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    Survival, Habitat Use, and Spatiotemporal Use of Wildlife Management Areas by Female Mallards in Mississippi's Alluvial Valley

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    etd-10162013-111811.pdf (1.756 Mb )
    Author
    Lancaster, Joseph David
    Item Type
    Thesis
    Advisor
    Davis, J. Brian
    Committee
    Kaminski, Richard M.
    Burger, L. Wes
    Afton, Alan D.
    Metrics
    
    Abstract
    The Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV) is an important region for wintering mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) in North America, yet little is known about their spatiotemporal habitat use and related survival in Mississippi. I tracked 126 radio-marked female mallards to quantify survival, habitat use, and use of wildlife management areas (WMAs) with experimental hunt regimes in the south MAV of Mississippi during winters 2010-2012. Daily survival was greatest in agricultural (0.997) and moist-soil (0.999) habitats in winters 2010-2011 and 2011-2012, respectively. Overall interval survival across both winters was 0.60 (SE = 0.02). Forested (40-54%) and moist-soil wetlands (41-59%) received greatest use diurnally and nocturnally, respectively. Mallards used WMAs similarly (P > 0.22) whether they were hunted 2- or 4-days/week. My data suggest that complexes of flooded cropland, forest, and moist-soil habitats are suitable habitats for mallards in the MAV, WMAs can be hunted 4-days/week, and sanctuaries should be revised at two WMAs.
    Degree
    Master of Science
    Major
    Wildlife and Fisheries Science
    College
    College of Forest Resources
    Department
    Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Aquaculture
    URI
    https://hdl.handle.net/11668/19531
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    • Theses and Dissertations
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    Mississippi State University Libraries
    395 Hardy Rd
    P.O. Box 5408, Mississippi State, MS 39762-5408
    (662) 325-7668
    (662) 325-0011
    (662) 325-8183
    Contact repository admin Report a problem Terms of use Privacy policy Accessibility MSU Legal
     

     

    Mississippi State University Libraries
    395 Hardy Rd
    P.O. Box 5408, Mississippi State, MS 39762-5408
    (662) 325-7668
    (662) 325-0011
    (662) 325-8183
    Contact repository admin Report a problem Terms of use Privacy policy Accessibility MSU Legal