Looking Back on the 2012 Season

We haven’t left Wyoming yet, and I don’t consider our season officially done until we’ve washed the vehicles and returned them to Fleet Services at UC Davis, but the crew leaving and having to pack up camp definitely puts me in a retrospective mood. Some thoughts on the 2012 season:

Overall we got REALLY lucky with the weather. This has been an amazingly warm, dry year, and we were rarely prevented from accessing the leks or collecting data. It seemed like we might have gotten a little more wind in the mornings, and the rain-out on our final experiment (when Stacie was going to get to join us on the lek) was a bummer, but otherwise we really could not ask for better weather.

As I said in my last post, the crew was fantastic. This project requires field technicians who completely buy in to what we’re doing, and they seemed to do that. It makes it much more fun when they are nice interesting people who are easy to live with, which they were. Once again, we did a good job selecting these folks out of the pool of more than 70 applicants.

Anna getting video of female behaviors on Cottontail

We collected a LOT of data this year. The arrays were installed relatively early, so we got sound recordings from before or around the peak in breeding. We managed at least two experimental treatments on each lek. Anna collected focal data on courtships and female behavior almost every day.

Gail did a great job turning an idea for a robot into a working tool for interacting with free-living animals. Besides just getting a realistic looking skin on the taxidermy mold, she had to solve challenges like figuring out the best wheels or treads, figuring out how to make the tail bend down when the robot leans forward so the robot isn’t mooning the whole lek. In general, the males really responded well this year.

Having to drop Preacher Lek from our stable of focal leks could have been a problem, but I think we handled it pretty well. Preacher’s replacement, Cottontail, was definitely a challenge, but I feel good about our effort there. Liz (and sometimes Mel) had to put some long hours there waiting for the last birds to leave. There were a lot of birds, and probably some movement of males back and forth from the upper center to our focal area closer to the reservoir. This meant new birds showing up all the time!

Our crew scheduling worked pretty well- it was a little uneven in that Cottontail always had more of everything than either Monument or Chugwater, but there are only so many ways to spread 4 people over 3 leks. Hats off to Mel for being a great floater, and learning the birds at all 3 leks. Although it might not have felt like it sometimes when we had to make last minute changes, but we did a much better job of planning ahead as well. Our crew not only had more frequent mornings off (once every eight days), but often actually knew when those were going to be.

The crew may have spent as much time watching video grouse than they did watching live ones. Collecting video data back in the lab will now be a lot easier, as we will know which males were where for the fembot experiment tapes, focal female courtship tapes, and the sound recording. This was definitely not the favorite part of the job for the crew, but they managed to get it all done.

The "unexplored" valley of Coal Mine Draw, complete with a lek

I found a new lek! And not too far from our camp. I think that’s pretty neat. I got to do counts on several leks I’d never been to. It’s nice to hear from the local managers like Sue and Stan how important these counts are.

 

No high-speed video this year. We still haven’t analyzed the set of clips that Gail collected last year. HSV is always really fun, and can be something the crew starts analyzing here, but we had neither the time nor the specific question that required it this year.

We didn’t spend much time capturing birds this year. This is probably our biggest challenge now- figuring out how to schedule a crew so we can work at night, in the morning, and in the afternoon. Something to think on for next year.

I got to meet Joe Hutto.

It was really fun to see our research area in such a warm year. The season was advanced substantially, so we got to see a lot of plants and animals that we normally miss. And in any year, this is a really special place to get to live and work. The more than 5000 photos I’ve taken this spring can attest to that!

"Super-moon" from a couple of days ago

And We’re Done! (almost)

2012 Grouse Crew

It’s been a whirlwind week or two, but the season is over! We’ve run our final experiments (or not), recorded our last sounds, and wished our wonderful crew safe journeys as they head towards their next employments. Gail, Anna and I have a few more days here in Lander to pack up our gear and dodge the cows that will be here any day now, but otherwise we’ve collected all of the blinds, stakes and cables. I’ll have more thoughts to share on the season in upcoming posts, but for now a big Thank You to Liz, Becca, Julia, and Mel. We had a great season and it was in large part to their hard work and that they were fun people to be around (always an important thing in a small camp like ours).

The photo is one of our crew photos from “Mount Boob,” a rather mammerific hill near camp that seemed a fitting place to take a photo with an all female crew. (Thanks Stacie Hooper for snapping the shots). Gail bought the crew t-shirts with a “roller girl” imagining of the fembot, and they are all wearing them in the photo.

 

Some Year-end Updates

I’m sure the blog doesn’t look any different on your end, but it does on mine, since I’m now typing on a new 13” Macbook Pro! My old laptop had served me pretty well for about 4 years, which I guess is about their typical lifespan. The old one still works more or less (sometimes more, sometimes less), but I decided to be proactive about getting the new model so I didn’t have to deal with a dead computer somewhere particularly inconvenient, like, for example, a trailer in Wyoming.

I’ve also moved forward with hosting for my website. I’m going to wait until I’ve got something up before I pass on the url, but it will be through LMI.net (the great local ISP in Berkeley). I’m also going to be tackling WordPress. Ideally I will have at least some of it ready to go by the time we head to the field. I think a likely scenario might be to shift the blog portion over to WordPress and wait on the static parts until after I get to the field. Those might benefit from some re-working rather than a wholesale copy-paste job, both in terms of the content as well as potentially distributing some of the media files to other hosts (e.g. linking all the videos to Youtube).

We had a great quarter in the lab. Lots of great students working on a few different projects, and it feels like we actually got some stuff done! We’ve made good progress on the analysis of our alarm call playback experiment. Preacher Lek is finished, and the Monument Lek data are coming in rapidly in spite of the challenge of having to work with data from a camera on the hill and a camera located in the playback blind diagonally behind the lek. Definitely requires some mental gymnastics to sort those out.

Most students were working on the female approach project. With our former student/current technician Becca, we wrapped up the female position data for one of the peak breeding days in 2007, which should complete our male strut rate data for that season. We have two remaining days from 2008 and one from 2006 that are in the finishing stages. Michelle, Tawny, and some others have been working on completing the lateralization dataset. That is really close to being done as well. And Becca has finished data collection on the mechanical sounds project. Cool! Now we just have to analyze these great datasets and write up (is that all?)

Summer 2011 Updates

Anna's Hummingbird

Anna's Hummingbird, Mendocino, CA

Time for a few updates from the summer. In a future post I’ll mention the 2011 Animal Behavior Society/International Ethological Congress that I recently attended in Bloomington, Indiana. In the mean time, a few notes about this web page…

First, a brief acknowledgement that since I added the visitor-counting widget ClusterMaps in the fall of 2009 [note, this is the old .mac site, the counter starts over on the new site], I’ve now received more than 1000 visitors from more than 30 countries. Ok, so these aren’t viral cat video numbers, but still it is nice to see peoples stopping by to check out our research. If you haven’t noticed the map, it is on the bottom of the main page.

Second, I’ve updated the Publications page with .pdfs of some of my recent papers. These include:

A commentary on the utility of Opportunity for Selection measures in sexual selection research, still online only in the Journal of Experimental Biology. I had several great co-authors on this paper: Mike Webster, Adam Jones, Steve Shuster, and Emily DuVal.

A review of the use of terrestrial microphone arrays, spearheaded by Dan Blumstein that appeared in the Journal of Applied Ecology. This paper emerged from an NSF-funded workshop a few years ago that Dan organized , with many of the participants helping with the manuscript.

Gail and I, along with our colleague Richard McElreath from Anthropology, investigated how economic models of bargaining and negotiation can be useful for understanding the dynamics of animal courtship on the lek. This invited paper was recently published in Current Zoology.

Finally, I scanned in the two book chapters I have helped to write. The most recent was published just this May. Emily DuVal and I were able to write the review on cooperative courtship in birds that we had been talking about for at least a decade. Somehow we managed to stick this in as an invited chapter in a new book on Evolutionary Family Psychology. I also now have available the chapter on Reproductive Skew in Birds that my PhD advisor Walt Koenig wrote with myself, Joey Haydock, and Shen-Feng Shen that was published a couple of years ago.

Again, links for these can be found on the publications page. Hopefully we’ll have some more empirical papers ready to go soon!

[Note- photo is an Anna’s Hummingbird- I took the photo this summer in Mendocino, CA]