Browsers that can not handle javascript will not be able to access some features of this site.
Skip Navigation
DNR BannerMichigan.gov, Official Website for Michigan
Michigan.gov Home DNR Home | Links | Site Map | Contact DNR | Ask DNR
Printer Friendly Version Printer Friendly   Text Only Version Text Version Email this page Email Page
Spruce Grouse (Canachites canadensis)

This grouse lives in young, middle aged to mature Michigan jack pine forests, as well as dense spruce, fir, cedar, and tamarack swamps, in the Lower and Upper peninsulas. It is larger than a pigeon and stands about 15 to 17 inches in height.

The female is deep brown in color and has black barred feathers, with facial feathers extending down the beak. Her body lacks the black belly feathers of the male and is tancolored and mottled. The tail is unbarred with a buffcolored band. Her flank feathers are blotched with white.

Flanks on a male spruce grouse are white spotted. The male also has a patch of red colored skin above the back of the eye, and the tail is tipped with a chestnut band. This blending of colors allows the spruce grouse to blend with the colors of needles, leaves and lichens.

Spruce grouse walk with jerky heads and a stiff legged gait, as if planting each foot with purpose as they strut among the duff on the forest floor. They leave three pronged footprints as lasting images of their explorations in the soft forest soils. In winter snows, their toes, which are edged with hair like feathers, create miniature snowshoe imprints.

The nesting hen makes a small depression of about five to six inches in diameter and one to two inches deep among needles and leaf litter underneath young jack pine branches and bent bracken fern stems. Clutch size may be five to as many as 16 eggs. An incubating hen will remain on the nest throughout most forest disturbances, even those that are obvious threats to her safety.

Hatching occurs in June. Chicks will leave the nest as soon as they can walk. Just after hatching they rarely venture more than a foot or two from their nest. Soon they are exploring the forest floor under the watchful eye of the hen. Within a short time, the young are flying on their own.

Predation of spruce grouse is by coyotes, red foxes, weasels, hawks and owls. The tame personality of the spruce grouse often allows people to approach to a close range. Spruce grouse are sometimes mistaken for ruffed grouse.

Spruce grouse are fully protected in Michigan and, because they are rare, are listed on the Special Concern list. To see one in its natural habitat provides an enriching experience for anyone so lucky.

Link to Department and Agencies Web Site Index
Link to Statewide Online Services Index
Link to Statewide Web-based Surveys
Link to RSS feeds available on this site
Related Content
 •  Mourning Dove (Zenaida macroura)
 •  American Goldfinch (Carduelis tristis)
 •  Brown-headed Cowbird (Molothrus ater)
 •  Common Crow (Corvus brachyrhynchos)
 •  Common Raven (Corvis corax)
 •  Black-backed Woodpecker (Picoides arcticus)
 •  Red crossbill (Loxia curvirostra)
 •  Wild Turkey (Meleagris gallopavo)
 •  Loggerhead Shrike (Lanius ludovicianus)
 •  Pileated Woodpecker (Dryocuopus pileatus)
 •  Scarlet Tanager (Piranga olivacea)
 •  Kirtland's Warbler (Dendroica kirtlandii)

Michigan.gov Home | DNR Home | Report All Poaching 1-800-292-7800 | Feedback | Contact DNR | Ask DNR | State Web Sites
Privacy Policy | Link Policy | Accessibility Policy | Security Policy | Michigan News | Michigan.gov Survey

Copyright © 2001-2007 State of Michigan