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Fecundity data for midcontinent sandhill cranes, 2003-2006

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2003
End Date
2006

Citation

Pearse, A.T., Brandt, D.A., and Krapu, G.L., 2020, Fecundity data for midcontinent sandhill cranes, 2003-2006: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9WMRBMV.

Summary

Midcontinent sandhill cranes (Antigone canadensis) are the most abundant management population of cranes in the world and have a broad breeding range. Four breeding segments of midcontinent sandhill cranes have been designated based on spatial and temporal distributions throughout the year, including Western Alaska–Siberia (WA–S), Northern Canada–Nunavut (NC–N), West-central Canada–Interior Alaska (WC–A) and East-central Canada–Minnesota (EC–M). WA–S and NC–N cranes primarily are composed of the lesser sandhill crane (A. c. canadensis) subspecies that breeds in the arctic, whereas WC–A and EC–M cranes are composed primarily of greater sandhill cranes (A. c. tabida), birds which breeds in northern parts of temperate and subarctic regions. [...]

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Attached Files

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SACR_age_ratio_survey.csv 615 Bytes text/csv
SACR_marked_recruitment.csv 542 Bytes text/csv

Purpose

Estimate recruitment rates for midcontinent sandhill cranes and compare estimates of annual recruitment derived from fall age ratio surveys with those from individually marked individuals.

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  • USGS Data Release Products

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DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9WMRBMV

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