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1 December 2003 Daily survival rates of ruffed grouse Bonasa umbellus in northern Minnesota
R. J. Gutiérrez, Guthrie S. Zimmerman, Gordon W. Gulliont
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Abstract

We radio-marked 56 ruffed grouse Bonasa umbellus in northern Minnesota, USA, during 1963–1965 and 2001–2002. Of these, we estimated the daily survival rate of 49 individuals (32 females and 17 males; of which 27 were grey phase and 22 were red phase) during the breeding and non-breeding seasons. We investigated whether daily survival varied by age, colour phase, gender, season and transmitter type. A model representing an interaction between colour phase and season fit the data best (AICc = 154.760) and was 77% more likely than any of our other a priori models. Daily survival rates were identical during the breeding season (0.998; SE = 0.002 for both colour phases), but higher for red-phased (0.994; SE = 0.003) than for grey-phased (0.980; SE = 0.007) birds during the non-breeding season. The daily estimate of grouse survival pooled across all individuals and seasons was 0.994 (SE = 0.002), which yielded an annual survival probability of 0.111 (SE = 0.082). The estimated annual survival rate was 0.010 (SE = 0.132) for grey-phased birds and 0.206 (SE = 0.146) for red-phased birds. There was no difference in survival rates between the two study periods. Our estimated annual survival rates were similar to other rates reported for ruffed grouse.

© WILDLIFE BIOLOGY
R. J. Gutiérrez, Guthrie S. Zimmerman, and Gordon W. Gulliont "Daily survival rates of ruffed grouse Bonasa umbellus in northern Minnesota," Wildlife Biology 9(4), 351-356, (1 December 2003). https://doi.org/10.2981/wlb.2003.024
Published: 1 December 2003
KEYWORDS
Bonasa umbellus
Galliformes
known-fate modelling
radio telemetry
ruffed grouse
survival rate
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