News about quail research

Researchers are trying to learn why the bobwhite quail populations in Texas and Oklahoma keep dwindling

The following news release came from the Rolling Plains Quail Resarch Ranch in Texas, which is partnering with the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation to study the demise of bobwhite quail populations in Texas and Oklahoma.

ROBY, Texas – Parasitic worms in the eyes and intestines of bobwhite quail have been found at record high levels in Texas bobwhites, according to an ongoing research
project.
And, while researchers caution that their results are preliminary, early findings suggest
the worms could be impairing the quail’s ability to thrive as it historically has across west Texas.
“The quail we’ve analyzed thus far suggest record-high levels of parasitism by eyeworms and
cecal worms” said Dr. Dale Rollins, director for the Rolling Plains Quail Research Ranch (RPQRR).
The Rolling Plains Quail Research Foundation recently funded a $2 million study to
evaluate the impacts of diseases and parasites on this area’s struggling quail population.
Research scientists from Texas Tech’s Institute of Environmental and Human Health, Texas
A&M’s College of Veterinary Medicine, and the Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute were
recruited to tackle specific research topics ranging from viruses to parasites.
Eight different research projects are being conducted as part of the research effort, dubbed
“Operation Idiopathic Decline.”
Last summer quail were collected from a total of 21 ranches across west Texas and 10 wildlife management areas in western Oklahoma in conjunction
with the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation.
“Our initial research started in 2009 and we noted high infection rates of eyeworms and cecal
worms here on the RPQRR, a 4,700-acre site just west of Roby, but we didn’t know at the time
how extensive the problem was. Now it appears that the problem extends across the Rolling
Plains, at least,” Rollins said.
“We took blood and tissue samples from nearly 600 quail in 2011 and then sacrificed a smaller
number for complete necropsies. This is the first comprehensive look at disease in quail since
the 1920s” Rollins said.
“About half of the quail we’ve examined thus far had eyeworms, and the average is five worms
per bird. The most we’ve found in one bird’s eyes was 53 worms.
Basically all of the birds have
the cecal worms, with some birds harboring more than 400 such worms” Rollins noted.
Rollins credits Dr. Alan Fedynich, a parasitologist with the Ceasar Kleberg Wildlife Research
Institute at Kingsville and graduate students Stacie Villarreal and Andrea Bruno for their efforts
in the discovery.
Rollins said the eyeworms are about half the diameter of a pencil lead and about a half-inch in
length. The cecal worms are about an inch in length and reside in the gut of the quail.
According to Rollins eyeworms have been reported for bobwhites, but not in such high
numbers.
“A. S. Jackson, a quail biologist for Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, found eyeworms in
bobwhites back in the early 1960s, but our data over the past three years suggest the infections
have become more severe.
He noted that some of the birds he examined did exhibit bleeding around the eyes when worm numbers approached fifteen worms per bird. He also expressed
concern that the birds’ vision may have been impaired” Rollins said.
“When you’ve got as many potential enemies as a quail has, any impairment of your vision is a
handicap” Rollins added.
Rick Snipes of Aspermont serves as the President of the board of directors for the Rolling Plains
Quail Research Foundation. His ranch has received many awards for its excellent quail habitat,
and, as recently as 2008, routinely produced 30 coveys per day. And yet, good habitat has not
spared his property from the decline.
“These findings are highly disturbing to me and will be to any quail hunter. Our ranch is
managed solely for the benefit of bobwhites, yet we have not shot a bird in two years, except
for research,.” he said.
As a seasoned quail hunter, Snipes has seen the ups and downs that are inherent in Texas quail
populations, and appreciates the ever-important weather conditions that drive quail
abundance. Like any quail hunter, he has become a keen weather watcher.
”But 2010 puzzles me, it was the straw that broke the camel’s back. We had perfect weather
and birds were everywhere in July, yet come September they were gone. A mystery? You bet,
and one the long term nature of our research is aimed squarely at solving,” he remarked.
Snipes referenced a precedent observed in red grouse in Scotland, in this case with cecal
worms.
“Red grouse that harbored high numbers of cecal worms were more likely to be killed by
predators” he noted. “The number of cecal worms we’re observing in our bobwhites may be
having a similar effect. And that’s on top of the eyeworm situation!”
Rollins said the research team is already making plans for “Phase 2” which will test various
alternatives to reduce parasite numbers. Future studies will also focus on the ecology of the
parasites themselves.
“The eyeworms infect quail via an ‘intermediate host’ which we suspect is either grasshoppers
or cockroaches. When a quail eats an infected grasshopper the larval worms move quickly into
the quail’s eyes, taking up residence around the eye itself.”
Rollins stresses that the parasites may not be the proverbial smoking gun, but they are a
suspect worthy of greater scrutiny.
“The value of longer-term research efforts like this one is that we can see how worm numbers
change over successive years as a result of changing weather. Who knows, maybe last
summer’s hot, dry weather reduced the parasite’s abundance” he offer ed. “Only time, and
additional research, will tell” Rollins said.
Snipes said the funding for the studies came strictly from private donations from concerned
quail hunters.
“West Texas is the ‘Alamo’ of bobwhite conservation, and quail hunters are committed to
seeking a solution to quail decline” said Snipes. “But we’re going to need more help as we
move forward.”
West Texas is historically renowned as some of the best quail hunting anywhere, but
populations of the iconic game bird have fallen to record low levels since 2008. According to
Rollins, no one knows exactly why populations of the once abundant game bird have dropped
in recent years.
“Everyone has their favorite theory about what’s causing quail populations to decline,
everything from varmints to fire ants, but none of them account for declines across the board.
In most areas you can explain the decline by citing habitat loss, but that doesn’t hold water
across large areas of west Texas and western Oklahoma—the scenery out here just hasn’t
changed that much. And certainly not that drastically in the past five years” he added. “We
realize that the record drought and heat in 2011 created a quail’s nightmare last summer, but
we’re more concerned about why we had a bust in 2010 which was an ideal summer for quail
weather-wise.”
Rollins says it’s not only quail hunters who should be concerned.
“The income generated by quail hunting is substantial, and especially important to struggling
rural communities which capitalize on an influx of orange-clad quail hunters and their pointing
dogs, and the dollars they bring. Quail hunters in Texas spent an average of $8,600 dollars in
pursuit of quail in 2010, and half of that was spent in the destination county” Rollins said, citing figures from a recent survey.


H&H Shooting Sports Complex Power Lunch Chat with Outdoors Editor Ed Godfrey


Notes from the world of outdoors

Honky tonk artist Kevin Fowler will be performing Saturday night in Oklahoma City and all ticket sales are going to the National Wild Turkey Federation

Join Bob Wiebelt, president of the Bow Hunting Council of Oklahoma, and myself Friday for a live chat on NewsOk.com about the outdoors and bow hunting in Oklahoma.
The chat begins at 11:30 a.m. and goes until noon at the H&H Shooting Sports Complex in Oklahoma City. Of if you prefer, drop by and see us at the store. We can talk about anything outdoors but will be discussing bow hunting in Oklahoma,  and crossbow issue and the activities and role of the Bow Hunting Council, which is the voice for many bow hunters in the state. 

Turkey concert

Musician Kevin Fowler, most known for the song “Beer, Bait and Ammo”, will be performing Saturday night at the Wormy Dog Saloon in Bricktown.
All proceeds from Fowler’s performance is going to the National Wild Turkey Federation.
Tickets are $20 and can be bought at the door. Fowler is expected to take the stage at 9 p.m.

Fly fishing school
Anglers interested in learning how to fly fish can enroll in the Illinois River Fly Fishing School on Feb. 24 and 25.
The clinic will be based out of Tenkiller State Park and will include hands-on practice on the banks of the Illinois River.
The clinic costs $150. For more information, call Mark Patton at 340-1992.

Bass fishing school

Rose State College’s “Bass Fishing Techniques” adult education classes begin Feb. 7. The first class in the four week course will be taught by former Bassmaster Classic champion Ken Cook.

Rose State prefers participants pre-enroll for the classes by calling 733-7392 but people can pay at the door. Cost is $89 for the four sessions. Classes the following weeks (Feb. 13, 21 and 28) will be taught by Tommy Biffle, Don Iovino and Jeff Kriet. 

The classes begin at 7 each night at the Tom Steed Center on the Rose State campus.

 


Balancing coaching and hunting

Oklahoma State wrestling coach John Smith reacts during the top-ranked Cowboys victory Sunday over Binghamton.

I am sure the other reporters crowded around John Smith Sunday afternoon at Gallagher-Iba Arena wondered what the heck I was doing asking the Oklahoma State wrestling coach about his hunting seasons, but that’s what happens when editors send an outdoor writer to cover collegiate wrestling.
Smith is passionate about the outdoors and an avid hunter so I thought he might have some good hunting stories to share with me. It turns out he didn’t kill much this season.
“Pheasant, not many of them,” Smith said. “It was disappointing. But when you have that weather we had this summer it was a struggle for those birds to survive. But I got out several times. Just getting out is all I need, and see a few birds and maybe take a couple home, which I did. But it was a slow season.”
Smith did see a few coveys of quail on his pheasant hunts but didn’t kill many of those birds either.
“When you are pheasant hunting, you are just not quite ready for those quail,” he said. “You see a few of the pheasant get up, with a little slower reaction you can still get the bird, then all of a sudden a covey of quail breaks and you need to be a little faster. I felt like I was behind all day on the two or three (coveys) that we did have a chance.”
Smith also is a deer hunter but didn’t harvest a buck this season.
“I passed on several deer,” he said. “It was a good season though. I saw a lot of deer. It’s a healthy herd right now in Stillwater and Payne County.”
Unfortunately for Smith, the hunting and wrestling seasons overlap. Smith has to balance his time between hunting and coaching. He sometimes will pass on shooting a buck so he can get to wrestling practice on time.
“I just kind of judge it on my time,” he said. “If I see a deer in the morning, if I am able to take one pretty early, I got time to get it and clean it and take care of it,” he said. “But if it’s late, it’s got to be a special deer because that means I am going to be late for practice.”


State wildlife director asks for federal help to protect the Lower Illinois River trout fishery

The Lower Illinois River is shown here barely wet after five days without water releases from Tenkiller Dam.

Oklahoma’s Wildlife Director is urging the state’s congressional delegation to take action to protect the Lower Illinois trout fishery near Gore.
Richard Hatcher, director of the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation, has asked Oklahoma’s senators and representatives to sponsor and pass federal legislation to ensure that the trout fishing stream will receive water from Tenkiller Lake when needed to keep fish alive.
Hatcher made the request this week in a letter addressed to U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Tulsa. The letter to Inhofe was also mailed to U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Muskogee, and Oklahoma’s five representatives.
“The ODWC (Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation) requests your assistance in finding a viable long-term solution including, if necessary, sponsoring and passing congressional legislation to provide sufficient water storage in Tenkiller Reservoir to protect fisheries resources in the Lower Illinois River,” Hatcher writes.
State wildlife officials stopped stocking trout in the river for several weeks last year because of the lack of water releases from Tenkiller Lake. Many fish, both hatchery-raised trout and native species, died in the Lower Illinois River last year because of low dissolved oxygen levels in the water.
The Lower Illinois River is one of two year-round trout streams in the state. The Lower Mountain Fork River in McCurtain County is the other. That trout stream is entitled to water releases from Broken Bow Lake when necessary to ensure fishing opportunities are year-round.
The Wildlife Department has permanent water rights to sustain the Lower Mountain Fork River trout fishery through federal legislation.
Below is a copy of Hatcher’s letter to Oklahoma’s congressional delegation.

Dear Senator Inhofe:
The Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation (ODWC) has been directed by its governing body, the Oklahoma Wildlife Conservation Commission, to seek solutions to water allocation issues currently impairing fisheries resources in the lower Illinois River in eastern Oklahoma.
As we have discussed with members of your staff, dissolved oxygen levels in the lower Illinois River are often well below state standards. Based on numerous studies, it is believed the lack of sufficient water releases from Tenkiller Dam contributes to the low dissolved oxygen levels resulting in numerous native fish species and trout being killed.

We have asked for cooperation from all interested parties, including the Tulsa District Corps of Engineers and the Southwestern Power Administration to assist in achieving a solution to this serious problem. The ODWC continues to work with these agencies on short term solutions.

It is also critical to begin the process of securing long-term solutions to protect these valuable fisheries resources. We believe an automated piping system at the Tenkiller Dam could provide a minimum sustained flow of water necessary to raise oxygen levels in the lower Illinois River to a satisfactory level.

Engineering plans for such a piping system have already been prepared. However, no water stored in Tenkiller Reservoir is currently allocated for this purpose.

The ODWC requests your assistance in finding a viable long-term solution including, if necessary, sponsoring and passing congressional legislation to provide sufficient water storage in Tenkiller Reservoir to protect fisheries resources in the lower Illinois River.


Big Blue from Texoma

James Chapman of Blanchard, Jacob Pressley of Arlington, Texas and Andy Wilshire of Edmond landed this 86-pound blue catfish on a jug line Saturday at Lake Texoma.

Winter is the best time for blue cat fishing in Oklahoma. Big blues are caught at twice the rate in the winter as they are in the summer.
That’s a fact that Andy Wilshire of Edmond does not need to be convinced of. While jug fishing for blue cats at Lake Texoma last weekend with three friends, they landed an 86-pound blue catfish.
“This is the biggest fish that any of us have ever seen, much less caught,” Wilshire said. “And odds are that this will be the biggest we catch or see for the rest of our lives.”
Wilshire, along with James Chapman of Blanchard and Conrad Cobb and Jacob Pressley, both of Arlington, Texas, were fishing an area about three miles west of the 377 bridge.
“We set our line of 20 jugs baited with fresh shad around 7:30 a.m. Saturday,” Wilshire said. “When we went to run the lines around 12:30 p.m. we noticed that the No. 2 jug was missing.
“We ran all the other jugs and then began looking for the missing jug. We found the jug about ½-mile north of where it was originally set. After a good battle with the fish on the jug, we finally pulled it into a boat.”
The anglers traveled back to Lake Texoma Marina to take pictures and weigh the fish, which they later released.
“Once in the water for a few minutes he became very lively again and we decided to let the trophy go to fight another day,” Wilshire said. “I hope by others seeing this and hearing our story that they will feel compelled to help the trophy blue cat population in our state by catching and releasing these beautiful beasts.”
Two years ago, the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation issued a regulation where anglers could only keep one blue catfish 30 inches or longer per day. That limit was imposed to help protect the population of trophy blues like the 86-pounder.
“Those big fish are very old and kind of rare,” said Gene Gilliland, assistant chief of fisheries for the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation.
Blue catfish feed more though the winter than their cousins, channel cats and flathead catfish, and stay more active. They have become a popular wintertime pursuit for Oklahoma anglers.
Why do blue cats bite better in the winter?
“They school up a little tighter and I think the forage, the shad they are feeding on, tends to be a little more concentrated,” Gilliland said. “I think that is a big part of it. It’s just a matter of locating fish.”
Creel surveys show that several Oklahoma lakes have an abundance of blue catfish but they grow very slowly.  That’s why state wildlife officials imposed the one-fish daily limit for blue cats 30 inches or longer. And if you think that is a big catfish, the biggest blue ever caught in the state was 118 pounds. It was also landed on a jug line at Lake Texoma in 1988.


Raptors get a stamp

The golden eagle is one of five "Birds of Prey" now depicted on U.S. postage stamps.

The U.S. Postal Service salutes five kings of the sky with its new “Birds of Prey” stamps: the northern goshawk, peregrine falcon, golden eagle, osprey and northern harrier.
The 85-cent definitive Birds of Prey stamps are being issued in self-adhesive sheets of 20 at a price of $17.00 per sheet. The stamps can be used with virtually all domestic First-Class Mail weighing up to 3-ounces.
“The stamps went on sale Friday nationwide.. They can be ordered online at usps.com and by phone at 800-782-6724.
Birds of prey, also known as raptors, thrive in diverse habitats and live on every continent except Antarctica. The roughly 500 species of raptors include birds that hunt by day, such as falcons, eagles and harriers and birds that hunt by night — owls.
They share several common characteristics, such as being carnivorous and using their powerful talons to capture prey. Their exceptionally keen eyesight allows them to see small objects in detail, even from a great distance. As predators high on the food chain, raptors play an important role in maintaining the balance of nature.
Collectors have 60 days to obtain the first-day-of-issue postmark by mail.


Bigger bows in the Blue

Trout anglers can enjoy all of the beauty and splendid fishing on the Blue River near Tishomingo through March.

Blue River trout start getting a little larger beginning Thursday as state wildlife officials begin stocking the river with Missouri-raised rainbows.
Up until now, the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation had been putting fish in the river that the agency receives from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Those fish come from an Arkansas hatchery and are free to the state.
Beginning Thursday, the state will begin stocking the rainbows that it buys from Missouri and those fish are a little bigger than their Arkansas counterparts.
The Wildlife Department’s contract with the Missouri hatchery calls for 12 to 14-inch trout with 10 percent more than 14 inches long, so there should be some 2- and 3-pounders calling the Blue Rive home on Thursday.
Blue River is one of my favorite fishing holes in the state.
As I have written before, if you were to put on a blindfold and get dropped at the Blue River, you likely wouldn’t believe you were in south-central Oklahoma when the blindfold was removed.
The Blue River looks like a trout stream you would find in Colorado, New Mexico or Arkansas.
The Blue is a swift, clear, braided stream that arises in Johnston County from the Arbuckle-Simpson aquifer, a giant underground water source.
The headwaters of the spring-fed Blue are southwest of Ada. The stream continues until it flows in the Red River in southeast Bryan County.
However, the river is most scenic along the 6 ¼- mile stretch through the Blue River Public Hunting and Fishing Area near Tishomingo.
Here, the granite rocks of the Arbuckle outcrop come to the surface and the river is energized.
Along these six miles, the river transforms from a sluggish, meandering stream to cascading water that forks through granite and limestone formations.
Matt Gamble is the state’s fishing biologist for the Blue River and gets to live there. With the weather being warmer than usual for January, it’s been a busy trout season on the Blue River.
In fact, the week between Christmas and New Year’s was as busy as Gamble can remember.
“On New Year’s, you almost couldn’t find a spot to fish,” he said. “People have really been getting out and taking advantage of the good weather.”
Gamble reports the trout fishing has been good lately with fly fishermen catching rainbows on brown woolly buggers, egg patterns, elk hair caddis fly pattern and some midge activity late in the evening.
For the non-fly anglers, small spoons and spinners have been successful but most fishermen are catching their trout on garlic-scented Powerbaits, he said.
The Blue River is normally busy with visitors on weekends but anglers still should be able to find some water to themselves, Gamble said. You certainly will not be fighting a crowd on a weekday fishing trip, he said.
Last week, state wildlife officials also stocked the river’s only catch and release for the final time. The catch and release only area of the river is on the far north portion of the stream.
“It’s been fishing well,” Gamble said of the catch and release area. ”Guys have been having good success up there.”
The trout season on the Blue River continues through the end of March. On Feb. 18-19, the weekend of President’s Day, there will be a trout derby on the river.


Nice late season buck

Who says Friday the 13th is unlucky?
It wasn’t for Terry Redus of McLoud who bagged this beautiful buck with a bow on Jan. 13 on his lease in Logan County.
It is Redus’ biggest deer with a bow and a buck he had been hunting for two years.

Terry Redus of McLoud harvested this beautiful buck in Logan County late in the afternoon on Friday the 13th. The last day of Oklahoma's archery deer season was Sunday, Jan. 15.

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“Can’t wait for next season,” Redus wrote in an email. “Got trail cam pics of his son, an 8-point that’s as big if not bigger.”
Sunday (Jan. 15) was the final day of the deer archery season in Oklahoma.
The state’s deer harvest is expected to be slightly down this season from a year ago, according to Alan Peoples, head of wildife division for the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation.
But it will be months before state wildlife officials will have the numbers totaled.


Put in your two cents

Off-roading would no longer be allowed on the Honobia Creek Wildlife Management Area in southeastern Oklahoma if a new regulation proposed by the Wildlife Department is presented to and approved by the Oklahoma Wildlife Conservation Commission.

Public meetings on proposed changes in the state’s hunting and fishing regulations are scheduled Tuesday (Jan. 10) in Poteau and Oklahoma City.
The Oklahoma City meeting will be at the headquarters of the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation, 1801 N. Lincoln Boulevard.
The meeting in Poteau will be at the Kiamichi Technology Center. Both begin at 7 p.m.
There also will be a town hall meeting in Antlers on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Wildlife Heritage Center where the hot topic of discussion is expected to be about the Honobia Creek Wildlife Management Area.
Restricting ATVs to established roads only on the Honobia Creek WMA is one of the proposed regulation changes the Wildlife Department is wanting to implement.
Ending off-roading on Honobia Creek has angered many recreational riders and businesses in the area who profit from the tourism.
Alan Peoples, head of the wildlife division for the state Wildlife Department said, the three timber investment groups that own Honobia Creek want to restrict ATVs to established roads only because of the damage they are causing to the land.
Off-roading already has been restricted at the nearby Three Rivers Wildlife Management Area and the new agreement with the landowners for public use of Honobia Creek calls for the same.
“If we don’t adhere to that agreement, we will lose use of the land entirely,” Peoples said.
Sportsmen have through Friday (Jan. 13) to comment on any of the proposed changes online at www.wildlifedepartment.com.
Other proposed rule changes to the state’s hunting and fishing regulations are:
- To make it unlawful to bait wildlife on all of the state’s wildlife management areas
- To change the bear archery season to Oct. 1 through the third Sunday in October and eliminate the 20-bear total quota for bear archery season
- To set the statewide daily limit of striped bass at five, except at Lake Texoma
- To eliminate daily harvest limits on furbearers so that only season limits apply.
- To make it legal to harvest two does during the deer youth gun season. The bag limit is currently one antlered deer and one antlerless deer. The total number of deer taken would remain two per hunter.