CBC Edition

Endangered sage grouse could soon disappear from the Canadian Prairies

- Wallis Snowdon

The greater sage grouse, which once numbered in the thousands in Western Canada, is coming perilous‐ ly close to vanishing from the Prairies, new govern‐ ment research shows.

Known for its unusual mating dance, the species found in areas where sage‐ brush grows - has been in trouble for decades.

The round-bodied bird is among the species most at risk in Canada. The latest da‐ ta from government conser‐ vationists provides little hope for their future.

Mark Boyce, a University of Alberta ecology professor and Alberta Conservati­on As‐ sociation endowed chair in fisheries and wildlife, said population­s are on the brink.

"It's desperate," said Boyce, who has researched sage grouse for decades.

"They are going to go ex‐ tinct, it's almost certain."

Sage grouse once num‐ bered in the thousands in Canada, if not the hundreds of thousands, with a sweep‐ ing range of 100,000 square kilometres.

Today, there are fewer than 100 in Canada. Their range in southeast Alberta and southwest Saskatchew­an has shrunk to less than 10 per cent of what it once was.

An Alberta government census published last month showed only 45 sage grouse are believed to remain in the province. Last year's spring count recorded 17 males, down from the 22 counted in 2022.

Only three of Alberta's 38 known lek sites - critical mat‐ ing grounds for the species remain active, according to the provincial report.

In southern Saskatchew­an's Grasslands National Park, only 24 males were spotted during the 2023 spring count at the only re‐ maining leks in the province.

Boyce said the sage grouse is especially vulnera‐ ble as Western Canada braces for a summer drought that will further damage grazing lands that are critical habitat.

"We can't sustain a popu‐ lation that small, especially given climate change effects," he said.

"We'll probably lose them this year."

Gathering detailed census data on the endangered species has long proved a challenge. Population esti‐ mates are based on the num‐ ber of males counted on the leks, expanses of open prair‐ ie where the birds gather each spring to find mates.

For the most recent Alber‐ ta count, government re‐ searchers visited each lek three times, watching with binoculars to count the chub‐ by, large-chested males as they arrived on the dancing grounds.

Strutting their stuff

The spring mating ritual is a spectacle that has made the birds beloved among biolo‐ gists and birdwatche­rs.

Males, with the dappled brown feathers of their star‐ burst tails on full display, gather at leks and begin their dances at sunrise - strutting, posing and thrusting their beaks.

Yellow sacks on their chests fill with air and then deflate, creating a burbling sound before the birds do a distinctiv­e swish of their wings.

"A female will show up and she'll wander through the lek and and it's literally like she's checking these guys out," Boyce said.

"The males will do it again and again, and the ones that strut most vigorously are the ones that the female will choose."

It's ladies' choice, as hens line up for the chosen male, he said.

"It gets fast and furious." WATCH | Rare birds show off in spring mating ritual:

Habitat loss caused by in‐ dustrial developmen­t has posed the biggest threat to the species, Boyce said. Un‐ like other birds that can thrive around humans, the sage grouse is especially frag‐ ile to any kind of disturbanc­e.

Noise caused by pump‐ jacks or nearby roads, or the constructi­on of fencing or power lines, can all cause the birds to abandon the area.

Endangered for decades

The species has been listed as endangered in Canada since 1998. It was designated an endangered species in Saskatchew­an in 1999. Alber‐ ta followed suit the following year.

But numbers have contin‐ ued to wane, and in 2013, in response to a court chal‐ lenge, Ottawa introduced an emergency protection order for the species.

In an effort to halt further destructio­n of sage grouse habitat, the protection order imposed strict restrictio­ns on provincial and Crown lands where the birds are found.

Boyce said the order was critical, but more must be done to preserve the few vi‐ able sagebrush habitats that remain.

"We've already done so much damage to sage grouse habitat that it's going to be really, really tough to bring them back. It's an almost hopeless situation."

Joel Nicholson, a senior wildlife biologist with Alberta Environmen­t, said while sage grouse are extremely vulner‐ able, he remains hopeful that conservati­on efforts will suc‐ ceed.

Alberta researcher­s are working with landowners, in‐ dustry and scientists across the Canada-U.S. border to help bolster existing popula‐ tions, Nicholson said.

The work includes recla‐ mation efforts on privatelyo­wned grazing lands, a seed program that will ensure sagebrush is planted on abandoned oil sites, and in‐ troducing new birds into the wild.

Around 40 hens from Montana, equipped with GPS trackers, will be released in Alberta this spring in an at‐ tempt to bolster the popula‐ tion.

"It is severe but we do have a lot on the go to try to turn the situation around," Nicholson said.

"I really hope that we are successful in keeping them in Alberta and it won't be for lack of trying if we did lose them."

Miles Anderson's ranch, south of Fir Mountain in southern Saskatchew­an, is among the last places sage grouse can be found in the province.

One lek sits on a fenceline that borders Grasslands Na‐ tional Park. Anderson, who has helped government con‐ servation efforts for years, said collaborat­ion between scientists and landowners must continue.

Sage grouse are a linchpin of the grassland ecosystem, an endangered habitat that should be deeply valued, and something irreplacea­ble will be lost if their annual dance ends, Anderson said.

"These really biodiverse areas, it's really important that we try to maintain them."

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