Here is some updated information from the survey:
Hello Everyone,
Many thanks to the wonderful group leaders, volunteers and bird dogs who braved some misty, foggy weather to help us conduct wild pheasant flushing surveys in the Hegins-Gratz Valley Wild Pheasant Recovery Area (WPRA) on Sunday!
43 people and 28 dogs helped survey.
A few people couldn?t make it because of icy roads and just as many stayed home due to illness. We hope to see you all again soon.
It was a tough day for flushing, weather-wise, and the birds held tight. Remember this is not a survey of total numbers of birds. The goal of flushing surveys is to flush a sample of the birds to determine the overall sex ratio. The sex ratio is then factored into population density estimates.
The numbers of male and female pheasants flushed are listed by group number and group leader below. A few more sites will be surveyed over the next few weeks, including an original release site in the Gratz Valley and another site in Hegins Valley where some birds have moved to from original release sites.
Wild pheasant sex ratios for both study areas will be calculated when all flushing surveys are completed. WPRA sex ratios have been holding steady around 1:1 for most sites and most years since wild pheasant recovery efforts began. This is typical for an unhunted wild pheasant population.
Preliminary Hegins-Gratz Valley wild pheasant flushing surveys, Sunday January 18, 2015:
M=Male, F=Female, U= unknown
03M:03F - Group 1: Brandon Black ? Gratz Valley ? not a release site*
12M:07F - Group 2: Kurt Bond ? Gratz Valley ? 2011 release site
07M:07F - Group 3: Colleen DeLong ? Hegins Valley ? 2011 release site
01M:00F - Group 3: DeLong (Site 2) - Hegins Valley ? not a release site*
15M:19F (4 U) - Group 4: Jim Kauffman ? Hegins Valley ? adjacent to a 2011 release site where the CREP habitat was converted back to cropland
01M:00F - Group 5: Will Dingman ? Hegins Valley ? not release sites*, 4 different small areas near original release sites
*We know about birds moving to new sites that were not original release sites because of radio tracking work conducted after releases.
Thanks again to all the great volunteers and dogs!
Please tell everyone you know in the WPRAs to contact our Pheasants Forever Habitat Biologists if they are interested in habitat for wild pheasants and other farmland wildlife! Let me know if you need contact info.
Thanks Again!
Colleen
Colleen DeLong
Wildlife Biologist
PA Game Commission