New podcast on Meateater with Dr. Ronald Kendall that dives into this subject. Dr. Kendall is from Florence and has done some good work in Texas.
https://wildlifetoxicologylab.org/
I'm not sure how to interpret the discovery of the parasites that are decimating the quail populations. Will wild quail only survive if they have had a chance to feed on the fortified medicated food? Can the parasite threat ever be reduced or eliminated for untreated birds? Will the existence of huntable populations depend on inoculating birds in perpetuity?
I thrilled they have found the source of the problem and have developed a treatment but still wonder if the solution can be scaled enough to make a permanent difference.
Is the eye worm a danger to other bird species?
I hope it works and was the problem for SC birds.
When they tell you it's habitat,....that's code for we don't have a clue for the real reason.
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Had a fellow up here in Newberry said he saw the biggest covey of quail has seen in a decade.
RIP Kelsey "Bigdawg" Cromer
12-26-98 12-1-13
If love could have saved you, you would have lived forever.
Missing you my great friend.
Or code for its a lot of reasons. I have the same fear that PB is talking about. I see a lot of anecdotal evidence to support theories like that.
I will say we are seeing more wild coveys and we arent spending a fortune manicuring a place, in fact quite the opposite. We are planting food and leaving cover. I have found that what man considers beautiful habitat and what wildlife considers a good place to be are often not the same.
cut\'em
I've been fortunate to see and have access to some properties where folks are working incredibly hard and spending incredible resources to improve habitat and foster wild quail. They are largely finding success, with highly regimented burn rotations, open canopy pine forests, strategically placed ragweed and brood plots, predator trapping, and supplemental feed placed into cover. The effects are also boosting other species such as rabbit, turkey, and deer populations on these same properties. We've started down this path on a smaller property that still has a couple coveys, in hopes of helping what we have.
What he said on the podcast was that the medicated feed reduces the rate year to year. If less birds are infected, less infected feces dropped by birds, less insects that feed on the infected feces, the less chance of re-infection on the birds who eat the insects.
He explained that over a 5 year study they went from 90% 1 year mortality to around 30% by this theory.
I would really like this to work.
My old man said he would trade it all to get them back….
“The price of freedom is eternal vigilance” - Thomas Jefferson
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