Doves from above
Images from high-flying
satellites are helping Mississippi State wildlife researchers learn more about a very popular high-flier that travels closer to earth.
Researchers at the universitys Forest and Wildlife Research Center are nearing completion of a three-year study on the future of Mississippis dove population.
Dove season, which opened Sept. 2, annually brings out some 80,000 hunters in search of the nations No. 1 harvested bird. Dave Godwin of the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks said that, while more than 1.5 million doves were harvested in Mississippi last year alone, "little research has been done on the one most frequently hunted, the mourning dove."
Sponsored by Godwins department with Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration funding, the dove population study is a research center first. MSU wildlife and fisheries professor Francisco Vilella is project leader.
"This is a unique project because we are looking at dove habitat relationships for a large landscape and over a long time period," he said. "This also is the first time the entire state has been studied."
Since 1966, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has inventoried dove populations along 23 secondary roads and other routes in Mississippi. Focusing on 10 of those routes, MSU researchers are comparing population counts generated from the annual study to changes they have identified in landscape and habitat.
While final data isnt available yet, general trends are evident, Vilella said. Among the findings: overall numbers of doves are on the decline in Mississippi, but mourning doves are more abundant in the Delta, possibly because agriculture is the predominant land use in that area.
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