By
Keryn Page MISSISSIPPI
STATE --
Declining
populations of quail led Mississippi State University
researchers to a grant to study the effectiveness of
programs that restore habitat for this traditionally popular
game bird. Wildlife
researchers hope to turn around the Northern bobwhite
quail's population decline by recreating elements of
historic land conditions. The potential exists for quail
hunting to once again become an economically significant
sport. "There
are very few quail hunters in Mississippi because of
declining Northern bobwhite populations, but if there were
quail around, it could be a very significant economic
activity," said Ben West, a wildlife specialist with MSU's
Extension Service. "The South has a pretty rich heritage of
quail hunting, and many people are optimistic about its
popularity returning." That
optimism is a result of several U.S. Department of
Agriculture programs that reimburse landowners for some of
the cost of land management practices that establish quail
habitat. Examples of these programs include the Conservation
Reserve Program, Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program,
Environmental Quality Incentives Program and Forest Land
Enhancement Program. USDA
also recently announced funding of a national research
project to evaluate the effectiveness of these conservation
programs. The USDA-Natural Resources Conservation Service's
Bobwhite Restoration Project is a cooperative effort between
the USDA and MSU. MSU's
Forest and Wildlife Research Center is serving as the
coordinating institution for the $1.5 million project. This
was divided into 11 grants funding separate studies by
researchers at seven universities, two state wildlife
agencies and two non-governmental organizations. "Changes
in the way we use our land have caused populations of
Northern bobwhite quail to decline an average of 3.8 percent
each year for the last 30 years," said avian ecologist Wes
Burger, an MSU Department of Wildlife and Fisheries
professor and lead investigator of the research project.
"Historically, quail were an accidental byproduct of the way
we used the land. Today with our more intensive use of the
land, we have to intentionally create and manage habitats in
order to maintain populations." Burger
said quail depend on early successional plant communities --
weedy, grassy or shrubby plant communities that occur
following some kind of disturbance, like fire or disking.
This habitat has declined steadily in response to
urbanization, increased grassland cultivation and a
transitioning of once grassy fields into woods and
forests. The
objective of the three-year Bobwhite Restoration Project is
to support research and demonstration projects in multiple
states throughout the quail range. Researchers will evaluate
the effectiveness of practices subsidized under federal farm
programs to enhance quail habitat and
populations. One
significant area of study is in the effectiveness of grass
buffers along agricultural field borders. President George
W. Bush recently announced a Conservation Reserve Program
initiative intended to create 250,000 acres of grass
buffers. These buffers would serve as nesting and
brood-rearing cover and are expected to increase national
bobwhite quail numbers by 750,000 birds annually. Burger
said studies in Mississippi, North Carolina and Georgia have
demonstrated that converting as little as 1 percent to 5
percent of land use to field borders in agricultural
landscapes can increase bobwhite populations by 50 percent
to 100 percent. "Five
of the 11 grants given under the Bobwhite Restoration
Project evaluate various components or implementation of
field borders and their benefits to quail and other
agricultural wildlife," Burger said. "They are emphasized
because field borders are a palatable practice to
agricultural producers. This is the one practice with the
greatest potential for implementing on a large scale across
agricultural landscapes." Steve
Dinsmore, an assistant professor of wildlife and fisheries
at MSU, received one of the grants and will evaluate the
impact of native grass field border width on the abundance
and nesting success of bobwhite quail and other grassland
songbirds. The 11
grants went to researchers in Mississippi, Florida, North
Carolina, South Carolina, Illinois, Tennessee, Arkansas,
Missouri and Texas. These states represent the natural range
of the non-migratory Northern bobwhite quail, which also
includes areas in eastern Colorado, north to Wisconsin, east
to the Atlantic seaboard and south to the Gulf
Coast. -30- Released:
Sept. 9, 2004
Forestry,
Wildlife & Fisheries News
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Grant studies success of
quail habitat programs
Contact: Dr. Wes Burger, (662) 325-8782 or Dr. Ben West,
(662) 325-3174
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:28
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fwnews/fw04/040909.html
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