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Spring 2020 – Behavior and ecology of Wild Turkeys

Affiliations:
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Project Leader: Amanda Beckman
akb13@tamu.edu
Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences
Faculty Mentor: Dr. Michael Morrison, Ph.D.
Meeting Times:
TBA
Team Size:
2 (Team Full)
Open Spots: 0
Special Opportunities:
Learning radio-telemetry techniques, learning different behavioral and ecological field methods, possibility for co-author on publication.
Team Needs:
Priority will go to students that will be available for at least three weeks January-April 2020 to go to South Texas for field work (signing up for a research credit in spring is not required). Field work will include tracking turkeys via radio telemetry and working as a team to perform behavioral observations, so you must be comfortable working outdoors in a relatively remote field site. Current students or former students that have a degree in any life science field may apply.
Description:
Cooperative display coalitions, groups where an alpha male mates but one or more males assist in attracting females, occur in some animal mating systems. Coalitions of male Rio Grande Wild Turkeys are an ideal system to investigate how cooperation may vary in groups of individuals varying in relatedness. Promiscuous males and females can lead to some coalitions being made up of brothers, half-brothers, or unrelated individuals. This project will investigate how relatedness between individuals influences behavior, parasite presence, and ability to attract females. This study will provide new information about cooperation, and the behavior of Wild Turkeys.

Written by:
Jennie Lamb
Published on:
February 18, 2020

Categories: FullTags: Spring 2020

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