[BCNnet] Fwd: USGS News Feature Release: Scientists Study the Long and Short of Pintail Duck Migration

Terry Schilling tsrecord@ripco.com
Wed, 16 Oct 2002 15:49:53 -0500


I thought this might be of some interest to some BCNnet'ers.

Terry


News Feature                                    Address:
U.S. Department of the Interior                    7801 Folsom Blvd., Suite
101
U.S. Geological Survey                             Sacramento, CA 95826

For Release:         Contact:                Phone:                  Email:
Oct. 15, 2002  Joe Fleskes       707-678-0682 x628 joe_fleskes@usgs.gov
                            Mike Miller       707-678-0682 x618
michael_r_miller @usgs.gov
             Gloria Maender          520-670-5596
gloria_maender@usgs.gov

News Editors: Interactive pintail migration maps can be viewed at:
http://www.werc.usgs.gov/pinsat/
Photos can be downloaded from:
http://www.werc.usgs.gov/news/2002-10-15a.tif
(Truck with radio-tracking antennae. Photo by Michael Miller, USGS)
http://www.werc.usgs.gov/news/2002-10-15b.tif
(Rocket net. Photo courtesy Gary Zahm, USFWS)
http://www.werc.usgs.gov/news/2002-10-15c.tif
(Pintail duck with radio transmitter. Photo courtesy Gary Zahm, USFWS)
http://www.werc.usgs.gov/news/2002-10-15d.jpg
(Released pintails with satellite transmitters. Photo by Joe Fleskes, USGS)

Scientists Study the Long and Short of Pintail Duck Migration

On September 23, pintail 17530's backpack transmitter beamed a signal from
the southwest coast of Alaska to a satellite. She was flying south, 272
days after USGS scientists equipped her with a PTT, or platform transmitter
terminal, last winter in California's Central Valley, where nearly half of
North America's pintails winter.

Back in Dixon, Calif., waterfowl biologists at the U.S. Geological Survey
have followed pintail 17530's travels via an interactive computer map. Her
route appears as a series of red dots linked by directional arrows. One map
each documents the migratory route of 30 female pintails that left the
valley wearing PTT's in mid-February, northbound for nesting grounds.

"The pintails we have tracked over the past three years by satellite
migrate many hundreds of miles along the Pacific flyway to nesting
destinations ranging from the prairies of southern Alberta and Saskatchewan
to Alaska, and even Russia," said USGS wildlife biologist Michael Miller of
the Western Ecological Research Center.

An international team of waterfowl biologists and technicians from USGS,
Ducks Unlimited, Inc. (DU), DU Canada and the California Waterfowl
Association (CWA), funded primarily by the Tuscany Research Institute of
Las Vegas, Nev., is using satellite telemetry to determine migration routes
and identify major resting areas of these birds. Miller leads this research
effort, assisted by Dr. Joe Fleskes and several other USGS biologists and
geographic information system technicians in the every day running of the
study. By piecing together what they learn from this study with additional
studies using standard radio telemetry the scientists hope to learn if
unknown factors are affecting this species' decline.

"Persistent drought, large populations of alien predators and conversion of
native prairie to farming in critical nesting regions of southern Canada
and the northern Great Plains in the U.S. have resulted in repeated pintail
nest failures over many decades," said Fleskes.

As recently as the 1970's, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service estimated a
North American breeding population of 5 to 7 million pintails in principal
nesting areas. By 1991 and again in 2002, however, the pintail breeding
population dipped to an all-time low of 1.8 million.

One of the most widely distributed ducks in the world, the pintail is a
medium-sized duck with slender, elegant body lines. Pintails are "dabbling
ducks" and forage on grains, marsh plant seeds, and aquatic invertebrates
throughout fall and winter.

"During the non-nesting seasons, pintails must replenish their body
reserves to be able to survive winter, migrate north again the following
spring, and produce young," said Fleskes.

Until the 1980's, said Fleskes, midwinter populations of pintails in
California's Central Valley reflected the overall population trend. Since
then, however, declines have been greater in the southern regions of the
Central Valley (San Joaquin Valley), than in northern areas (Sacramento
Valley). To understand this disproportionate decline, Fleskes with Dr. Dave
Gilmer, also a USGS research biologist, and Dr. Robert Jarvis from Oregon
State University, fit radio transmitters to the backs of 419 young and
adult female pintails and followed them for three consecutive winters.

The three scientists found that neither contaminants nor disease, but a
redistribution, accounted for the disproportionate declines in wintering
pintails in the southern Central Valley.

"Over 80 percent of the tagged pintails shifted each midwinter from areas
in the south having less abundant habitat for food and refuge, to locales
in the Sacramento Valley more favorable for their survival," said Fleskes.

The change each winter in pintail distribution appears to be related to
loss of suitable habitat, drought conditions and the lesser quality habitat
of cotton-farmed lands in the San Joaquin Valley, which lacked winter
flooding, in contrast to the flooded rice lands of the Sacramento Valley,
said Fleskes.

Spring migration to nesting regions begins as early as February and is well
under way by March. Pintails begin to arrive in prairie nesting areas at
the end of March or early April. By May, females will be incubating their
eggs in nests they built on the ground of short grasses and brush. They
lead their 8-12 ducklings, which hatch together in one day, to water. There
they feed on mostly aquatic invertebrates till fledging by July or August.

For the spring 2003 migration, the team of scientists will outfit 30 adult
female pintails with PTT's in the Sacramento Valley. Like last winter, the
team will tag an additional 10 birds in central New Mexico and 20 in Texas,
to add birds to the study that winter in the Central Flyway. After trapping
crews release the birds, Miller receives satellite data on each bird's
movements every three days through the following August, or until the
transmitters quit.

"The first stop or staging area for more than 75 percent of the pintails is
northeastern California and southern Oregon, where they build body reserves
for their remaining migration," said Miller. "They remain there for as
little as a few days up to two months, depending on the migration routes
ultimately used."

The team pinpoints specific habitats the ducks use at this staging area by
fitting additional ducks with standard radio transmitters and following
them from the ground. Obtaining day and night locations for each duck in
spring 2002, the researchers determined specific habitat use for over 80
percent of 150 radio-tagged pintails.

"The satellite and standard radio data have revealed key staging areas in
northern California and southern Oregon," said Dr. Fritz Reid, DU's
director of conservation planning for the western United States.
"Organizations such as Ducks Unlimited and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service can now focus protection and restoration efforts on these areas
with the aid of private landowners and state agencies. The pintail
satellite data have further provided insight into critical areas of the
prairies and western boreal forest that warrant protection," Reid added.

Upon leaving southern Oregon and northeastern California, about 40 percent
of the pintails fly directly to southern Canada, followed by an additional
25 percent that use one or more additional resting areas along the way,
said Miller. Yet another 25 percent head for Alaska, traveling along the
coast or directly over the Pacific Ocean, a trip of more than 2,000 miles.
The remaining 10 percent fly to the Dakotas.

Miller directed field technicians to nearly 100 stopover areas to document
habitat use and behavior of pintails during the first two years of the
project. "Pintails observed near the tagged hens used a variety of habitats
ranging from stock ponds to tundra," said Miller, "with greater use of
private than public lands."

One of the principal pintail nesting regions is the Prairie Pothole Region,
located in the Dakotas, northeastern Montana and the southern prairie
provinces of Canada. "Prairie drought has prevailed each year of the study
period, and most of the satellite tracked pintails flew on to areas farther
north," said Miller. The birds migrating directly to Alaska, however,
another critical nesting region, were not affected by prairie drought.

Above-average rainfall in southern Alberta and southern Saskatchewan this
summer after the pintails' passage, gives Miller and the team cause to
believe they may find pintails nesting there next spring.

"If the wetlands are replenished and uplands have enough cover to attract
pintail females next March and April, we can expect a high proportion of
tagged pintails to stop in the prairie region, rather than continue on
farther north."

To learn more about pintail migration and the pintail satellite study,
please visit "Discovery for Recovery" at http://www.werc.usgs.gov/pinsat/.

The USGS serves the nation by providing reliable scientific information to:
describe and understand the Earth; minimize loss of life and property from
natural disasters; manage water, biological, energy, and mineral resources;
and enhance and protect our quality of life.

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