Wisconsin's Prairie Chickens
Conservation and Courtship
Wisconsin's greater prairie chicken (Tympanuchus cupido
pinnatus) began its return from near extinction in this state when, in
1954, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (WDNR) entered into a
partnership with Wisconsin conservation groups to establish a prairie chicken
management program on the Buena Vista Grasslands in southwestern Portage County.
Successful growth and continuation of this project has saved a
species.
Today, the population of greater prairie
chickens changes yearly, but a few thousand chickens can be found in the central
part of the state each fall. These birds breed, nest, raise their young, and
weather the seasons in a landscape still capable of supporting this native
grouse species.
Learn about the "comeback story" of a
bird with a past and, thanks to the continuing efforts of many people, a bird
with a future. Their original prairie habitat may be gone, but these remarkable
birds now thrive in the "surrogate" grasslands of central Wisconsin where the
age-old sounds of territorial aggression, conflict, and competition are heard
each spring.