WEST Publication: Sage-grouse and Sagebrush Songbirds Don’t Agree on Quality Habitat

Share This Article

WEST Research Biometrician Dr. Jason Carlisle is the lead author on a recently published study examining how beneficial sage-grouse conservation might be for songbird species of concern that also live in sagebrush ecosystems. Conservation actions to benefit sage-grouse are often focused in areas with high abundance of sage-grouse, under the assumption that other species occur there in large numbers, therefore also benefiting from those actions. The team, including the US Geological Survey and University of Wyoming, compared the abundance of sage-grouse and six songbird species of concern in Wyoming and found little agreement between species, suggesting actions to benefit sage-grouse might miss other species of concern. The publication titled “The abundance of Greater Sage-grouse as a proxy for the abundance of sagebrush-associated songbirds in Wyoming, USA” appears in the peer-reviewed journal Avian Conservation and Ecology: https://doi.org/10.5751/ACE-01702-150216

WEST Webinar | A Decade Later: New Findings on Wind Energy Development and Greater Sage-Grouse

April 29, 2026

Advancing Science‑based Conservation with Innovative Strategies at the ACP Siting and Permitting Conference 

April 17, 2026

WEST is Hiring!

April 3, 2026