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Boone, Wesley W.; Moorman, Christopher E.; Moscicki, David J.; Collier, Bret A.; Chamberlain, Michael J.; Terando, Adam J.; Kilgo, John C.; Bakner, Nicholas W.; Pacifici, Krishna
Effects of temperature and precipitation on wild turkey brood survival in the southeastern United States Journal Article
In: Wildlife Society Bulletin, vol. 49, no. S1, pp. e70003, 2025, ISSN: 2328-5540, 2328-5540.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: bird, brood survival, climate change, Meleagris gallopavo, precipitation, temperature, Wild Turkey
@article{boone_effects_2025,
title = {Effects of temperature and precipitation on wild turkey brood survival in the southeastern United States},
author = {Wesley W. Boone and Christopher E. Moorman and David J. Moscicki and Bret A. Collier and Michael J. Chamberlain and Adam J. Terando and John C. Kilgo and Nicholas W. Bakner and Krishna Pacifici},
url = {https://wildlife.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wsb.70003},
doi = {10.1002/wsb.70003},
issn = {2328-5540, 2328-5540},
year = {2025},
date = {2025-12-01},
urldate = {2025-12-17},
journal = {Wildlife Society Bulletin},
volume = {49},
number = {S1},
pages = {e70003},
abstract = {Abstract
Climate change is altering annual recruitment and influencing the trajectory of wildlife populations. The effect of climate change on recruitment varies among wildlife species, making implications difficult to generalize, necessitating species‐specific assessments. Assessment is especially important for investigating implications of future climate change for populations currently in decline, such as the eastern wild turkey (
Meleagris gallopavo silvestris
). We evaluated how variation in weather and plant phenology affected wild turkey brood survival by monitoring 257 broods across the southeastern United States during 2014\textendash2022. Average daily low temperature, average daily precipitation, maximum single‐day precipitation, and proximity to green‐up date did not predict daily brood survival. Although we documented no support for weather effects on wild turkey brood survival, additional work is likely needed to assess how climate change will influence other factors that indirectly influence brood survival and subsequent recruitment, including availability of food and cover resources.},
keywords = {bird, brood survival, climate change, Meleagris gallopavo, precipitation, temperature, Wild Turkey},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Climate change is altering annual recruitment and influencing the trajectory of wildlife populations. The effect of climate change on recruitment varies among wildlife species, making implications difficult to generalize, necessitating species‐specific assessments. Assessment is especially important for investigating implications of future climate change for populations currently in decline, such as the eastern wild turkey (
Meleagris gallopavo silvestris
). We evaluated how variation in weather and plant phenology affected wild turkey brood survival by monitoring 257 broods across the southeastern United States during 2014–2022. Average daily low temperature, average daily precipitation, maximum single‐day precipitation, and proximity to green‐up date did not predict daily brood survival. Although we documented no support for weather effects on wild turkey brood survival, additional work is likely needed to assess how climate change will influence other factors that indirectly influence brood survival and subsequent recruitment, including availability of food and cover resources.