Sage Grouse
In nearly four decades of birding, I had never managed to
make contact with Sage Grouse. It is mostly a resident of Wyoming, southern
Idaho, eastern Montana, and eastern Washington, places to which I have rarely
or never ventured. This summer we traveled to northern Colorado to see them at the southeastern edge of the bird’s range.
Greater Sage-grouse, Coalmont |
The Sage Grouse is well named. It is intimately tied to sagebrush,
especially the species known as Big Sagebursh, Artemisia tridentata (the
leaf being three-toothed in shape). Before European settlement, tridentata
occupied vast areas of the American west (270 million acres), and it was
healthy. (Varieties of this shrub can be bought in nurseries in New Mexico, and
they do well in the yard with no supplemental water – as we learned when living
there.) This made the Sage Grouse happy and it thrived. There are several
closely related species of grouse in North America, likely deriving from some
original grouse-like bird before specializing into the continent’s unique
habitats. Sage Grouse decided to settle down in the semi-arid, mostly flat
areas between mountain ranges in the upper northern portions of the American
west, including nearby parts of Canada. The vast regions of Big Sagebrush were
also colonized by specialized bunchgrasses that occupied the places between
shrubs. The Sage Grouse found good use for that too, with the tall grasses
helping to hide chicks from predators. In the long cold and windy winters of
the region, the Sage Grouse learned to survive by eating sage leaves. The
unique characteristics of this habitat caused the species to differentiate from
the other grouse like Dusky Grouse, which kept to the mountains, and Greater
Prairie Chicken in the tallgrass prairie to the east.
Native American tribes would have been intimately familiar
with the Sage Grouse. The lavish and energetic displays of males during courtship must have been
witnessed and marveled at by generations of tribal people. It doesn’t seem too
far-fetched to imagine that spring-season Sage Grouse dances at lek sites were
part of the inspiration for tribal dances that one can still experience today.
The tribes would have hunted the abundant grouse in appropriate season, and
would have treasured the breeding plumes of the male birds as precious and
rare. They would have been expertly informed about where the grouse thrived and
what it needed to perpetuate.
These lessons, like so many of the period, were lost on
European settlers, who were oblivious to the specially-adapted species until
the Lewis and Clark expedition of 1806. The settlers were obsessed with raising
livestock, which became a lucrative business once the railroads were
established in the late 1800s. At first, coexistence was possible; after all,
the semi-arid plains of Wyoming and Montana were not particularly attractive
places to raise a family. But livestock-raising quickly turned into an industry,
and the two were set on a collision course that would become contentious in 2005.
Conservation groups noted a steep decline in Sage Grouse numbers in that era,
resulting in a petition to force federal and state governments to take protective action.
After studying the maps in field guides and in eBird, I settled on the headwaters of the North Platte River, in north-central Colorado. One of the premier Sage Grouse locations is the expansive Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge near the town of Walden. Tourism is important but not a dominant economic force in this remote region of large flat sagebrush-grass flats ringed by three towering mountain ranges, which feed snowmelt into the meandering streambeds that feed ponds and eventually merge into the river. The Arapaho, nicely named after one of the tribes of the region, was established in the mid 1960s. The main purpose was habitat for nesting and migrating ducks and geese, who were losing ground to agriculture in the Midwest. An incidental benefit was the preservation of Big Sagebrush and the aptly-named Sagebrush Steppe habitat. This is yet another example of how habitat preservation for one group of species brings benefits to many more, a not-so-subtle feature of public lands management that is quickly forgotten in every case of proposed new refuge or park establishment.
Sunrise at Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge. In the morning haze of distant forest fire smoke. |
We began our refuge tour at sunrise, noting a great many perched Swainson’s Hawks waiting for warm air to soar in. Brewer’s and Vesper Sparrows were camped out with Sage Thrashers at the top of almost every sagebrush. A thrilling Long-tailed Weasel bounced along just off the road, looking for breakfast in the fields of White-tailed Prairie Dogs, which scampered across the road at every bend. American White Pelicans paddled around improbably in the ponds, a Sora sounded off, and American Coots were too numerous to count. Every large puddle held a few Wilson’s Phalaropes gathering insects on the surface. White-faced Ibis floated over in formation.
Swainson's Hawks near Coalmont, Colorado. Juveniles waiting for the next feeding. |
Our first Sage Grouse appeared in sage and tall grass off
the refuge road in the dim early light. They were unexpectedly large for
grouse, much more so than the Dusky Grouse to which I was accustomed from New
Mexico. They seemed weirdly huge, as if they had stretched beyond their
prescribed body contours. Initially at rest, they perked up when I stopped the
car, and mildly alarmed, soon wandered off into the sage. The light was
challenging because the skies were filled with smoke from distant forest fires
to the north and west in other parts of the continent. But we could make out
the fine white markings on the back, a black belly, and long tail. A disjunct
population of these birds occurs further to the south in Colorado and to a
limited extent in eastern Utah. Having no contact with the rest of the species
for probably millennia, it was declared a separate species a few decades ago,
the Gunnison Sage-grouse. In the Arapaho, the new name is Greater Sage-grouse.
Greater indeed, for these birds seemed to stalk off with aplomb. They melted
quietly into sagebrush and out of sight.
White-tailed Prairie Dog, Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge |
Oddly enough, these birds were not far from a herd of
cattle. The refuge permits livestock in small numbers, reportedly to shake up
the vegetation a bit and promote the growth of young sagebrush. Not being a big
fan of arid-lands grazing, I was skeptical, but I must say that judging by
the vegetation, the grazing is light indeed. Maybe someday the cows can be
replaced by American Bison.
Cattle herd in the Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge. Notice the relatively healthy sage and grass: the grazing intensity is light here. |
Later that morning we found a trio of Greater Sage-grouse in
the area around Coalmont. They first appeared sitting in the middle of the
gravel road, apparently taking in some sunshine in the cool morning air of
about 6 degrees C. As we approached, they lost patience and took to the air.
They flew strongly and with purpose on large wings, a few feet off the ground,
and slowly dropped over the horizon. We found a large group farther down the
road near a lake. Two adult females were chaperoning 6 young birds. We stayed
silent and got close looks in the tall grass, before they slowly wandered off
and disappeared. It was a perfect illustration of their need for luxuriant
grasses. Although it appeared to be private land here, both sage and grasses
looked healthy. Several Pronghorn wandered around as well, trotting through the
sage with a supreme ease.
Greater Sage-grouse near Coalmont, Colorado |
In the 1990s, wildlife observers and biologists became
worried about a decline in Sage Grouse numbers, and a shrinking of the range.
The causes were documented well by researchers. Habitat alteration by
residential and commercial development and by a growing number of oil and gas
wells were contributors. Fences and poles provide perches for predators that
enhance their success at grouse capture. The intrusion of exotic plants is
another factor. Livestock grazing, prompted by a growing national demand for MacDonald’s
cheeseburgers, has also been mentioned. Many ranchers protested the analysis.
Cows eat grass and Sage Grouse eat sage, so what’s the problem?
The impacts are many. Livestock can trample the sage shrubs
as they forage, threatening the health of the plants. Heavy grazing causes the
grasses to decline and even be eliminated. That leaves Sage Grouse chicks easy
to spot by predators, causing a dent in nest productivity (the number of chicks
fledged each year). The reduction of grasses alters the insect life, which
adult and young grouse need for growth. Cow herds tend to bring in Cheatgrass
(Bromus tectorum), an invading annual species from Asia that chokes out the
natives. (I personally witnessed the dramatic growth of Cheatgrass in northern
New Mexico in the 1990s and 2000s. The ground grows eerily green very early in
the spring, and then quickly turns inedibly brown and shades out native perennial
grasses that green up much later.) Incubating adults may abandon their nests
when large herbivores come too close. Livestock are also devastating to fragile
riparian areas that the grouse sometimes use for water and forage. Sagebrush
can fall prey to ranchers who use heavy equipment to rip it out of grazing
areas, in a desperate but usually fruitless attempt to increase the grass cover
on the land. We saw a few areas like this in our drives around the area.
In theory, we have land managers who are federal employees
and can watch out for these negative impacts on native wildlife, working in
agencies such as the US Forest Service (USFS) and Bureau of Land Management
(BLM). In practice, it is a different story. One of the conservation groups
observed shrewdly, “the BLM is trapped by federal law, and compelled by
politicians, local resource users, and its own organizational culture to
continue livestock grazing even to the detriment of fish, wildlife and
watersheds.” I
have been known to cynically refer to BLM as the “Bureau of Livestock and
Mining.”
In the face of this, conservation groups filed petitions in
the 2000s to get the federal agencies to declare the grouse endangered. The US
Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) agreed in 2010 that the bird should be
classified as endangered, but that they lacked the money and staff to do so
(the dreaded “warranted but precluded” designation). Conservation groups like
the Center for Biological Diversity and the Western Watersheds Project kept the
pressure on with negotiation and the threat of lawsuits. In 2015, it seemed
like a victory for the conservationists was imminent.
It was not. Enter our beloved US Congressmen. They included
language in appropriations bills in 2015 to prevent the USFWS from declaring
the bird endangered. Now, this creates all kinds of confusion over the role of government
agencies. The USFWS is ostensibly supported by Congress. Funds are allocated to
them annually by Congress to carry out a prescribed mission. But now we have
Congressmen dictating what actions they can and cannot perform? That seems
blatantly contradictory. What is the use of having an agency to protect
endangered species if Congress has its hand on the steering wheel? The USFWS,
under pressure from western Congressmen, issued a statement in 2015 that they
would rely on a land management plan as an alternative to Endangered Species
Act listing. They trumpeted it as “an unprecedented conservation partnership”
and claimed to be protecting 90% of the 173-million acre range of the bird.
Pronghorn near Coalmont, Colorado |
Then Trump got elected, and things got worse, as you might
guess. In 2018, Trump ordered political appointees (Ryan Zinke) to gut protections for the Sage Grouse, carving out nine million acres of land to wind and
solar farms, drilling, mining, and cornfields for ethanol production. The
recent Supreme Court decision on the Chevron doctrine (2024) is likely to
complicate things even further. The rationale of the Congressmen (mostly
western-state Congressmen) is that local authorities are already doing everything
they can to protect habitat and ensure the grouse’s future. Is that true? The
way to assess those programs is to look at numbers of birds detected in
surveys, and those numbers continue to shrink.
Lark Bunting in Colorado |
And that leaves us at a standstill. Both species of Sage-grouse are in a downward spiral, and both forms of government (state and federal) are standing around with their hands in their pockets. The likely outcome is that the birds will eventually become critically endangered. It might get to the point of no return, with no amount of money able to retrieve them. The bird with such a facility for vanishing into the tall grasses might end up vanishing into the aether instead.
Greater Sage-grouse, before disappearing into the tall grasses |
We didn’t stay in the Walden area long enough to get an idea
of how local people think about these issues. But one minor bit of insight
comes from a roadside sign related to different wildlife issue. In November
2020, Colorado held a referendum on reintroducing wolves to the state, as a way
to supplement the highly successful effort in Wyoming and its spillover effects
in Montana, Idaho, and Washington. There was controversy over the proposal, and
the vote was very close, but voters approved the proposition, and Coloradans
are looking forward to hosting wild wolves for the first time in a century. In
Walden, a landowner voiced his or her scorn over the reintroduction program
with a prominent sign saying “If you voted for reintroduction of wolves, do not
recreate here. You are not welcome.”
Roadside sign just north of Walden, Colorado |
One would be hard-pressed to find a sadder manifestation of
entrenched attitudes toward wildlife. Is this landowner really prepared to
reject the revenue from wildlife tourism? In our short trip, we spent several
hundred dollars to see Greater Sage-grouse, on rental car, gas, hotel bills,
restaurant meals, and groceries. We participated in keeping Colorado businesses
active and prosperous, just to see a rare resident bird. We plan to do so again
in the future, since Greater Prairie Chicken and Sharp-tailed Grouse are still
on the list. All of this provides a badly needed shot in the arm to Colorado’s
economy. Doesn’t that count for something?
Variegated Fritillary. Near Zimmerman Lake, Colorado. |