Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Drop in ruffed grouse drumming is a concern

- Paul A. Smith Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK - WISCONSIN

Ruffed grouse drumming decreased 34% statewide this spring in Wisconsin, according to an annual survey coordinate­d by the Department of Natural Resources.

Notably, drumming dropped 38% in the northern region, home to the state’s best grouse habitat and highest grouse population.

The findings amplified concerns of hunters and wildlife watchers for the native upland bird species that until last fall was thought to be on the upswing in its traditiona­l 10-year population cycle.

“It’s disturbing to have the woods so quiet in spring,” said Jim Hayett of Hartland, a former national board member of the Ruffed Grouse Society who owns a cabin near Park Falls.

For the first time, West Nile Virus was documented in ruffed grouse in Michigan in 2017. No grouse was tested for the disease in Wisconsin last year.

But many fear the disease, spread by mosquitoes and known to kill more than 100 species of birds, was at least partly responsibl­e for lower grouse numbers seen and killed last fall by hunters in the Upper Midwest.

Participan­ts at the national hunt run by the Ruffed Grouse Society in Grand Rapids, Minn., killed a record low number of birds per hunter per hour. Results from the event showed poor survival, or recruitmen­t, of last year’s hatch.

Roadside surveys to monitor the number of breeding grouse have been conducted in Wisconsin since 1964 by the DNR, U.S. Forest Service, tribal employees and grouse enthusiast­s and volunteers.

The surveys begin 30 minutes before sunrise and consist of 10 stops at assigned points. Surveyors listen for four minutes at each stop for the distinctiv­e thumping sounds made by drumming male grouse.

One hundred seventeen routes were used this spring to produced the statewide drumming index, according to the DNR’s report.

The 2018 statewide index was 0.63 drums per stop, down from 0.96. In the north, the index fell to 1.28 from 2.06.

Weather conditions influence drumming activity by male grouse, and, despite a late spring and unusual April snows, surveyors rated conditions better in 2018 than in 2017.

The decline in breeding grouse was unexpected, as once the cyclic low is reached, Wisconsin normally has a steady increase until the cyclic high in years ending in a 9, 0, or 1, according to the DNR.

Wisconsin wildlife officials are participat­ing this year in a regional effort to test the ruffed grouse population for the presence of West Nile Virus. No details have been announced in Wisconsin, but hunters are likely to be included in the sampling regimen.

The Wisconsin ruffed grouse hunting season opens Sept. 15 in Zone A and Oct. 20 in Zone B.

Elk tag winners drawn: The four winners were selected last week in the DNR’s drawing for Wisconsin elk hunting tags.

The agency did not release the identities of the winners, but Kevin Wallenfang, DNR deer and elk ecologist, said they were men who lived in Appleton, Green Bay, Kenosha and Merrill.

“One guy’s brothers had told him he was wasting his time and money,” Wallenfang said. “But he said he got the last laugh.”

About 38,000 people paid $10 each to enter the drawing for the state’s first regulated elk hunt.

Under state rules, the Chippewa tribes were issued five elk tags, the DNR received four and the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation has one. The RMEF raffle is open to the public through Aug. 11. An unlimited number of $10 tickets is available for purchase.

Visit www.rmef.org/wisconsin to purchase a ticket of for more informatio­n.

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