Ecology and Status of Greater Sandhill Cranes in Southeastern Wisconsin
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Bennett, Alan James
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University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, College of Natural Resources
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Abstract
The population and ecology of greater sandhill cranes
was studied in 17 southeastern Wisconsin counties during
1976 and 1977. A population of 1,106 adult cranes was
censused, of which 52 percent consisted of breeding pairs
and the remainder non-breeding flocks numbering 5 to 90
birds. Ninety-two percent of the population was located in
4 counties. The population has increased substantially
since 1930. Over 78 percent of the crane population occurs
on privately owned wetlands which are currently subject to
an annual rate of wetland drainage exceeding 3 percent.
The average size wetland used by cranes was 126 ha and a
significant preference was exhibited for wetland Types 2,
3, and 8. Significant correlations (r=0.72) between wetland
size and years of crane occupancy indicated that intensive
pioneering into formerly unoccupied habitat has occurred.
Fifty-three crane nests were found, most in cattail
communities along sedge-cattail ecotones. The highest
nest densities occurred on wetlands with floating bog
mats. Mean clutch size was 1.91 eggs and the mean hatching
date was 10 May. Hatching success was 84 percent and the
fledging rate of chicks averaged 69 percent. Cranes
preferred cattle pastures for brood rearing habitat. The
mean size of 7 territories was 38 ha. The average brood
size at fledging was 1.36 chicks/nesting pair and the annual
recruitment .rate was 11.1 percent. Crane roosts consisted
of ponds 1.4 ha in size, 5-27 em deep, surrounded by tall emergent vegetation. Peak arrival of cranes at roosts
occurred during the first 15 minutes after sunset and peak
departure was 5 minutes before to 30 minutes after sunrise.
Thirty-seven cranes were banded and 136 observations were
made on color-marked cranes within the study area. Nonbreeding
cranes fed primarily on the tubers of aquatic
plants in spring and almost exclusively in grain fields
after July. Only 5 percent of the farmers adjacent to
wetlands occupied by cranes reported significant crop
depredations. A peak migratory population of 2,400 cranes
was censused on 7 major staging areas on 20 September 1977.
Current management recommendations involve the preservation
of scattered wetland units in each county identified as
optimal crane nesting habitat.
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Wildlife Management Institute, American Petroleum Institute, Wisconsin Chapter of the National Audubon Society, Citizens Natural Resources Association, and the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point