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Fauna · Pinedale, Wyoming, United States

Greater Sage-Grouse Lek Dawn Dance — Wyoming USA

The greater sage-grouse lek in Wyoming's Powder River Basin — the largest remaining sage-grouse population in the world — is one of North America's most extraordinary bird displays. Males arrive at ancestral lek sites before dawn from late March through May and perform their inflatable air-sac display: the yellow air sacs on the breast inflated and deflated rapidly while tail feathers fan in a white-spiked circle, producing a resonant swishing-and-plopping sound audible at 500 metres. At peak lek density with 80–120 males displaying simultaneously, the sound — a liquid, bubbling, mechanical chorus — is one of the American West's most alien yet compelling audio environments. The dawn light on the sage-covered plains, the white circles of tail feathers moving against the blue-grey pre-dawn, and the territorial rushing and jumping between males creates a spectacle of prehistoric intensity that is entirely vanishing from a landscape diminished by energy development.

When
Mar — May
Best viewing
Arrive in darkness and watch from a distance as scores of male sage-grouse inflate their breast sacs and fan their tail feathers in a resonant, otherworldly dawn chorus. The display peaks at first light and dissolves within an hour or two of sunrise.
Category
Fauna
Status
Peak season

About this spectacle

Before first light, the sage-covered plains of Wyoming's Powder River Basin come alive with one of North America's most astonishing avian theatres. Male greater sage-grouse converge on ancestral lek sites in numbers reaching 80–120 birds simultaneously, spreading their white-spiked tail feathers into stiff fans while rapidly inflating and deflating vivid yellow breast sacs. The result is a liquid, bubbling, mechanical chorus — audible at 500 metres — that carries across the blue-grey pre-dawn stillness like nothing else on the continent. As the sky brightens, the white tail circles and puffed chests become visible against the sage, punctuated by explosive territorial rushes and mid-air clashes between rival males. The sound environment alone — alien, resonant, oddly hypnotic — justifies rising before dawn. Visitors crouch in vehicle blinds or low hides at the lek perimeter, watching the display intensify as daylight grows, then dissolve as males disperse. The Pinedale Lek Complex in Sublette County holds the world's largest remaining sage-grouse population, giving this site global significance among bird spectacle enthusiasts.

When to go

Mar — May

Getting there

Nearest airport: RKS. Nearest city: Pinedale.

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