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Impacts of weather on northern bobwhite sex ratios,body mass,and annual production in South Texas
Authors:Andrew N Tri  Joseph P Sands  Michael C Buelow  Damon Williford  Erin M Wehland  Jon A Larson  Kyle A Brazil  Jason B Hardin  Fidel Hernández  Leonard A Brennan
Institution:Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute, Texas A&M, University–Kingsville, Kingsville, TX 78363, USA
Abstract:A landscape-scale assessment of how bobwhite productivity varies in relation to weather does not exist for northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus). We collected age and sex ratio and body mass data from hunter-harvested bobwhites in 16 counties of South Texas (n = 72,797 bobwhites) during 2001–2009 hunting seasons. We evaluated annual bobwhite production (juvenile:adult age ratios) as a function of cumulative April–August rainfall using National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) weather station data from Falfurrias and Hebbronville, Texas. We observed minimal among-year change in percent males harvested (51.0–54.5% male) and mean mass (156–160 g) of bobwhites across South Texas. We found no relationship between percent male or body mass and weather. We documented a positive, linear relationship between cumulative April–August rainfall and bobwhite age ratios (r2 = 0.94); we also documented a negative, linear relationship between summer (Jun–Aug) mean maximum daily temperature and bobwhite age ratios (r2 = 0.38). Our results suggest that rainfall is a landscape-scale indicator of annual bobwhite production in South Texas and can thus be used to manage annual expectations of quail hunters prior to the hunting season. © The Wildlife Society, 2012
Keywords:age ratio  bobwhite  Colinus virginianus  rainfall  reproduction  temperature  weather
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