2023
DOI: 10.3390/d15010114
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Exploring Old Data with New Tricks: Long-Term Monitoring Indicates Spatial and Temporal Changes in Populations of Sympatric Prairie Grouse in the Nebraska Sandhills

Abstract: The contiguous grasslands of the Sandhills region in Nebraska, USA, provide habitat for two sympatric, grassland-obligate species of grouse, the greater prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus cupido pinnatus) and the plains sharp-tailed grouse (Tympanuchus phasianellus jamesi). Collectively referred to as prairie grouse, these birds are monitored and managed jointly by wildlife practitioners who face the novel challenge of conserving historically allopatric species in shared range. We reconstructed region-wide and route… Show more

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“…Faced with enormous financial constraints, many conservation managers/practitioners today are confronted by the challenge of how best to assess the trajectory of these threatened populations given the contemporary threats of climate and land-use changes. Berger et al [9] suggest that to provide new insights into population trends, it is not a matter of collecting the data using new methods/technologies but rather analysing these data in new ways through contemporary forms of analyses.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Faced with enormous financial constraints, many conservation managers/practitioners today are confronted by the challenge of how best to assess the trajectory of these threatened populations given the contemporary threats of climate and land-use changes. Berger et al [9] suggest that to provide new insights into population trends, it is not a matter of collecting the data using new methods/technologies but rather analysing these data in new ways through contemporary forms of analyses.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%