1st Edition

Migrating and Wintering Waterfowl

408 Pages 125 Color & 18 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

408 Pages 125 Color & 18 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

408 Pages 125 Color & 18 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

This book explores the remarkable journeys that ducks, geese, and swans undertake each year in search of suitable migratory stopover and wintering habitats. It delves into the seasonal challenges that dictate the lives of waterfowl, highlighting their mobility, evolved behaviors, and nutritional strategies that allow them to be successful in an ever-changing world. The narrative combines... Read more

Editor Biographies

Contributors

Chapter 1 Migration and Winter in the Annual Cycle of Waterfowl

Bart M. Ballard and Joseph P. Fleskes

Chapter 2 Important Geographies for Migrating and Wintering Waterfowl

Heath M. Hagy, Michael G. Brasher, Joseph P. Fleskes, Jacob N. Straub, Jay A. VonBank, Alberto Lafón-Terrazas, and Eduardo Carrera Gonzalez

Chapter 3 Events During Migration and Winter

Aaron T. Pearse, Courtney L. Amundson, and Mark P. Vrtiska

Chapter 4 Migration, Movements, and Habitat Use

J. Brian Davis, Michael L. Schummer, Matthieu Guillemain, and Johan Elmberg

Chapter 5 Foraging Ecology, Nutrition, and Energetics

Bruce D. Dugger, Scott R. McWilliams, Robert H. Blenk, Daniel P. Collins, Jay A. VonBank, and Bart M. Ballard

Chapter 6 Survival During Migration and Winter

Chris A. Nicolai, Matthieu Guillemain, Olivier Devineau, and Stephen J. Dinsmore

Chapter 7 Waterfowl Harvest Management

James H. Gammonley, G. Scott Boomer, and Mark P. Vrtiska

Chapter 8 Conservation Planning for Migrating and Wintering Waterfowl

Mark J. Petrie, Michael G. Brasher, Michael W. Eichholz, and Josh L. Vest

Chapter 9 Future Directions of Migrating and Wintering Waterfowl Management

James K. Ringelman, Kevin M. Ringelman, and John M. Eadie

Index

Biography

Dr. Bart M. Ballard holds the C. Berdon and Rolanette Lawrence Endowed Chair in Waterfowl Research with the Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute at Texas A&M University-Kingsville. He also serves as chair of the Department of Rangeland and Wildlife Sciences. Additionally, he is a Regents Professor which is the highest honor bestowed by the Texas A&M System on faculty members for outstanding teaching, research, and service. He received a Ph.D. in Wildlife Science from Texas A&M University-Kingsville, an M.S. in Range and Wildlife Management from Texas A&I University, and a B.S. in Wildlife Biology from Iowa State University. Bart has worked for over 30 years directing research on waterfowl and waterbird ecology and management along the Texas coast and throughout North America. His research program strives to provide science-based management recommendations to land managers, and through which, also train the next generation of wildlife biologists.

Dr. Michael (Mike) G. Brasher is Senior Waterfowl Scientist for Ducks Unlimited Inc., in Memphis, Tennessee. Mike received a Ph.D. in Ecosystem Science and Management from The Ohio State University (2010), and an M.S. in Wildlife Ecology (2000) and B.S. in Wildlife and Fisheries Science (1997) from Mississippi State University. Mike served for 13 years as Biological Team Leader for the Gulf Coast Joint Venture partnership in Lafayette, Louisiana, where he helped coordinate priority waterfowl science needs and integrated contemporary findings into landscape-scale conservation planning. In his current position, Mike collaborates with DU staff and partners to strengthen the scientific foundation of DU’s conservation activities, ensuring that DU’s habitat work is focused on issues and places of greatest importance to continental waterfowl populations.

Dr. Joseph P. Fleskes worked for 40 years to improve the scientific foundation of North American waterfowl management. For the last 30, he focused on Pacific Flyway issues, providing critical guidance for the Central Valley and Intermountain West Joint Ventures and their partners. His research relating improvements in waterfowl body condition and other changes in waterfowl ecology to landscape changes was especially effective in strengthening support for habitat programs. In between earning his B.S. (1980) in Fish and Wildlife Biology and M.S. (1986) in Wildlife Ecology at Iowa State University, Joe worked with Northern Prairie and Patuxent Wildlife Research Centers studying waterfowl ecology in the Prairie-Parkland breeding and Lower Mississippi Valley wintering areas.  After completing his M.S. in 1986, Joe joined the USFWS Dixon Field Station (later USGS Western Ecological Research Center).  His study on San Joaquin Valley pintails earned Joe his Ph.D. at Oregon State University.  Partnering with numerous organizations, Joe expanded his waterfowl program into multi-species studies of winter, spring migration, and molt ecology, avian influenza, and impacts of climate, urbanization, and water management on Central Valley habitat.