What we can learn from wild turkeys

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If you plan to travel around Western North Carolina or East Tennessee to visit friends or family and eat turkey for the coming Thanksgiving holiday, there is a good chance you’ll spot a few wild turkeys along the way. Although sometimes we humans may call one another “turkey” as a lighthearted insult, our species can actually learn a lot from the big bird known as Meleagris gallopavo.

Keenly aware of the presence of predators, turkeys will reduce their gobbling and move considerable distances to elude hunters according to Ryan Williamson, a wildlife technician with Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Provided by Joye Ardyn Durham.
Keenly aware of the presence of predators, turkeys will reduce their gobbling and move considerable distances to elude hunters according to Ryan Williamson, a wildlife technician with Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Provided by Joye Ardyn Durham.

Evidence suggests the first turkeys existed as early as 20 million years ago. The modern turkey is related to other game birds like pheasants, quail, grouse, and partridges. There are five subspecies of turkey, each differing in plumage and range. Wild turkeys have keen eyesight, are born with innate knowledge of predators and landscape, and are talkative, gregarious animals. They maintain a strong family or “clan” mentality and are superb communicators and collaborators.

“When given the opportunity to study them in graduate school, I realized turkeys were a fascinating species,” said Michael J. Chamberlain, a professor of wildlife ecology with the University of Georgia who grew up hunting turkeys and now studies their behavior all over the Southeast. “Turkeys communicate in various ways from vocalizations to appearance. It is believed that turkeys primarily recognize each other through these vocalizations and the appearance of their heads.”

Of particular interest to Chamberlain are the social hierarchies that influence how individual turkeys behave throughout their lives. Male and female wild turkeys spend much of the year together in a flock.

“Pecking orders introduce structure into the flocks we observe,” said Chamberlain. “This structure is something we do not fully understand, but it clearly influences how they behave and interact throughout the year.”

Both males and females maintain pecking orders in which a dominate bird holds sway over subordinates. These pecking orders begin to form when birds are only a few days old, but they are also fluid and ever-changing.

In the spring, male wild turkeys begin their “lek” breeding displays. According to the revised edition of Birds of the Smokies, “The spring courtship often involves several females in close company with a strutting cock. He droops his wings until their tips almost drag the ground and spreads his chestnut-tipped tail wide.” Provided by Warren Lynn.
In the spring, male wild turkeys begin their “lek” breeding displays. According to the revised edition of “Birds of the Smokies“, “The spring courtship often involves several females in close company with a strutting cock. He droops his wings until their tips almost drag the ground and spreads his chestnut-tipped tail wide.” Provided by Warren Lynn.

“Turkeys constantly test these pecking orders, by fighting, pecking at each other, chasing each other, and so forth, seeking to challenge the dominant bird and move up in the hierarchy,” Chamberlain said. “These pecking orders dictate access to resources and breeding opportunities in the spring.”

As spring arrives, males begin their “lek” or group-based breeding rituals. Females will lay an egg each day for 14 days and then incubate the eggs for 28 days until they all have hatched. The young poults are raised by their mother without any fraternal care. The male poults, or jakes, will generally be kicked out of the group the following spring by dominant gobblers.

Wild turkeys were plentiful when European colonists first came to Southern Appalachia. By the early 1900s, however, only a few were left, a decline that continued into the mid-century due to unregulated hunting, rapid deforestation, and habitat destruction.

Thankfully, biologists in the 1950s began to capture surviving individuals in various places and relocate them to suitable habitat with the help of an innovative trap known as a rocket net. These relocation efforts continue today, with birds still being moved to areas in the South where populations have not done as well.

In the Smokies, some of the best places for viewing turkeys are in the relatively open fields of Cades Cove, Cataloochee, and Oconaluftee, along forest edges, and in open woodlands and forest clearings. Provided by Quintin Ellison.
In the Smokies, some of the best places for viewing turkeys are in the relatively open fields of Cades Cove, Cataloochee, and Oconaluftee, along forest edges, and in open woodlands and forest clearings. Provided by Quintin Ellison.

“The restoration of this iconic species is considered one of the greatest conservation success stories in the world,” Chamberlain said, “yet turkeys face ongoing challenges that have resulted in population declines in some areas.”

Turkey researchers in Southern Appalachia are focused on ensuring that we have sustainable populations of wild turkeys in the future. Seeming to have a preternatural cognition of their near extinction in the not-so-distant past, the birds exhibit a keen understanding of the constant threat of predators, including humans.

“During spring the males will gobble to announce their presence on the landscape and hens will call or ‘yelp’ to let males know that they are present in an area,” said Ryan Williamson, a wildlife technician with Great Smoky Mountains National Park. “But they will reduce their spring gobbling to near silence to elude hunting pressure. So, they are aware of the presence of predators and adjust accordingly to survive.”

It is estimated that more than 500 wild turkeys live in the park, but Williamson says the exact number is unknown. “The population does appear to be stable and healthy,” he said, “and seems to be growing every year based on the number of surviving poults seen along roadways.”

But over the past several years, Williamson and other park wildlife managers have begun to observe some human conflicts with turkeys.

“In the park, where humans are not a predator of turkeys, we are seeing an increase in the number of animals that are habituated to people and getting easy meals from visitors,” he explains. “Most animals that have been fed by humans appear to lose their natural fear of people and learn to approach them for food, which most humans find threatening. These turkeys can be aggressive towards humans to acquire food, especially during the springtime when they are naturally aggressive towards each other and will fight to establish dominance.”

The male eastern wild turkey has dark plumage with striking bronze, copper, and green iridescent colors. Females are usually duller in color than males, which helps camouflage them while they are nesting. Provided by Warren Lynn.
The male eastern wild turkey has dark plumage with striking bronze, copper, and green iridescent colors. Females are usually duller in color than males, which helps camouflage them while they are nesting. Provided by Warren Lynn.

Wild turkeys thrive in areas with abundant grasses and shrubby vegetation that grows low to the ground. These plants harbor abundant insects and seeds, which dominate turkey diets. The habitats where wild turkeys thrive are also critically important to other species, such as elk and black bears, who share their requirement for hard mast like acorns in the winter. Ultimately, managing parks and forest lands to ensure turkeys can thrive should mean success for many other important species.

In the Smokies, some of the best places for viewing turkeys are in the relatively open fields of Cades Cove, Cataloochee, and Oconaluftee, along forest edges, and in open woodlands and forest clearings. Early morning is typically an ideal time for birding.

If you’d like to learn more about turkeys and other birds in the Smokies, you can pick up a copy of the newly revised Birds of the Smokies field guide by Fred J. Alsop III online or at any visitor center bookstore in Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

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