Male Contribution to Reproduction: A Random Occurrence or Indicator of Population Status?

Aug 22, 2022

By Garrett Roberts, AQP Research Technician/Graduate Student, originally published in the Summer 2022 edition of Quail Call. 

Male contribution to reproductive output and its importance to population recovery and persistence in bobwhite quail is an understudied topic commonly overlooked in research. We know already that males tend to contribute more to total reproductive output in lower density/recovering populations, but what we don’t understand as well, is how much and when they contribute under other circumstances. Bobwhite quail exhibit a form of mating strategy known as ambisexual polygamy.

This is where both the male and female will contribute to parental care, both during incubation and after hatching. Both sexes will also have multiple mates throughout the summer breeding season.

Females are generally the targeted sex studied during this time, resulting in minimal return data for the male bobwhites throughout the season. The aim for this study is to analyze the variability of male contribution over time and between bobwhite populations on the primary study site of the Albany Quail Project, Tall Timbers, Livingston Place, The Jones Center at Ichauway, and Central Florida. All of these study sites have varying spring breeding densities, possibly resulting in varying levels of male contribution.

Starting this year, we have begun increasing our sample size of radio-tagged males on all study areas to gain a better understanding of their relative contribution to reproductive output. This data is being used for a master’s project for the current research technician and new graduate student of the Albany Quail Project, Garrett Roberts. Garrett is a North Alabama transplant, graduate of Auburn University, and has been with AQP for the past year.

This project will be ongoing for the next several years with the intent of determining how male contribution varies on sites with different densities and varying seasonal survivals. This valuable insight should show just how big of a role males play in the success of reproduction and the overall growth of the population.

 

About the Author
Garrett Roberts
Garrett is the primary Research Technician and current graduate student for Tall Timber’s Albany Quail Project. His master’s thesis will be on male contribution to reproduction across the bobwhite’s native landscape. His primary focus outside his master’s thesis is the continuation of research efforts in the Albany area.
  • Recent Articles
    Turkey hunting for biodiversity data

    The Stoddard Bird Lab is pilot testing a new app that engages turkey hunters in collecting data on Chuck-will’s-widow, a declining species in the eastern United States.

    Tall Timbers’ historic Beadel House lost in fire

    The two-story house built in 1895 by Edward Beadel ignited after a lightning strike during a severe storm moving through the Red Hills. It housed numerous artifacts from our organization’s history and four staff offices.

    New online prescribed fire academy launched for private landowners

    Private landowners play a big role in the prescribed fire conducted annually in the Southeast. The Tall Timbers Prescribed Fire Academy was established to provide them with access to high-quality, continually improved training options. Thanks to funding from our state...

    Belowground biomass in pine savannas – more than meets the eye

    Most savannas and grasslands worldwide are sustained by frequent fires that kills the above-ground portion of long-lived plants that then resprout from belowground parts, including roots, rhizomes and other nutrient storage structures. However, very few studies have...

    Does growing season prescribed fire affect turkey nesting?

    Wild turkeys, like a host of other ground-nesting birds in the Southeast, need regular prescribed fire to maintain their habitat. As many land managers start to head into the woods to light off fires that will inevitably help turkeys, bobwhite, and a number of other...

    Related Articles