[Tweeters] White-tailed Ptarmigan in WA -- confusion re WDFW
claims and statements
Stephen Chase via Tweeters
tweeters at u.washington.edu
Wed Jul 3 15:16:22 PDT 2024
Appreciate the discussion, Steve.
A second point of confusion is that WDFW lists
<https://wdfw.wa.gov/species-habitats/species/lagopus-leucurus-saxatilis#resources>
"our" White-tailed Ptarmigan as *Lagopus leucurus saxatilis*. As far as I
can tell, *saxatilis* is the subspecies endemic to Vancouver Island. I
wondered if it once used to be conspecific with the Mt. Rainier
White-tailed Ptarmigan (*L.l.rainierensis*), but I don't see any evidence
to corroborate that guess. Oddly, on the same page, WDFW references a
thorough resource on White-tailed Ptarmigan that clearly describes
*rainierensis* as the subspecies of White-tailed Ptarmigan across the
Cascades, to the Canadian border (pgs 21-25 of this document
<https://ecos.fws.gov/ServCat/DownloadFile/202270>).
Stephen Chase
Everson
On Wed, Jul 3, 2024 at 2:40 PM Steve Loitz via Tweeters <
tweeters at u.washington.edu> wrote:
> I seek to clear up confusion re WDFW's statements re White-tailed
> Ptarmigan, the Mt. Rainier subspecies of which has recently
> received enhanced ESA protection, which is a good thing.
>
> WDFW's webpage
> <https://wdfw.wa.gov/species-habitats/species/lagopus-leucurus-saxatilis#desc-range> re
> the WTPT re the WTPT seems to make inconsistent claims-- WDFW claims
> that "[t]he Washington population may be about 1,000 individuals"
>
> -- but in the immediately preceding paragraph, WDFW states that the
> species is "common in areas further north, such as the Pasayten
> Wilderness."
>
> How can a bird with only 1,000 individuals state-wide be deemed "common"
> in a relatively small geographic subset of the state?
>
> Furthermore, the "1,000 individuals" claim is contrary to my experience,
> which I acknowledge to be anecdotal, but nonetheless relevant. I've been
> mountaineering and birding in the WA Cascades for 40 years, have seen
> hundreds of WTPT and, although I do acknowledge the long-term threat of
> climate change, I have not noted any material decline in the numbers of
> WTPT north of I-90. WTPTs are a common sight in the NCNP on both sides of
> SR20, e.g., Pickets, Steattle Ridge, Isolation Traverse, Bacon/Hagan/Blum
> area, Ragged Ridge, Mt. Logan massif, and also in the Glacier Peak WA,
> Chelan/Sawtooths, Pasayten WA and other areas.
>
> WDFW acknowledges that [t]here has been little work done with [the
> species in WA]."
>
> What's going on here? WDFW's claim is not qualified by subspecies and,
> AFAIK, the Mt. Rainier subspecies is the only WTPT subspecies in the WA
> Cascades.
>
> On what sampling does WDFW rely for the "1,000 individuals" claim? Many,
> very possibly most, WTPT reside in areas which see little human traffic
> and, based on my considerable experience mountaineering in WA's WTPT
> habitat, those areas very likely get virtually zero eBirders.
>
> This is not the first time I've been addled by claimed data which reflects
> the very small overlap of birders and deep wilderness travelers, but it's
> the most mindboggling.
>
> Steve Loitz
> Ellensburg, WA
> steveloitz at gmail.com
> _______________________________________________
> Tweeters mailing list
> Tweeters at u.washington.edu
> http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/tweeters
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/pipermail/tweeters/attachments/20240703/692c494c/attachment.html>
More information about the Tweeters
mailing list