At
first it sounds like the muffled booming of a distant jet. Or perhaps a moose
thumping through the open forest over the next hill.
It
starts slowly, a muted thump, thump, thump then increases to something similar
to a far off sonic boom.
I
don’t hear that sound often these days so I can be forgiven for not identifying
it instantly. It is, of course, a ruffed grouse pumping its cupped wings
against the air and creating a drumming sound.
Male
ruffed grouse, or partridge, stand on a log or rock in the spring and drum to
attract females. As he drums, a ruff of dark feathers expands around his neck
and he arches his tail feathers into a broad fan.
Witnessing
drumming and strutting is a joy of the spring forest. It is one that I
experience less and less with each passing year.
Ruffed
grouse populations are down throughout much of North America. Many upland game
hunters have stopped hunting them.
I
am reluctant to shoot a grouse in the
fall, despite the fact they are one of the finest game birds around; fun to
hunt and the best eating bird in the woods. I’ll take grouse over domestic
chicken or turkey any day.
I
can’t bring myself to shoot one because they have become so scarce in areas where
I go. I figure every one I leave alive might help grouse populations get back
to where they once were.
I
saw a decline in my hunting area in the early 2000s. The small flocks I used to
encounter were rarely seen. Then sightings of pairs and singles became less
frequent.
Any
wildlife decline in one area can be the result of localized conditions, so I
assumed it was me just having poor luck. About the same time, however, hunters
in Pennsylvania, where the ruffed grouse is the state bird, began noticing population
declines. Then other northeastern U.S. states reported falling numbers.
Wildlife
biologists always talked about eight- to 10-year cycles in which grouse
populations waxed and waned. Population declines were attributed to periods of
heavy predation, parasitic infestations or severe weather. As these periods
passed, populations bounced back.
However,
grouse populations have not bounced back in many areas. What is happening to
ruffed grouse is more than regular up and down cycles.
Last
year a U.S. game bird report said grouse populations in the northeastern states
have declined at least 30 per cent in the last 30 years. It predicted
continuing declines unless the causes are clearly identified and addressed.
The
causes are the subject of much study and debate in the U.S. One of the main
theories of cause has been habitat loss.
These
birds survive mainly on buds, berries, catkins, soft leaves and seeds. They
love clover when they can get it.
These
succulent foods are abundant in new growth forests. Mature forests with large
canopied trees have less ground cover growth and therefore fewer food choices
for grouse.
Logging
and forest fires allow for new forest growth in many areas, so habitat loss as
a main factor in general population declines is questionable.
A
recent theory is that ruffed grouse are being hit hard by mosquito-borne West
Nile disease. Some research has shown that 80 per cent of grouse exposed to
West Nile die or are left sick enough to be unable to survive harsh weather and
predators.
There
has been little to no research to determine if West Nile is a major factor in
Ontario’s ruffed grouse decline.
No
one is able to say definitively what is killing Ontario’s grouse. It might be
habitat loss, West Nile, parasites, or unusually heavy predation or combination
of all these factors.
We
need a definite answer to be able to do whatever is necessary to stop the
decline and help grouse populations get back to previous levels.
The
ruffed grouse is more than just a game bird. It is an important link in forest biodiversity.
As
Aldo Leopold, the American environmentalist, wrote in his A Sand County
Almanac:
“
. . . the grouse represents only a millionth of either the mass or the energy
of an acre. Yet subtract the grouse and the whole thing is dead.”
Email: shaman@vianet.ca
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