The Battalion i' m MONDAY April 24, 1996 GGIE Page 3 A fowl way of life A&M program aims to save Attwater prairie chickens By John LeBas The Battalion A t one time, as many as one mil lion Attwater prairie chickens roamed the country between Louisiana and Mexico. Native Americans integrated the chicken into their culture, imitat ing the bird’s head and tail feather displays and mating dances in dress and ritual. Now, mostly due to habitat re duction, 40 chickens or less exist in the wild. However, a Wildlife and Fish eries Sciences program at Texas A&M is working to halt the extinc tion of this en- dangered species. Dr. Nova Silvy, a professor in the Depart ment of Wildlife and Fish eries Sci- e n c e s , said the Attwater prairie chicken is actually one of four prairie grouse sub species. The heath hen, a sub species that used to live in in the Eastern states, is already ex tinct, and the Attwater prairie chicken is predicted to die out in the wild by 1998. Tripping Daisy returns to Bryan-College Station “They require large expanses of prairie habitat,” Silvy said, “and that’s gone. The major reason is that this habitat is the easiest to go to crop land.” Since the United States expand ed from the East, the heath hen was the first to go extinct, Silvy said. Urban sprawl in Texas, like in Houston, has helped contribute to the Attwater prairie chicken population crash. Degraded prairie lands, on which the chickens are more susceptible to predation, and fewer habitat-renewing fires have also taken a toll on the population. The captive propaga tion program at A&M aims to stabilize and raise the number in captivity, while supplementing the existing population, with the hope that later, habitat conditions will im prove,” Silvy said. Along with similar programs at the Houston and San Antonio Zoos and the Fossil Rim Wildlife Center, researchers at A&M are striving to save the birds through captive breeding. The small number of chickens has created breeding prob lems, Silvy said. ; “One problem we found in I the wild was we had isolat ed populations that were highly inbred,” he said. “In the facilities, we bring in males from one county to mate with females from another.” Researchers hope the more genetically diverse birds will have increased vigor and a greater chance of survival in the wild. Clifton Griffin, a wildlife and fisheries doctoral student, said photomanipulation is used to increase offspring numbers. Pho tomanipulation involves altering the amount of light hens receive to induce more frequent egg lay ing, and thus more chicks, he said. But Attwater chicks eat a lot of insects in early life — up to 17 grams per day. Finding an ade quate number of insects to feed the chicks has been a bit of a hurdle, Griffin said. Food shortages may also affect wild chickens, he said. “One of the factors we feel like is leading to the demise of the Attwa ter prairie chicken is a lack of in sect availability,” he said. When chickens move into adult hood and begin eating vegetation, a new problem arises. The chickens are raised on commercial feed in captivity but must learn to eat vege tation upon release. “There are not any little red feed and water bowls on the prairie,” Griffin said. “This year, we’re going to try to train them to go back to native vegetation before they’re re leased,” Silvy said. Training s u r - vival in the wild remains a large as pect of the prairie chicken’s future. But Silvy said researchers are en couraged by last year’s chicken re lease — 15 percent have survived, without any such training. Typical survival rates in the wild from egg to adult chicken are about three percent. This year, researchers hope to release as many as 100 captive- bred and trained birds in the wild. These birds will be fitted with ra dio transmitting collars for track ing purposes. While the fate of the chickens remains to be determined, Griffin is confident about their survival. “Within a few years, we’ve worked out many of the details of raising the chickens,” he said. “Now, we can increase the scale. “We need to keep getting land, because there is no sense in hav ing a huge number of birds if you have nowhere to put them.” Griffin said the state of the prairie chicken also points to the poor condition of the entire tall grass prairie ecosystem. Without signifi cant increas es in popu lation, the Attwater species ja _ t will be lost, he said, and might indicate the destruction of this entire ecosystem. “This is a critical year,” he said. “Hopefully, it’s not too little, too late.” Tripping Daisy (above) is returning to College Sta tion to play its first show at A&M since last sum- mer. The band is playing tonight at The Tap. Queens Theatre one of several buildings to be renovated as part of downtown Bryan revitalization By Kristina Buffin The Battalion T he oldest build ing in down town Bryan dates back to the 1890s. However, one hundred years later, most of the historic buildings are ei ther deserted or in hor rible condition. Over the next few years, down town Bryan will become a place where more A&M students and Bryan-College Station residents fre quent for entertainment, shopping and work. The revitalization of downtown Bryan will include the refurbishing of the Queens Theatre, the LaSalle Hotel and the Carnegie Library. The owners of the 3rd Floor Canti na and the Dixie Theatre, Willie Bennett and John Williams, pur chased the Queens Theatre when they realized they were losing bigger bands because the venues were not large enough. “The music scene is growing,” Ben nett said. “More bars around town have live music and there is an in creasing overall awareness of the mu sic scene in Bryan-College Station. We believe in downtown Bryan.” See Bryan, Page 4 Gwendolyn Struve, The Battalion The Queens Theatre, which has been closed for 30 years, is being renovated. musk poetry food RESEARCH PARK FRIDAY. APRIL 26 7.00 PM and its all free... because we love you. follow the orange signs down University Dr. and into Research Park 1997 Aggieland Applications Available Now!!! Due by 5 p.m. Friday, April 26 Positions Available: Writer/Reporter Designers Photographers Pick up applications in 012 Reed McDonald