Video of an experiment

We’ve started Round 2 of our experiments, measuring how responsive males are to differences in the behavior of the robot female. We want to see if we can explain some of the variation we see in how hard males are working on the lek, and one of the things we would like to know is the importance of female interest- if a female is disinterested, should a male work harder to try to win her over, or cut his losses and save his energy for the next potential mate? Does it matter what his expectation is for another female visit, and how successful he is?

Below you can see a clip of the disinterested behavior- the robot is simulating pecking at the ground. Real females frequently do this on the lek as well. This clip is from Cottontail, but we finished our second treatment on Monument Lek this morning. Chugwater will require one more experiment, and Cottontail will probably require two or three.

I love this video, not only for showing off the great job Gail has done getting the robot to look realistic, but also for the funny chasing behavior occuring in the foreground. A non-territorial male ambles from left to right, and just as he reaches the right edge of the screen, he must spot an angry territory holder. He walks quickly back to the left, and just as he leaves the screen, a fully inflated male comes sprinting across.

Full Moon Fever

We get to study the sage-grouse in a really beautiful place here in Wyoming, and at no time is that more evident than during the full moon. There’s just something about seeing a moonrise over a vast expanse of sage, or watching the moon set over the snow-topped Wind River Range that just gives me chills. It’s always disappointing when we get cloudy weather on those days, but for this cycle in early March 2012, we were lucky enough to get stunningly beautiful moonrise and moonset. The moonset in particular was really magical- I was in a blind in the snow on Monument Lek. The birds on Monument had not really come in on any morning we were watching yet, but this morning Becca and I heard bird after bird fly in just as the moon started falling below the horizon. I’ve added a few more photos to the flickr albums- check out the Photos page for the links.

Field Season 2012 Day 1

Planning for our field season started last fall, when Anna came on board, we posted our job ads, and reserved our research vehicles. Even last week we were still in planning mode- I led a discussion for our weekly lab meeting where we went over the details of our upcoming robot experiments and got feedback from folks in the lab.

In the Cabela's Parking Lot

The Snow Chief in its natural habitat

Today we finally pulled up stakes in Davis and started the 2-day trek to Wyoming to put these plans into action. Friday was a long day of packing, and this morning we loaded up our vehicles and joined a steady stream of traffic heading east on I-80. The drive was pretty manageable, and we had beautiful weather for the drive. We stopped in Reno at the Cabela’s outlet (this was Becca and Anna’s first trip there- I feel like this is an important part of one’s education as a wildlife biologist, of course!)  We had another excuse to stop there- we are loaning some recording equipment to a sage-grouse biologist from Nevada, and the Cabela’s store makes a nice landmark. The trip through central Sunset in mirrorsNevada was beautiful. The only potential tragedy was soldiering on until 9PM to make it to Wendover, Nevada, our intended destination for the first night. We pulled off the interstate to find the parking lots ominously full, and literally “no room at the inn” at the hotel we traditionally go to. We managed to find the last room in town. The No Vacancy sign was put up right after I booked our room. We are all very thankful we didn’t have to retreat to Elko or Wells, or try to make it further to Salt Lake City.

No_Vacancy

Got the last room- is that a sarcastic smiley face?