How do the birds break up the chicks/poults are grown?
I would assume that the hens stick around, and the jakes move off? If the hens and jakes from the same clutches both stuck around, I would assume there would be significant inbreeding?
One a different note, I have watched the vast majority of birds on a 500 acre ranch use the same area for the whole season... 3 toms, 2 jakes, and about 30 hens.... (This is following an extremely warm winter, and an unusually cool spring).
All season, they fly off the roost into a large bowl-like meadow area surrounded by woods, and then walk or fly into a high-fence pasture on the neighboring property... On the limb all the birds are very vocal, but once on the ground there is very little chatter. I am assuming some of this behavior is dictated by heavy predator pressure.
The hens are already starting to sit on the nest (as I bumped a hen on the nest walking in last weekend)... There are bachelor groups of 2-4 jakes on the property as well...
Early in the season, I heard a lone hen yelping like crazy on the limb, and figured/hoped she was with a silent tom (and maybe other hens)... I set up near her a bit after fly-down, hoping to call in the tom (I assumed she was with)... She came in to my calling (yelping and cutting the whole time), as did 3 jakes from the opposite direction...
The jakes were interested in her, but she was not interested in them. It was an interesting interaction to watch unfold, but would love to understand some of the biology behind it... What was she doing all alone (and so vocal), and why the disinterest in the jakes?
One of the things I enjoy about turkey hunting is trying to understand behavior and the science behind things...