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Long Beards & Spurs
Honest question about numbers
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<blockquote data-quote="AT Hiker" data-source="post: 4893369" data-attributes="member: 10019"><p>Plenty of concern within the research realm. Biologist acknowledge something is happening and are conducting research.</p><p></p><p> "Without exception, all southeastern states are seeing declining production," says Michael J. Chamberlain, a wildlife ecology and management professor at the University of Georgia.</p><p></p><p>Fifteen states have formed a cooperative effort to study the declines and, hopefully, put brakes on the slump. Headed up by Chamberlain and wildlife biologists from Texas A&M University, the Southeast Regional Wild Turkey Reproductive Decline Study is working with wildlife agencies and conservation groups such as the National Wild Turkey Federation to find out if there are common factors affecting turkeys throughout the Southeast. The effort is not just about gobblers. Healthy wild turkey numbers can be an indication that overall habitat quality is high, and biologists worry that a decline might mean that other, less stud- ied species could be suffering under the radar."</p><p></p><p> <a href="https://www.audubon.org/magazine/wild-turkey-rocks" target="_blank">https://www.audubon.org/magazine/wild-turkey-rocks</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="AT Hiker, post: 4893369, member: 10019"] Plenty of concern within the research realm. Biologist acknowledge something is happening and are conducting research. “Without exception, all southeastern states are seeing declining production,” says Michael J. Chamberlain, a wildlife ecology and management professor at the University of Georgia. Fifteen states have formed a cooperative effort to study the declines and, hopefully, put brakes on the slump. Headed up by Chamberlain and wildlife biologists from Texas A&M University, the Southeast Regional Wild Turkey Reproductive Decline Study is working with wildlife agencies and conservation groups such as the National Wild Turkey Federation to find out if there are common factors affecting turkeys throughout the Southeast. The effort is not just about gobblers. Healthy wild turkey numbers can be an indication that overall habitat quality is high, and biologists worry that a decline might mean that other, less stud- ied species could be suffering under the radar." [url=https://www.audubon.org/magazine/wild-turkey-rocks]https://www.audubon.org/magazine/wild-turkey-rocks[/url] [/QUOTE]
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