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1 August 2014 Greater Roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus) Home Range and Habitat Selection in West Texas
Andrea E. Montalvo, Dean Ransom Jr., Roel R. Lopez
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Abstract

We studied Greater Roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus) habitat use during spring and summer 2011 on the Rolling Plains Quail Research Ranch in the Red Rolling Plains of west Texas. We captured 9 roadrunners (1 male, 8 females) and fitted each with a 10-g backpack-style radio-transmitter. We relocated roadrunners 2–4 times per week from February to August. Roadrunners used a mean minimum convex polygon home range of 43.0 ha, a 50% core range of 11.9 ha, and 33% overlap between adjacent home ranges. Home ranges were approximately half the size of those reported in a recent study of roadrunners in north Texas. Habitat selection ratios showed that roadrunners selected for ridge and grassland vegetation types and avoided bare ground and flatland vegetation types at both first- and second- but not third-order levels of selection. Similar results were documented for roadrunners in north Texas.

Andrea E. Montalvo, Dean Ransom Jr., and Roel R. Lopez "Greater Roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus) Home Range and Habitat Selection in West Texas," Western North American Naturalist 74(2), 201-207, (1 August 2014). https://doi.org/10.3398/064.074.0205
Received: 5 October 2013; Accepted: 1 February 2014; Published: 1 August 2014
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