From the Wildlife Conservation Society:
New Long Distance Migration Route
for Pronghorn Found
in Idaho by Wildlife
Conservation Society and Lava Lake Institute
GPS
collars reveal that southern Idaho
pronghorn population
has one
of the longest overland migrations in the American West
Effort
underway to protect herd numbering 1,000 animals
threatened
by increasing development
BRONX, NEW YORK (October 29, 2009)
– Researchers from the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) and the
Idaho-based Lava Lake Institute for Science and Conservation discovered a new
overland migration route of pronghorn antelope that ranks among the farthest
for any land mammal in the Western Hemisphere.
The migration route stretches from the base of Idaho’s
Pioneers Mountains
to the continental divide’s Beaverhead Mountains, passing through Craters
of the Moon National Monument and Reserve – a
round trip in excess of 160 miles. The route crosses federal, state, and
private land and narrows in one stretch to a bottleneck less than two football
fields wide. There, animals are restricted by mountains, fences, a
highway, and fields of jagged lava from Craters of the Moon National Monument
and Preserve.
(Images: WCS)
The discovery is part of an ongoing study to track pronghorn using GPS and
radio collars. The study’s investigators include Dr. Scott Bergen
of the Wildlife Conservation Society, Tess O’Sullivan of the Lava Lake Institute of Science and Conservation, and Mark
Hurley of Idaho Fish and Game.
“This study shows that pronghorn are the true marathoners of the American
West,” said Scott Bergen, project director for WCS. “With
these new findings, we can confirm that Idaho
supports a major overland mammal migration – something that is becoming
increasingly rare in the U.S.
and worldwide.”
The researchers tracked the pronghorn’s daily movements during their
annual migration. They estimate 100-200 pronghorn currently use the
migration route. During the winter, the pronghorn congregate with other
regional herds from the area, making it Idaho’s
largest pronghorn herd of around one thousand animals.
The authors warn that the route is threatened by increased habitat
fragmentation from development and other land-use changes. Growing
interest in development of large-scale wind farms and their associated
power-lines could threaten the migration route.
“As the American West continues to face increased development pressure,
preserving migratory corridors will become more and more crucial to
safeguarding large populations of wildlife like pronghorn,” said Dr. Jodi
Hilty, Director of North America Programs for the Wildlife Conservation
Society, and author of the book Corridor
Ecology. “We have lost so many migrations globally, that
these sorts of finds should inspire more of us to help give this uniquely
American species a chance to roam in Idaho
and throughout its range.”
WCS is working with ranchers, conservationists, and public lands managers to
safeguard the large family ranches that have helped support this migration
route over the past 100 years. The Pioneers Alliance, a coalition of
landowners, ranchers, conservationists, and state and federal land managers, is
working to develop conservation easements and other mechanisms to protect
working ranches and farms that are part of the pronghorn migration route.
“We are committed to working with many partners, including private
landowners and state and federal land managers to take the steps needed to
sustain this long distance migration,” said Tess O’Sullivan,
Program Director for the Lava Lake Institute.
Some of the data collected by the GPS collars will help researchers better
understand – and ultimately protect – the pronghorn’s
little-known wintering grounds. Data will also be used to inform the
Western Governor’s Association,
which continues to work toward protecting pronghorn migration. Recently
the Governors of Idaho and Montana signed agreements with the
Departments of Interior, Agriculture, and Energy to improve management on federal lands
where pronghorn migrate. In addition,
Congress has recognized the value of wildlife migrations corridors as a
strategy for adapting to global warming in pending climate change
legislation.
In 2005, Wildlife Conservation Society scientists used GPS collars to document
another migratory herd of pronghorn in Wyoming
that travel from Grand Teton National Park to the Green River Valley.
With the leadership of the U.S. Forest Service,
the nation’s first designated wildlife migration corridor to protect
150-mile round-trip movement of pronghorn in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
was created. It has since been safeguarded in a unique public/private
partnership called “Path of the Pronghorn.”
This project is being supported by the Wildlife Conservation Society, Lava Lake
Institute for Science and Conservation, Idaho Department of Fish and Game,
Bureau of Land Management, The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, Idaho
Conservation League, LightHawk Aviation, National Park Foundation, the National
Park Service, The Conservation Fund, Wood River Land Trust, Carey area
landowners and ranchers, The Nature Conservancy, and the Craters of the Moon
Natural History Association.
The Wildlife Conservation Society saves wildlife and wild places worldwide. We do
so through science, global conservation, education and the management of the
world's largest system of urban
wildlife parks, led by the flagship Bronx Zoo. Together these activities
change attitudes towards nature and help people imagine wildlife and humans
living in harmony. WCS is committed to this mission because it is
essential to the integrity of life on Earth. Visit: www.wcs.org
The Lava Lake Institute works to accomplish
conservation and increase understanding of wildlife and ecosystems of the
Pioneer Mountains – Craters of the Moon
Region. www.lavalakeinstitute.org
Cool Pronghorn Facts
- Lewis and Clark
called pronghorn “speed goats.” They can reach speeds of
60 mph, making them second only to cheetahs in speed for land animals.
- Researchers collar
speedy pronghorns using helicopters that launch nets to temporarily
capture them.
- Once numbering in
the millions, pronghorn have been reduced by some 90-95 percent although
almost a million still live in the American West.
- A previous WCS study
showed the pronghorn benefit from wolves by reducing populations of coyote
that normally prey heavily on pronghorn fawns.
- WCS’s Queen
Zoo recently debuted a pronghorn fawn.
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