Sunday, January 22, 2012

Ruffed Grouse (Bonasa umbellus), Popular Game Bird

A ruffed grouse (Bonasa umbellus) in a New Hampshire
birch thicket.
Photo by Brad Sylvester. Copyright 2012. Do not copy.
With several inches of hard, ice-crusted snow on the ground, ground feeders like the ruffed grouse (Bonasa umbellus) can have a hard time finding food. Fortunately, the upper branches of most trees tend to remain relatively snow free, especially if there's a little wind to knock the snow off. The ruffed grouse, therefore, can often be found in the treetops after a particularly deep snowfall or when the snow has frozen over with a hard crust. That's where I spotted this one.

This ruffed grouse is about 25 feet high in the trees, and was walking along the branch eating birch catkins. Normally, the ruffed grouse is a ground feeder, eating berries, buds, plant shoots, and fallen nuts that it finds there.

The ruffed grouse is a large bird measuring about 17 inches long with a plump, round body. As such, it is a favorite game bird of New Hampshire hunters. In fact, says New Hampshire Fish and Game, fully two-thirds of all the hunting hours logged by small game hunters were spent in pursuit of the ruffed grouse. Hunting season for the ruffed grouse in New Hampshire runs from October 1 through December 31 and requires a small game permit. I don't hunt myself, and generally don't allow hunting on my property as I enjoy the presence of the animals that live here.

When I first moved to our home in New Hampshire, I would often hear a strange, low-pitched noise coming from the woods. It was a slow thrumming sound that increased its pace over the course of about 15 seconds before stopping. It was the call of the male ruffed grouse. Actually, not a call, but rather the sound the bird makes during it territorial display, flapping its wings at an increasing pace moving its wings so fast with each flap that the sound of air rushing to fill the void left by the moving wind makes a loud, low pitched sound almost like a hushed drumbeat.

Unfortunately, I haven't heard this sound from the woods behind my house for the last two years. Either the male ruffed grouse that was there has moved or died. There is, however, a female that still resides in my yard. Every so often when I am walking through the woods, I will inadvertently flush it out and catch a brief view of it as it wings away from the perceived threat. I try not to startle it or go to areas where I know it hangs out, but it sometimes feed next to a walking path that I use.

Ruffed grouse prefer to live in areas of thickly growing small trees. Aspen is their favorite, but other species will do. The thick growth of small trunks gives them cover from predators and provides a source of food. In my yard, there is a decently-sized area of successional birch growing too thickly for a person to comfortably walk through. This is perfect home territory for ruffed grouse and it is in or near this area that I typically find them.

 
Quick Facts about the Ruffed Grouse (Bonasa umbellus):

Where does it live? The ruffed grouse lives in the forest and makes its nest on the ground. Depending upon the food availability in a given year, a ruffed grouse requires a range between 4-40 acres per bird. Females tend to be more mobile feeding throughout the ranges of several males during the winter. They range through most of Canada and the northern United States.

Diet: Plant buds, fruit and berries, young plant shoots according to Birds of Eastern North America: A Photographic Guide. It's hard to imagine, though, that they won't take forest beetles and other insects as opportunity presents.

Where does the ruffed grouse go in winter? The ruffed grouse stays right here all year round and does not migrate, although as I mentioned above, it's feeding habits may change when its usual dining table, the forest floor is made inaccessible by snow.

IUCN Red List status: Species of Least Concern, however, the IUCN notes that although it does not meat the threshold of vulnerable due to its wide range and population size, the population trend of the ruffed grouse is declining.
Breeding: According to the Natural Resources Conservation Services of Minnesota, the ruffed grouse hen lays 9-14 eggs over about two and a half weeks and then incubates them for 23-24 days before they hatch. Like chickens, the hen doesn't start incubating the eggs until the nest is full. Until then, the eggs remain in a dormant state. That allows all the eggs to hatch at about the same time. Although they will follow the mother hen around for 8-12 weeks, the ruffed grouse chicks are able to feed by themselves as soon after hatching as they get hungry. The mother, however, provides protection from predators by attempting to draw attention away from the chicks if a threat comes too near.

Ruffed Grouse Taxonomy:

Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Galliformes
Family: Phasianidae
Genus: Bonasa
Species: Bonasa umbellus





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