Ptarmigan, close relatives of forest and prairie
grouse, live in alpine and arctic tundras
throughout the northern hemisphere. There are
three kinds of ptarmigan, and all are found
in Alaska. Willow Ptarmigan (Lagopus
lagopus) are found nearly everywhere in
Alaska’s high, treeless country. They occupy a
broad range throughout Canada, Scandinavia,
Finland and Russia. The famous Red Grouse of
Scotland is a race of the Willow Ptarmigan.
Rock Ptarmigan (Lagopus mutus) also
live in Canada, Scandinavia, Scotland, and
northern Eurasia. They range through most of
Greenland and Iceland and have scattered
southern outposts in Japan, Switzerland, and
Spain. In Alaska, Rock Ptarmigan live in all
major treeless areas except the flat tundras of
the western and northern coasts. White-tailed
Ptarmigan (Lagopus leucurus) are
strictly North American. They occupy rugged
uplands from the Alaska Range and central Yukon
southward to Washington and northern New Mexico.
General description:
Ptarmigan look
just like small grouse, weighing from 10 1/2
ounces to 1 1/2 pounds (0.3-0.7 kg) except that
their toes are feathered, their wings are white
all year, and they have pure white body plumage
in winter.
Life history: In early spring, male
ptarmigan become intolerant of other males and
establish territories that they defend
vigorously with aerial chases and a variety of
gargling, croaking, and screaming noises.
Sometimes the three species are found on a
single mountain, and often two kinds breed close
together. In such cases there is usually a clear
altitudinal separation of the various kinds,
with Willow Ptarmigan living closest to
timberline, Rock Ptarmigan on middle slopes and
low ridges, and White-tails high among rough
rocky screes and boulder-strewn ridges close to
glaciers or snowfields.
All ptarmigan nest on the ground soon after
the snow melts. Hens usually lay six to ten eggs
which are incubated for three weeks. Hatching
takes place in late June and early July
throughout Alaska. The male Willow Ptarmigan
stays with the family and doesn’t hesitate to
defend the brood, but male White-tails and Rock
Ptarmigan leave the care of chicks entirely to
hens. The chicks grow with amazing speed. They
can get off the ground only 9 to 10 days after
hatching and fly well when they get their first
full set of flight feathers at 8 to 10 weeks of
age.
Autumn is a time of restlessness.
Flocks form
and disperse and form again, and the birds move
around into unfamiliar alpine areas. In October
the wandering takes on a pattern; females tend
to form their own flocks and drift lower down
into brushy forest openings while cocks stay
close to timberline. The extent of the fall
movements varies from place to place, but
migrations of 100 to 150 miles (160-240 km) one
way probably are the longest undertaken by any
ptarmigans in Alaska.
Ptarmigan are nomadic in winter, moving
erratically from one sheltered slope or patch of
food to another from November to March. The
birds are quite sociable in winter and usually
feed and roost in the snow close together. In
April and early May, flocks of ptarmigan
numbering several thousand sometimes appear in
purposeful movement back to their breeding
grounds. These huge flocks, perhaps created by
the funneling effect of river valleys and narrow
mountain passes, rapidly disintegrate when the
summering areas are reached, as each cock
demands his share of elbow room in the vast
stretches of white and brown tundra.
Foods: When snow covers the ground,
Willow Ptarmigan eat willow buds, willow twigs,
and a little birch. Rock Ptarmigan nip off birch
catkins, birch buds, and a little willow.
White-tails mix buds and catkins of willow,
birch, and alder in varying amounts. This diet
lasts until well along in the courtship period
of spring, giving way as snow melts to a blend
of insects, overwintered berries, new leaves,
and flowers. The birds eat a potpourri of
vegetable matter in summer and occasionally take
advantage of a particularly abundant crop of
caterpillars or beetles. Gradually, as insects
disappear and plants become dormant, the diet
turns increasingly to berries, seeds, and buds.
By mid-October most ptarmigan (except in coastal
areas of Southcentral Alaska) are back to their
winter menu.
Populations:
Ptarmigan are notorious for their here-today,
gone-tomorrow populations, pulsing between
superabundance and virtual absence in just a few
years. The causes of the rapid population
changes remain a mystery. Many people think that
ptarmigan numbers fluctuate rhythmically, with
peaks once every 9 or 10 years. Although there
is good evidence for these cycles in Iceland,
cycles are more legend than proven fact in
Alaska. As with many other grouse, the
population depends very heavily on each year’s
production of chicks, since this year’s chicks
will be next year’s breeding stock. Under these
conditions, one or two years of poor
reproduction or high winter losses can cause
drastic declines in abundance. Conversely, one
or two good years might result in more ptarmigan
than you could shake a shotgun at.
Hunting: Ptarmigan hunting is fun. You
never know what to expect from one trip to the
next. On opening day you tramp through colorful
thickets of willow and dwarf birch, your dog
nosing coveys of brown birds out of the brush
while you mop your brow and wish you hadn’t put
on a sweater. Late in September, after facing a
strong, cold wind for several fruitless hours,
you top out on a rocky ridge and suddenly find
yourself surrounded by several hundred
stretch-necked, pinto-patterned ptarmigan. You
hang up your shotgun for five months, only to be
tolled into the hills again by the bright blue
days of March. Warmly clad in parka and mukluks,
you snowshoe across narrow alpine valleys
following meandering trails of three-pronged
ptarmigan tracks across the brilliant snow.
Ptarmigan
hunting can be a serious business,
especially if you live in Alaska’s vast
hinterland and caribou have been scarce. Then is
the time to go after ptarmigan in earnest, using
all the tricks at your command. Snares are very
effective when used by those who know the birds
well. A favorite method is to build a thin fence
of close-set willow branches, leaving small
openings where the snares are set. Another
technique takes advantage of the fact that
ptarmigan drag their feet in soft snow. A series
of snare loops are tied into a long line, and
the loops are placed flat on the ground around a
favorite thicket of willows. Birds step into the
loops, drag their feet forward--and are caught.
Text: Robert B. Weeden
Illustration: R.T. Wallen
Revised and reprinted 1994
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