -
Chapter Sixteen Connecting Pattern and Process in Greater Sage-Grouse Populations and Sagebrush Landscapes -
Chapter Seventeen Influences of Environmental and Anthropogenic Features on Greater Sage-Grouse Populations, 1997–2007 -
Chapter Eighteen Factors Associated with Extirpation of Sage-Grouse -
Chapter Nineteen Greater Sage-Grouse as an Umbrella Species for Shrubland Passerine Birds: A Multiscale Assessment -
Chapter Twenty Energy Development and Greater Sage-Grouse -
Chapter Twenty-One Energy Development and Conservation Tradeoffs: Systematic Planning for Greater Sage-Grouse in their Eastern Range -
Chapter Twenty-Two Response of Greater Sage-Grouse to the Conservation Reserve Program in Washington State -
Chapter Twenty-Three Restoring and Rehabilitating Sagebrush Habitats -
Chapter Twenty-Four Conservation of Greater Sage-Grouse: A Synthesis of Current Trends and Future Management - Literature Cited
- Index
- Studies in Avian Biology
Influences of Environmental and Anthropogenic Features on Greater Sage-Grouse Populations, 1997–2007
Influences of Environmental and Anthropogenic Features on Greater Sage-Grouse Populations, 1997–2007
- Chapter:
- (p.406) (p.407) Chapter Seventeen Influences of Environmental and Anthropogenic Features on Greater Sage-Grouse Populations, 1997–2007
- Source:
- Greater Sage-Grouse
- Author(s):
Douglas H. Johnson
Matthew J. Holloran
John W. Connelly
Steven E. Hanser
Courtney L. Amundson
Steven T. Knick
- Publisher:
- University of California Press
The Greater Sage-Grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus), endemic to western North America, is of great conservation interest. Its populations are tracked by spring counts of males at lek sites. This study explored the relations between trends of Greater Sage-Grouse lek counts from 1997 to 2007 and a variety of natural and anthropogenic features. The results show that trends were correlated with several habitat features, but not always similarly throughout the range. Lek trends were positively associated with proportion of sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) cover, within five and eighteen kilometers. Lek trends had negative associations with the coverage of agriculture and exotic plant species. Trends also tended to be lower for leks where a greater proportion of their surrounding landscape had been burned. Lek trends were reduced where communication towers were nearby, whereas no effect of power lines was detected. Active oil or natural gas wells and highways, but not secondary roads, were associated with lower trends. These findings are important for identifying features that could threaten Greater Sage-Grouse populations.
Keywords: Centrocercus urophasianus, communication towers, Greater Sage-Grouse, leks, exotic plant species, highways, Artemisia, conservation, sagebrush, agriculture
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- Title Pages
- Contributors
- Preface
- Foreword
-
Greater Sage-Grouse and Sagebrush: an Introduction to the Landscape
-
Chapter One Historical Development, Principal Federal Legislation, and Current Management of Sagebrush Habitats: Implications for Conservation -
Chapter Two The Legal Status of Greater Sage-Grouse: Organizational Structure of Planning Efforts -
Chapter Three Characteristics and Dynamics of Greater Sage-Grouse Populations -
Chapter Four Characteristics of Greater Sage-Grouse Habitats: A Landscape Species at Micro-and Macroscales -
Chapter Five Molecular Insights into the Biology of Greater Sage-Grouse -
Chapter Six Predation on Greater Sage-Grouse: Facts, Process, and Effects -
Chapter Seven Harvest Management for Greater Sage-Grouse: A Changing Paradigm for Game Bird Management -
Chapter Eight Parasites and Infectious Diseases of Greater Sage-Grouse -
Chapter Nine West Nile Virus Ecology in Sagebrush Habitat and Impacts on Greater Sage-Grouse Populations -
Chapter Ten Characteristics of Sagebrush Habitats and Limitations to Long-Term Conservation -
Chapter Eleven Pre-Euro-American and Recent Fire in Sagebrush Ecosystems -
Chapter Twelve Ecological Influence and Pathways of Land Use in Sagebrush -
Chapter Thirteen Influences of the Human Footprint on Sagebrush Landscape Patterns: Implications for Sage-Grouse Conservation -
Chapter Fourteen Influences of Free-Roaming Equids on Sagebrush Ecosystems, with a Focus on Greater Sage-Grouse -
Chapter Fifteen Greater Sage-Grouse Population Dynamics and Probability of Persistence -
Chapter Sixteen Connecting Pattern and Process in Greater Sage-Grouse Populations and Sagebrush Landscapes -
Chapter Seventeen Influences of Environmental and Anthropogenic Features on Greater Sage-Grouse Populations, 1997–2007 -
Chapter Eighteen Factors Associated with Extirpation of Sage-Grouse -
Chapter Nineteen Greater Sage-Grouse as an Umbrella Species for Shrubland Passerine Birds: A Multiscale Assessment -
Chapter Twenty Energy Development and Greater Sage-Grouse -
Chapter Twenty-One Energy Development and Conservation Tradeoffs: Systematic Planning for Greater Sage-Grouse in their Eastern Range -
Chapter Twenty-Two Response of Greater Sage-Grouse to the Conservation Reserve Program in Washington State -
Chapter Twenty-Three Restoring and Rehabilitating Sagebrush Habitats -
Chapter Twenty-Four Conservation of Greater Sage-Grouse: A Synthesis of Current Trends and Future Management - Literature Cited
- Index
- Studies in Avian Biology