← Back to PublicationsJournal Article

Are Lek Disturbance Buffers Equitable for All Gunnison Sage-Grouse Populations?

Authors: Ouren, Douglas S.; Cade, Brian S.; Holsinger, Kenneth W.; Siders, Melissa S.
Year: 2019
Journal: Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management, Vol. 10(1), pp. 51-61
Publisher: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
DOI: 10.3996/012018-jfwm-003

Abstract

Abstract Lek disturbance buffers can be used to identify areas that provide important seasonal habitat for Gunnison sage grouse Centrocercus minimus (hereafter GUSG), a species with declining or vulnerable populations across their range. Lek disturbance buffers define areas around leks where anthropogenic disturbance is not permitted and have been considered for potential conservation strategies across GUSG habitat. Currently there is minimal information available on the effectiveness of the size of defined lek disturbance buffers. This study focused on two GUSG populations, the smaller Crawford population and a segment of the larger Gunnison Basin population. We utilized global positioning system location data on GUSG to evaluate seasonal use within three lek disturbance buffers, then compared and contrasted results between the two populations. The Crawford GUSG population showed increased movements from breeding season to late brood-rearing season and in winter returned to a usage pattern similar to the breeding season. Comparatively, the western Gunnison Basin GUSG population showed considerable movement throughout the entire year. In addition to these differences, we noted remarkable differences in distance between active leks, home range size, and total daily distance traveled between Crawford and western Gunnison Basin populations. Lek disturbance buffers created using the standard protocol provided varying protection depending on the distance between leks and number of leks. In small populations, the disturbance buffers overlapped each other, thus producing a smaller total lek disturbance buffer area. In addition to adding to the general body of knowledge of a little-studied species, our study had two important findings: 1) the use of empirical cumulative distribution demonstrated considerable differences in lek disturbance buffer use between the Crawford and the western Gunnison Basin populations, and 2) lek disturbance buffers did not provide equal protection for all populations on the basis of their current definition and derivation. We anticipate that land managers will find our results useful and informative when developing land management plans for the conservation of GUSG. Our analysis showed that the variability between populations and species is important for managers to consider when developing conservation strategies, especially for small populations.

Local Knowledge Graph (13 entities)

Loading graph...

Knowledge graph centered on Are Lek Disturbance Buffers Equitable for All Gunn with 14 nodes and 75 connections. Top connected: Crucial nesting habitat for gunnison sage‐grouse: , Sage grouse, Centrocercus urophasianus, Centrocercus, Gunnison Sage Grouse.

Related Works

Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.

Article

Crucial nesting habitat for gunnison sage‐grouse: A spatially explicit hierarchical approach

2012The Journal of Wildlife Managementcited
Chapter

Sage-Grouse

202377% similar
Dataset

Lek Disturbance Buffer Analysis data, Western Colorado, Derived from Gunnison Sage Grouse Location Data 2010 - 2014

202177% similar
Article

Gunnison Sage-Grouse Use of Conservation Reserve Program Fields in Utah and Response to Emergency Grazing: A Preliminary Evaluation

2006Wildlife Society Bulletin7 shared entities
Dataset

Maps of habitat suitability improvement potential for the Gunnison Sage-grouse (Centrocercus minimus) satellite populations in Southwestern Colorado

20247 shared entities
Document

Gunnison Sage-Grouse Conservation Priority Regions in the Gunnison Basin

66% similar
Dataset

GAP Web Service: Gunnison Sage-grouse

07 shared entities
Document

Candidate Conservation Agreement With Assurances for Gunnison Sage-grouse (Centrocerucus minimus) between the Colorado Division of Wildlife and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

8 shared entities
Document

A Resolution Amending Section 11-106: Protection of Wildlife Habitat Areas and Related Sections of the Gunnison County Land USe Resolution and Replacing the Temporary Regulations for Gunnison County Land Use Change, Access, Reclamation, Individual Sewage Disposal System or Building Permits on Lands Located Wholly or Partially Within a 0.60 Mile Radius of a Gunnison Sage-Grouse Lek or Located Wholly or Partially Within Gunnison Sage-Grouse Occupied Habitat

7 shared entities