No, Boss Gentz and Dan Slattery don’t
count
DEM biologists need the information to
evaluate this year's reproduction of wild turkeys, the survival of the young,
and the population of the state's wild turkey flock.
Last year the public helped by reporting 286 turkey brood sightings, according to Brian Tefft, principal wildlife biologist at DEM and head of the wild turkey project. That information helped DEM determine the number of young birds that survived after various mortality factors such as predators, poor weather, road kills, or domestic cats took their toll.
Last year the public helped by reporting 286 turkey brood sightings, according to Brian Tefft, principal wildlife biologist at DEM and head of the wild turkey project. That information helped DEM determine the number of young birds that survived after various mortality factors such as predators, poor weather, road kills, or domestic cats took their toll.
The brood index also helps determine turkey population trends. Despite gains in the number of poults seen in the last two years, Tefft noted that we will need several successive years of good productivity to recover the turkey population that has declined overall.
The 2012 brood index of 2.6 young per hen surviving
until fall was 25 percent below the 10-year average of 3.5 young per hen. With
declining productivity, the overall turkey population in the state has declined
in the last few years.
Weather-related factors and predators can dramatically
affect brood production in ground-nesting birds like wild turkeys. Warm, dry
weather favors the survival of turkey poults and other ground-nesting birds,
while cool and rainy conditions in early summer can reduce survival and result
in dead broods.
From this study, DEM will document seasonal conditions that
affect turkey brood survival. The public can help DEM obtain this brood information by reporting
observations of wild turkeys with (or without) broods in their area.
Tefft estimates the overall statewide turkey population at approximately 3,500 birds. The wild turkey population in the state is a direct result of the Division of Fish and Wildlife's successful trap and transfer program in the 1990s, which has resulted in improved opportunities and chances for the public to see and hunt wild turkeys.
Tefft estimates the overall statewide turkey population at approximately 3,500 birds. The wild turkey population in the state is a direct result of the Division of Fish and Wildlife's successful trap and transfer program in the 1990s, which has resulted in improved opportunities and chances for the public to see and hunt wild turkeys.
The wild turkey restoration project began in 1980 with
releases of wild trapped birds that established new turkey flocks in Exeter,
Burrillville, Little Compton, West Greenwich, Foster, Scituate, and Tiverton.
Restoration of the wild turkey was funded by state hunting license fees and the
Federal Aid to Wildlife Restoration program. Wild turkeys were abundant prior
to the 1700s but were decimated due to habitat destruction and subsistence
hunting.
To report wild turkey sightings, hens with or without broods, participants should record the date, the location, and the total number of hens and poults seen. Brood report forms can be downloaded from DEM's website at: http://www.dem.ri.gov/programs/bnatres/fishwild/pdf/turkysee.pdf.
Participants in the survey are asked to send reports via email to brian.tefft@dem.ri.gov, or by mailing brood report forms to Brian Tefft, Wild Turkey Project, 277 Great Neck Road, West Kingston, RI 02892.
To report wild turkey sightings, hens with or without broods, participants should record the date, the location, and the total number of hens and poults seen. Brood report forms can be downloaded from DEM's website at: http://www.dem.ri.gov/programs/bnatres/fishwild/pdf/turkysee.pdf.
Participants in the survey are asked to send reports via email to brian.tefft@dem.ri.gov, or by mailing brood report forms to Brian Tefft, Wild Turkey Project, 277 Great Neck Road, West Kingston, RI 02892.