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1 February 2009 Do Sharp-Tailed Grouse Select Loafing Sites to Avoid Visual or Olfactory Predators
Michael R. Conover, Jennifer S. Borgo
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Abstract

Grouse should seek loafing sites hidden from predators; however, good hiding sites from predators that use vision to locate prey differ from good hiding sites from predators that use odor to locate prey. We compared characteristics of control sites to sites used for loafing by sharp-tailed grouse (Tympanuchus phasianellus) to determine whether selection of loafing sites was more influenced by the need to hide from visual or olfactory predators. Sites used for loafing were similar to control sites in characteristics that would help hide a grouse from visual predators (i.e., visual obstruction, lateral visibility, visual obstruction, cover ht, and surface roughness), but loafing sites differed from control sites in characteristics that would help hide a grouse from olfactory predators (i.e., greater updrafts, wind velocities, and atmospheric turbulence).

Michael R. Conover and Jennifer S. Borgo "Do Sharp-Tailed Grouse Select Loafing Sites to Avoid Visual or Olfactory Predators," Journal of Wildlife Management 73(2), 242-247, (1 February 2009). https://doi.org/10.2193/2008-049
Published: 1 February 2009
JOURNAL ARTICLE
6 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
grouse
loafing site selection
olfactory concealment theory
olfactory predators
predator-prey interactions
Tympanuchus phasianellus.
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