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WILD TURKEY MANAGEMENT AND RESEARCH

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Title: WILD TURKEY MANAGEMENT AND RESEARCH


1
  • WILD TURKEY MANAGEMENT AND RESEARCH

2
A WILD TURKEYS YEAR
  • Spring
  • Breeding
  • Nesting
  • Hatching
  • Summer
  • Poults grow quickly
  • Gobblers leave the hens

3
A WILD TURKEYS YEAR
  • Fall
  • Flock breakup
  • Adult and juvenile hens
  • Adult gobblers
  • Juvenile gobblers
  • Winter
  • Foraging for survival
  • Establishing dominance

4
MANAGING WILD TURKEYS ON YOUR LAND
  • For the purposes of this discussion, well assume
    you already have some turkeys, for at least part
    of the year, on your land
  • Well explore what you as a landowner can do to
    make your property attract and produce more
    turkeys

5
HISTORY
  • Turkeys were once thought to require large,
    unbroken tracts of mature forest
  • In fact, for most of the early part of the 20th
    century, the few turkeys that survived were found
    only in remote, wild areas
  • The logical assumption was that this habitat was
    what turkeys must have

6
HISTORY
  • We now know that those large, unbroken forest
    areas were the only places where turkeys were
    able to find refuge from human activity and
    unrestricted hunting
  • As game laws and their enforcement improved and
    many American families left their farms for the
    city, turkey populations began to increase

7
TRAP AND TRANSFER
8
Courtesy National Wild Turkey Federation
9
Courtesy National Wild Turkey Federation
10
Courtesy National Wild Turkey Federation
11
Courtesy National Wild Turkey Federation
12
Courtesy National Wild Turkey Federation
13
Courtesy National Wild Turkey Federation
14
Courtesy National Wild Turkey Federation
15
Courtesy National Wild Turkey Federation
16
Courtesy National Wild Turkey Federation
17
TRAP AND TRANSFER
18
As turkey populations began to grow, research
focused on their requirements.
19
REQUIREMENTS
  • Now we know that turkeys can do very well on much
    smaller acreage than was previously thought, but
    that certain requirements must be met.

20
FOOD
  • Turkeys are omnivorous, and use a wide variety of
    different food items
  • Insects are very important as a protein source
    for poults and adults
  • Seeds are important, especially grass seeds

21
FOOD
  • Hard mast such as acorns or beechnuts can be
    critically important in fall and winter
  • Soft mast, including grapes, blackberries and
    dogwood berries, is important in all seasons

22
WATER
  • Turkeys need access to permanent water this is
    often a limiting factor in the West
  • They also, at least in the South, often prefer to
    roost over water

23
HABITAT
  • Good turkey habitat should contain a good
    interspersion of the following diverse areas

24
NESTING HABITAT
  • Young, relatively thick growth
  • Usually occurs 1 or 2 years past a prescribed
    fire or clear-cut
  • Good nesting areas have at least some overhead
    cover and a minimal amount of disturbance

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BROOD REARING AREAS
  • Open, grassy areas, near the nesting area
  • High insect production
  • Not too thick for poult movement
  • Good level of cover for the poults
  • Not so high or thick that the hen cant see the
    surroundings

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FALL/WINTER HABITAT
  • Bottomland hardwoods, especially oaks, with an
    open understory
  • Upland mixed pine/hardwoods, also relatively open
  • Chufa patches, preferably over 1 acre in size
  • Oat/wheat/clover patches

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SPRING/SUMMER HABITAT
  • Open areas, either old fields, harrowed fields,
    wildlife openings or burned areas, near open
    woods
  • Areas planted in winter/spring annuals such as
    oats, wheat and clover
  • Grassy, seed producing openings
  • Chufa patches

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WHAT CAN YOU DO?
  • Most properties can be manipulated in a variety
    of ways that will enhance their ability to
    produce and attract turkeys.
  • In determining what the land manager should do,
    the following should be considered

34
LIMITING FACTORS
  • Are there good areas for turkeys to nest?
  • Brood rearing?
  • Food in all seasons?
  • Open woods with open understory?
  • Low levels of disturbance, especially in nesting
    season?
  • Compatible land use on adjacent properties?

35
MANAGEMENT
  • What can the land manager do to remove the
    limiting factor(s)?

36
MAINTAIN NESTING AREAS
  • Discourage entry or timber activities during
    spring and early summer
  • Fence to keep livestock out
  • Mow or burn in alternate years

37
PRESCRIBED FIRE
  • One of the cheapest, most effective management
    tools
  • Can be tailored to produce specific results

38
Head fires, moving with the wind, produce higher
flame heights and temperatures
39
Back fires, moving into the wind, are cooler
40
WINTER
41
SPRING
42
MAINTAIN BROOD-REARINGAREAS
  • Make openings near nesting cover
  • Plant native warm season grasses
  • Maintain openings by late summer mowing or
    fall/winter burning

43
PLANT FOOD PLOTS
  • Soil tests are critical
  • Lime and fertilize as recommended
  • Plant the right crop
  • Plant at the right time

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46
SOIL TESTS
  • Critical to good food plots
  • Simple and cheap
  • Will save money in the long run

47
CHUFA
  • A member of the sedge family
  • Produces tubers that turkeys love
  • Plant in the early summer
  • Turkeys will begin to use chufa plots in the fall

48
CHUFA
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  • Plant at least an acre per plot in full sun
  • Broadcast at 50 pounds per acre
  • Cover to a depth of 1.5 inches
  • Or row plant in 36 inch rows at 25-30 pounds per
    acre
  • Follow soil test recommendations for corn
  • Control grass competition

51
WINTER FOOD PLOTS
  • Winter annuals such as oats and wheat
  • Clover, both red and white

52
WHEAT AND OATS
  • Lime and fertilize to soil test
  • Broadcast 2-3 bushels per acre
  • Cover to depth of 1.5 inches
  • Plant clover over the top
  • Plant in late September through October

53
WHEAT
54
CLOVER
  • Plant in the fall
  • Use a mixture of red and white clovers
  • Broadcast or use small seed attachment for grain
    drill
  • 10-20 pounds per acre, depending on type
  • Lime and fertilize to soil test

55
EXCLOSURE
56
SUMMER FOOD PLOTS
  • Millets, such as browntop, proso and pearl
  • Native warm-season grasses such as big and little
    bluestem, Indian grass and orchard grass
  • Sunflower
  • Grain sorghum

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58
PLANT MAST-PRODUCING SEEDLINGS
  • Sawtooth oaks?
  • Genetically selected native oak seedlings
  • Autumn olive, dogwood, crabapple

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61
Autumn Olive
62
Fast-growing, selected, native oak seedlings can
produce acorns in less than 10 years
63
PINE PLANTATIONS
  • Thin as soon as commercially possible
  • Third row or fifth row thin
  • Cool, late season prescribed fire to promote
    spring grasses and forbs
  • Plant winter annuals such as wheat, oats and
    clover between rows

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MAINTAIN MATURE HARDWOODS
  • Regenerate with small clearcuts or shelterwood
    cuts
  • Promote a mix of oak types that includes both red
    and white oaks
  • Be careful not to burn too hot, check air
    temperature and humidity carefully

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HARVEST STRATEGY
  • Hens are off limits, at least during population
    expansion
  • Encourage hunters not to shoot jakes
  • Dont over-harvest the gobblers (this is not a
    problem for most of us, but research shows it can
    happen)

68
NWTF SPONSORED RESEARCH
69
EARLY RESEARCH
  • Life history
  • Population dynamics
  • Habitat use
  • Movements
  • Gobbler mortality
  • Now, research is taking new directions.

70
CHESTNUT RESTORATION
71
CHESNUT RESTORATION
  • Developing a blight resistant American chestnut
  • Work in progress for more than 30 years
  • Out-plantings growing well on native chestnut
    range
  • Approaching 3rd generation

72
CANKER
73
OCELLATED TURKEY PROJECT
  • Guatemala
  • Pilot project on providing economic incentive for
    conserving turkeys
  • Sport hunting income goes to local villages

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75
GUZZLER PROJECT
  • Investigating the importance of guzzlers in the
    Keg Mountains, Utah
  • Will artificial water sources allow turkeys to
    occupy Pinon/Juniper areas?

76
DRINKER
77
All turkeys from last years stocking have died
78
Drought killed half, predators got the rest
But now were trying again with more turkeys
79
DNA COMPARISONS
  • Using DNA analysis to distinguish wild from
    domestic turkeys
  • Law enforcement applications
  • Restoration applications

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81
LA BREA OSTEOLOGICAL COMPARISONS
  • La Brea turkey same genus as modern
  • minor differences in beak and sternum

82
CHUFA VS NUTSEDGE
  • Compare and contrast
  • Little potential for crossing
  • Distinct differences
  • Flower at different times
  • Different arrangement and structure of tubers

83
Texas and Kansas Rio Grande Study
  • Since January 2000, 724 turkeys radio collared
  • One post-doc, 6 grad students
  • Found 219 nests, put transmitters on 123 poults
    from 39 broods
  • Found that large, traditional roost sites are
    extremely important

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ECONOMICS OF TURKEY HUNTING 2003
  • Average per hunter 784
  • Total retail sales 1.8 billion
  • Jobs 41,323
  • Taxes, salaries wages 1.4 billion
  • Total multiplier effect 4.4 billion

86
NWTF VINEYARD STUDY
  • WHATS REALLY EATING VINEYARD GRAPES?

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CROP DEPREDATION (INDIANA)WHATS REALLY EATING
CORN AND SOYBEANS?
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NEOTROPICAL MIGRANTSONGBIRDS (TENNESSEE)
  • Effects of openings on neotropical migrant
    songbirds and turkeys
  • Compared forest areas with no openings to areas
    that were thinned and burned
  • Bird use higher on treated areas than on control

94
IMPACTS OF PREDATION ON WILD TURKEYS
  • Literature search
  • Predation is the main cause of mortality
  • Production more than makes up for losses
  • Predator control not cost efficient or needed,
    but fur trapping for profit OK
  • Habitat improvements can make a big difference

95
THE IMPACT OF OVER-WINTER NUTRITION ON RIO GRANDE
WILD TURKEY PRODUCTIVITY
  • Physiological condition/poult production
  • Timing of physiological decision to reproduce
  • Relationship between food classes, physiological
    condition and poult production
  • Effects of exotic grasses

96
CENSUS USING CAMERAS
  • Test and refine remote camera/bait station survey
    technique
  • Visible leg bands for ID
  • Determine optimum spacing
  • Determine optimal season for camera placement

97
GOBBLER SURVIVAL AND GOBBLING IN VIRGINIA AND
WEST VIRGINIA
  • Main project will investigate factors affecting
    gobbling
  • Gobbler survival
  • Half day vs. all day hunting

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