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Research and Conservation on the Lower Brule Indian Reservation

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Presentation on theme: "Research and Conservation on the Lower Brule Indian Reservation"— Presentation transcript:

1 Research and Conservation on the Lower Brule Indian Reservation
Shaun M. Grassel Wildlife Biologist Lower Brule Sioux Tribe Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Recreation

2 Outline of Presentation
Location Department information Management activities overview Research and Projects Black-footed ferrets Pronghorn

3 Lower Brule Indian Reservation

4 Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Recreation
9 full-time staff: Director, 2 administrative assistants, 3 Biologists (Habitat, Wildlife, Assistant), 2 Conservation Officers, 1 Bison Manager Created in the early 1980’s as an outfitter/hunting lodge Focus changed to wildlife management in 1993

5 Management Activities
Big Game (Mule deer, white-tailed deer, pronghorn) - Aerial surveys to estimate population size, recruitment surveys, estimate harvest, hunting recommendations Upland Game (Greater prairie chicken, sharp-tailed grouse, pheasant) – lek surveys, roadside brood surveys, estimate harvest, hunting recommendations Habitat – noxious weed and cedar control, grassland and wetland restoration, shelterbelt and food plot plantings Bison and elk management

6 Conservation Projects
Prairie dog conservation – colony mapping, estimate harvest, plague management, translocations, sylvatic plague vaccine field trials Swift fox reintroduction Black-footed ferret reintroduction

7 Research Activities Ecological relationships of black-footed ferrets, badgers, and black-tailed prairie dogs Resource selection, survival rates, and seasonal movements of a declining pronghorn population Habitat characteristics of chestnut-collared longspurs Demographics of burrowing owls and recreational prairie dog shooting

8 Ecological relationships of black-footed ferrets, badgers, and black-tailed prairie dogs

9 Ecological relationships of black-footed ferrets, badgers, and black-tailed prairie dogs
Asymmetric patterns of avoidance of badgers by ferrets based on the sex of both species. Ferrets avoided adult female badgers, but not male badgers, and male ferrets exhibited less avoidance than female ferrets.

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11 Ecological relationships of black-footed ferrets, badgers, and black-tailed prairie dogs
Asymmetric patterns of avoidance of badgers by ferrets based on the sex of both species. Ferrets avoided adult female badgers, but not male badgers, and male ferrets exhibited less avoidance than female ferrets. Additionally, avoidance decreased with increasing densities of prairie dogs.

12 Ecological relationships of black-footed ferrets, badgers, and black-tailed prairie dogs
Reproduction by prairie dogs was strongly influenced by precipitation received during the previous year and winter severity. Harsh winter conditions resulted in a marked decline in reproduction during one of the years of our study.

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14 Ecological relationships of black-footed ferrets, badgers, and black-tailed prairie dogs
Reproduction by prairie dogs was strongly influenced by precipitation received during the previous year and winter severity. Harsh winter conditions resulted in a marked decline in reproduction during one of the years of our study. Despite a marked decrease in the reproduction of prairie dogs, reproduction by ferrets varied little across years of our study.

15 Ecological relationships of black-footed ferrets, badgers, and black-tailed prairie dogs
Ferret productivity Year Average litter size Kits:adult female Observed litter size of ferrets varied little during the 3 years of our study as did the number of kits captured and marked per adult female with similar effort. Our data is limited to the Lower Brule site and because of small sample size our comparisons were qualitative. These data suggest that a consistent number of juvenile ferrets were born annually during this time period despite marked differences among years in reproduction by prairie dogs, including a 77% decrease in prairie dog production in 2010. Although our sample size is small, it seems to support an alternative hypothesis that ferrets might produce a relatively consistent number of young because they evolved within an ecosystem that has relatively abundant and stable prey.

16 Ecological relationships of black-footed ferrets, badgers, and black-tailed prairie dogs
On multiple scales badgers selected for prairie dog colonies, and within prairie dog colonies, they selected for areas with high burrow densities.

17 Badgers selected for prairie dog colonies at the largest spatial scale we examined.
67% of badger locations were on prairie dog colonies while prairie dog colonies comprised only 20% of our study site.

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20 Ecological relationships of black-footed ferrets, badgers, and black-tailed prairie dogs
On multiple scales badgers selected for prairie dog colonies, and within prairie dog colonies, they selected for areas with high burrow densities. At the scale of their geographic range, badgers are most often described as generalists, but our results suggest local specialization appears to occur and is most likely due to the abundance and predictability of prairie dogs.

21 Resource selection, survival rates, and seasonal movements of a declining pronghorn population

22 Historical / Current Range

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26 Resource selection, survival rates, and seasonal movements of a declining pronghorn population
Goals of research Evaluate resource selection patterns Evaluate seasonal movement patterns Estimate survival rates and causes of mortality 45 adults fitted with GPS collars 14 kids fitted with VHF collars in 2015 Goal to capture 35 kids annually

27 Resource selection, survival rates, and seasonal movements of a declining pronghorn population
Resource selection patterns – preliminary findings Appear to avoid lands enrolled into the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) Select for roads during parturition Avoid prairie dog colonies during parturition Avoid cattle during parturition

28 Resource selection, survival rates, and seasonal movements of a declining pronghorn population
Seasonal movements – preliminary findings Fall/winter movements and herd characteristics dictated by winter weather patterns

29 Resource selection, survival rates, and seasonal movements of a declining pronghorn population
Survival – preliminary findings 10 of 14 kids killed by coyotes Kids / 100 Does Year Lower Brule Nearby Counties 2004 27 97 2005 26 100 2006 77 2007 14 76 2008 n/a 86 2009 63 60 2010 29 57 2011 44 2012 38 2013 Average 30 71

30 Resource selection, survival rates, and seasonal movements of a declining pronghorn population
Survival – preliminary findings 10 of 14 kids killed by coyotes 4 of 25 adult mortalities – 2 males legal harvest, 2 females unknown (disease suspected)

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