A steamboat captain recalled seeing great flocks of prairie chickens at
Bird's Point in 1840, writing "Then we gazed in wonderment, but very soon our eyes were drawn to something more attractive which caused us to forget the great river. The whole banks or sandbars on either river were a mass of quail or partridges. I have never in my life seen such a grand sight. They had come from the prairies to the river, but unable to fly across either stream there they were by the millions running up and down each river until they had made paths and roads. We killed a great many with sticks and clubs and took them to the boat. We met Dick Bird, the man this point took its name from, and he said we could look for a cold winter, as the quails and prairie chickens were leaving the prairies and trying to get south to escape the cold." The greater prairie-chicken was almost extinct in the 1930s due to hunting pressure and habitat loss. In
Illinois alone, in the 1800s, the prairie-chicken numbered in the millions. It was a popular game bird, and like many prairie birds, which have also suffered massive habitat loss, it is now on the verge of extinction, with the wild bird population at around 200 in
Illinois in 2019. It now only lives on small parcels of managed prairie land. Throughout North America, it is thought that their current population has declined severely, to approximately 360,000 individuals as of 2020. It was again confirmed by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada in November 2009. Nonetheless, sightings and encounters continue to occur in the south-central regions of Alberta and Saskatchewan, along with southern Ontario, where sightings are extremely rare. In states such as Iowa and Missouri that once had thriving prairie-chicken populations (estimated to be hundreds of thousands), total numbers have dropped to about 500. However, the
Missouri Department of Conservation has started a program to import prairie-chickens from
Kansas and
Nebraska in the hopes that they will be able to repopulate the state and increase that number to 3,000. Wisconsin is home to a small population of greater prairie-chickens, down from 55,000 when first estimated in 1929 by A.O. Gross. Gross's contemporary,
Aldo Leopold, felt that this population estimate was over-optimistic. In 1955, the hunting of prairie chickens was outlawed in Wisconsin. By 1998, a census of booming cocks (male birds) counted a total of 649 birds in their remaining habitat in central Wisconsin. As of 2025, up to 307 cocks were counted on booming grounds in central Wisconsin, the highest population recorded since 2007 – this population increase is largely driven by a growing population at the Buena Vista prairie management area. Though this area was predominately spruce and tamarack marsh before European settlement, early pioneers drained the marshes and attempted to farm the poor soil. As the prairies to the south and west were lost to agriculture and development, and the southern half of Wisconsin was logged, the prairies spread northward into the abandoned farmland. Today, over 30,000 acres are managed by the
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources as greater prairie-chicken habitat. Surveys conducted in 2025 detected that 38 different booming grounds were present in central Wisconsin wildlife areas.
Conservation of subspecies The Attwater's prairie chicken is one of the most endangered endemic species of the United States, its biggest threats are habitat loss caused by
industrialisation and natural disasters such as
Hurricane Harvey. There were many conservation efforts to save the heath hen. The biggest threats towards the subspecies were overhunting due to perceived overabundance, predation from
invasive species such as
feral cats, and natural disasters. As early as 1791, bills were passed to protect the species but were poorly enforced. By 1870, the heath hen was extirpated from mainland North America, leaving a
relict population of 300 individuals on
Martha's Vineyard. In 1908 the "Heath Hen Reserve" (Now the
Manuel F. Correllus State Forest) was established as a last ditch effort to save the remaining birds. By late 1928, only one male individual remained, Booming Ben, the
endling of the subspecies. Booming Ben was last seen in March 1932, with his disappearance marking the extinction of his subspecies. There is an ongoing project to potentially
revive the heath hen through
genome editing and reintroduce it to Martha's Vineyard. The project is carried out by American non-profit,
Revive & Restore. ==Threats==