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Natal dispersal and its consequences in Black Grouse Tetrao tetrix
Authors:Alain Caizergues  & Laurence N Ellison
Institution:1Office National de la Chasse et de la Faune Sauvage, Direction des Etudes et de la Recherche, C.N.E.R.A. Faune de Montagne, 95, rue Pierre Flourens, 34098 Montpellier cedex 5, France;2CNRS-CEFE, 1919 Route de Mende, B.P. 5051, F-34033 Montpellier Cedex 1, France
Abstract:Data on dispersal distances of juveniles are important for understanding the genetic structure of populations, population regulation processes and the effects of landscape ecology on metapopulation dynamics. We studied dispersal in juvenile Black Grouse Tetrao tetrix in the French Alps between 1990 and 1998, by radiotracking 39 young grouse captured in August or autumn in a study area of 836 ha. Natal dispersal occurred in two discrete phases, autumn (October) and spring (mid-April to early May), with periods of reduced mobility between. The mean distance travelled by females exceeded that of males in autumn but not in spring. The natal dispersal distance of females was greater than that of males, and resulted in 81% of females leaving the study area to nest 5–29 km from their site of capture. This emigration must have been compensated for by immigrants because the number of hens in the study area increased during the study. Males were more philopatric. By the summer after capture, only 9% had emigrated from the study area. Despite the longer dispersal distances of females, there was no difference in the survival functions of the sexes between the ages of 6 weeks and 13 months.
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