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  • Winter habitat use of great...
    Holloran, Matthew J.; Fedy, Bradley C.; Dahlke, John

    The Journal of wildlife management, 20/May , Letnik: 79, Številka: 4
    Journal Article

    Energy development in western North America has been shown to negatively influence greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) populations. No effective methods of reducing on-site impacts of energy development to greater sage-grouse are known. We investigated greater sage-grouse use of wintering habitats relative to distances to infrastructure, densities of infrastructure, and activity levels associated with infrastructure of a natural gas field over 5 years in southwestern Wyoming. We compared year-long drilling locations, locations of conventional well pads, locations of well pads with off-site condensate and produced water gathering systems (LGS), and plowed main haul roads to the number of and time associated with greater sage-grouse visits to continually monitored, distinct patches of habitat. Liquid gathering systems reduced human activity levels at producing well pads approximately 53%. We used data loggers to monitor distinct patches of habitat throughout the 2005–2006 to 2009–2010 winters and used the number of times and the amount of time individuals from a sample of greater sage-grouse (n = 236) were detected at data logger stations to model frequency and time of occurrence as functions of anthropogenic and habitat variables. Greater sage-grouse avoided suitable winter habitats in areas with high well pad densities regardless of differences in activity levels associated with well pads. Our results further suggested that greater sage-grouse avoidance of conventional well pads was stronger than LGS well pads. We found relatively consistent positive relationships between distance to infrastructure with high levels of human activity and average hours greater sage-grouse spent in an area. Greater sage-grouse avoidance of natural gas field infrastructure during the winter may be explained mechanistically as movements of individuals from areas close to high levels of activity—movements that may occur at the time human activity is experienced—followed by a lack of movement back into these areas. Minimizing the densities of well pads may reduce on-site impacts of energy development on wintering greater sage-grouse. Our study, additionally, indicated that reducing anthropogenic activity levels associated with energy developments may reduce the temporal scale of indirect greater sage-grouse winter habitat loss. © 2015 The Wildlife Society.