Showing posts with label missouri wildlife. Show all posts
Showing posts with label missouri wildlife. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

MDC says watch cavities in trees to spot wildlife

Interesting creatures may be making a hollow a home
Kansas City, Mo. – A freshly chipped, round hole in the tree limb’s outer bark led to a newly excavated cavity, revealing a woodpecker's handiwork. The woodpecker chipped inside the dead locust tree limb this spring and created a cavity, possibly for a nest site. But a thunderstorm snapped the limb from the tree. The limb broke apart at the hollow spot when it hit the ground, a loss to the woodpecker but a lucky new hideaway for a ground-dwelling creature.
Nature sometimes tears down what it builds, but nothing is ever wasted, including a hole in a tree. The Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) suggests that observing cavities in trees alive or dead, standing or fallen, is a good way for people to spot watchable wildlife using a hole as home. Creatures use hollows created by fungi, woodpeckers, and squirrels as nesting and hiding spots.
“I’m sure if the locust limb had not fallen a woodpecker or squirrel would have used the cavity,” said Krista Noel, MDC natural history biologist.
Missouri has more than 20 species of birds that use tree cavities as nesting or roosting sites. They have neighbors. Squirrels, raccoons, bats, bees, and other creatures also use hollows in trees as a place to hide or live.
Tree cavities can be small or big enough for a bear. Fungi can enter a tree through a damaged spot and consume heartwood without killing the tree. Nutrients that keep the hollow tree’s branches and leaves alive moves up and down in the outer rings of the tree trunk, not in the center. Big trees that appear solid throughout  when standing often turn out to be hollow. A black bear may make a large, hollow oak blown down by a summer storm its winter den site.
Woodpeckers are pioneers at creating small hollows in limbs or chipping into a tree trunk. They may peck away at dead wood looking for insects to eat and keep going. Squirrels, a member of the rodentia order of wildlife, may use their strong teeth to gnaw larger the hole a woodpecker started. Other birds or small mammals finding a cavity unoccupied may move in for a season, to nest in spring or ride out the winter cold.
The hollowed locust limb that fell to the ground can be used, too. Perhaps a lizard or skink needs a hiding spot?
“Even on the ground, whether in the woods or a fencerow, a wood cavity still serves as shelter for smaller animals,” Noel said. “I can see a mouse using it for shelter on the ground or perhaps a toad.  A snake might use it to escape the heat of the day temporarily, and of course insects would use it.”
A dead limb or tree trunk that poses a possible hazard to people and property should be removed. But if a dead tree, or at least the trunk, can be safely left standing in the woods or yards, they serve watchable wildlife, such as bluebirds.
For more information about how den trees and snags serve wildlife, visit https://short.mdc.mo.gov/Z8h.

Monday, June 8, 2020

Join MDC webcast July 1 to learn about attracting backyard wildlife

Register in advance at short.mdc.mo.gov/Zht and then join the free webcast live.

JEFFERSON CITY, MO. – Interested in attracting birds, bees, and other wildlife to your backyard? The Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) invites the public to join its free live Wild Webcast on Attracting Backyard Wildlife on Wednesday, July 1, at noon.

MDC Urban Wildlife Biologist Erin Shank of Powder Valley Conservation Nature Center will explain the basics of creating backyard wildlife habitat; the importance of native plants and insects for pollination, wildlife food, and other benefits: planning and designing native plantings; attracting birds; supporting pollinators such as butterflies and bees; and more.

Register in advance for the free live MDC Wild Webcast on Attracting Backyard Wildlife at short.mdc.mo.gov/Zht and then join the webcast live on July 1 at noon.

Learn more about property improvements to attract wildlife from MDC at mdc.mo.gov/property/improve-my-property/wildlife-management.

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

MDC tracking Grand River Grassland prairie chickens

Relocated birds being monitored and resident flock shows growth from last year

greater prairie chicken
Eagleville, Mo. – Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) biologists are using radio telemetry to monitor 20 female prairie chickens released this spring at Dunn Ranch in Harrison County. Those hens and 19 males were trapped in east-central Nebraska and released in an effort to restore an iconic prairie species in northwest Missouri. The releases are part of a broad partnership with public agencies, non-profit groups and private landowners to improve plant, fish and wildlife diversity in a focus area called the Grand River Grasslands.
   Less than one percent of Missouri’s once vast native prairie remains. As a result, grassland species have diminished. Prairie chickens that once numbered in the hundreds of thousands dwindled and are endangered in Missouri. Limited habitat combined with poor weather conditions over the past two decades caused prairie chicken numbers to dwindle to a few dozen, mostly in northwest and southwest Missouri.
   But the Grand River Grasslands partnership is making strides in restoring prairie chicken habitat, and hopefully the prairie chicken flocks to sustainable population levels. Studies such as monitoring movements by hens outfitted with small radio telemetry transmitters help land managers know what habitat best helps prairie chickens successfully hatch young, rear broods and survive winter.
   “This helps us to monitor nest site selection by the hens,” said David Hoover, MDC Wildlife Management Biologist. “We can determine nesting success and determine brood survival.”
   Those results provide feedback and guide future decisions on how grassland habitats in the focus area are managed, and how well the prairie chicken population is responding.
   Dunn Ranch is owned and managed by The Nature Conservancy of Missouri (TNC). MDC owns the nearby Pawnee Prairie. MDC staff also works with private landowners in the Grand River Grasslands. The Iowa Department of Natural Resources conducts similar prairie chicken restoration efforts in the Grand River Grasslands with public and private partners. Prairie chickens from both states intermingle.
   MDC recently expanded its portion of the Grand River Grasslands and it now includes the Grand Trace Conservation Area. For private land owners in the focus area, there are increased opportunities for cost sharing or grants for habitat improvements that can benefit both cattle forage and wildlife. Those interested in programs or advice on management can contact Kendall Coleman, MDC private lands conservationist, at 660-726-3746.
   This is the third year prairie chickens have been trapped in Nebraska and released at Dunn Ranch and at nearby Kellerton Wildlife Management Area in Iowa. Biologists are seeing positive trends, Hoover said. Prairie chickens visit leks, also called booming grounds, to mate in spring. On April 11, observers counted 20 males and 11 hens on the main lek at Dunn Ranch. Most of those birds are believed to have been present before releases this spring. Some have no leg bands, so they were hatched and reared on the area or were residents before the relocation program began. That shows a positive trend because the same lek site had only four to six males in spring three years ago. Another positive sign are that some birds have been spotted on other leks not used for several years.
   “This gives us encouragement that we did have a good nesting season last year,” Hoover said. “So we are increasing the population.”
   For more information on prairie chickens in Missouri, visit http://mdc.mo.gov/discover-nature/field-guide/greater-prairie-chicken. For information on Grand River Grasslands, visithttp://bit.ly/RmQ4Rr.
   For video of Missouri prairie chickens on a lek, visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wobkFMMVlXI.

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