Nature Conservancy, DNR stream greater prairie chickens booming at Bluestem Prairie

Apr. 25—CLAY COUNTY, Minn. — The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources has placed a

livestreaming camera

at The Nature Conservancy's Bluestem Prairie Preserve in Clay County to showcase the sights and sounds of greater prairie chickens' annual mating behavior, known as booming.

To watch the livestream, go to

nature.org/minnesota

and click on the link under "Latest News."

At dawn, male prairie chickens venture out to a short-grass patch in the prairie known as a lek, where they perform an intricate courtship display in which they hop, strut, flap their wings, fill their vibrant orange air sacs and make a low booming sound. That's why the behavior is known as "booming." The displaying birds may even spar with other males, all for the attention of females.

"All this fighting, displays and booming are the male prairie chicken's way of showcasing his fitness to the females," Rob Baden, area wildlife manager for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources in Detroit Lakes, said in a statment. "If you haven't witnessed the dance of the prairie chicken, you are missing one of nature's finest shows." Prairie chicken hens look on to the booming males to scout out a mate. A hen signals to a male that she's interested by dropping her wings and squatting. They mate on the lek, and then the hen finds taller grass to set up her nest and lay her dozen or so eggs.

Prairie chickens were once abundant across the Great Plains. Today, there are

only about 360,000

living in small pockets of grassland such as TNC's

Bluestem Prairie

, which is one of the largest and highest quality remaining northern tallgrass prairies.

Habitat loss is the main culprit for the greater prairie chicken's decline. The birds rely on large, nearly treeless landscapes of grassland. Most of their original range has been converted to agriculture over the last several decades, reducing their suitable habitat to a small fraction of what it once was.

"Greater prairie chickens are truly an icon of the prairie. I'm so excited to share this livestream so viewers can appreciate the beauty and spectacle of Minnesota's grasslands," said Ann Mulholland, director of The Nature Conservancy's Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota chapter. "Watching the booming each spring reminds me how important our work to preserve and restore native grasslands for the survival not only of greater prairie chickens, but for all species that call the prairie home."

The Nature Conservancy, Minnesota DNR, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service all have viewing blinds available for the public to reserve. Information on how to reserve a blind

can be found

at prairiechickens.org/how-to-view.