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As soon as all the eggs in a greater sage-grouse nest have hatched, the hen and surviving chicks leave the spot behind, in search of food and water.
Broods spend the long summer days walking about, then bed down each night where they find themselves when sunlight wanes. They no longer use a nest, but the hen continues to shelter young as they rest until first light.
By fall, the chicks will generally reach full height, though first-year males will still be somewhat smaller than their elders as they arrive at their first lek in the spring.
If the sagebrush canopy is not thick enough, a brood is at higher risk of being spotted from above or sniffed out at ground level by predators that are among the more than 350 other species native to sagebrush habitats: eagles, ravens and hawks aloft, coyotes and badgers, skunks and foxes at ground level.
Chicks and adults eat the summer leaves and flowers of sagebrush, grasses and native flowering plants, called forbs. Insects and spiders living on the plants or the ground supplement the grouses’ diet.
Healthy habitats sustain enough chicks through maturity and allow population numbers to stabilize. Biologists estimate that an average of 2.25 hatchlings per-hen need to survive their first year of life to keep a local population viable.