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Study links long-distance movement of mule deer to robust population growth

by Wyoming Livestock Roundup

Ungulate migration has fascinated people for millennia. In the western U.S., ungulates such as elk, bison and mule deer migrate each spring and fall, navigating snow, predators and human infrastructure.

New research by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the University of Wyoming (UW), recently published in Current Biology, reveals migrating mule deer access more productive summer ranges, have higher adult survival and raise more offspring compared to resident mule deer that remain year-round in a desert ecosystem. 

These findings help explain the burning question of why ungulates migrate – to find more and better food.

“This study provides some of the strongest evidence to date on why ungulates need to migrate across western landscapes,” says Matthew Kauffman, a USGS researcher at the Wyoming Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit based at UW. “Access to forage, fat gained, fawns raised, surviving through harsh winters – you name it. The migratory animals did much better than their resident counterparts.”

Study details

The nine-year study followed a portion of the Sublette mule deer herd which spends the winter in the Red Desert of south-central Wyoming. 

Kauffman and others, including Kevin Monteith from UW’s Haub School of Environment and Natural Resources, captured more than 200 mule deer at the beginning and end of winter to attach GPS collars and document each animal’s body fat, which is a measure of their overall nutritional condition. 

They monitored where deer migrated, how many offspring they raised each year and when deer died, which allowed them to quantify population growth.

Previous research by the team had documented mule deer in this herd use three strategies. Some deer are residents and remain year-round in the desert sagebrush shrubland, whereas other deer travel mid-distances of 50 miles or longer distances of 100-plus miles to different summer ranges.

But this new study – connecting their movement data from the GPS collars to survival, reproduction and population growth – provides a rare understanding of how different migration strategies translate into population performance. 

By traveling to mountainous summer ranges, long- and medium-distance migrants accessed more nutritious forage and outperformed residents when the researchers compared fat gain, survival and reproduction rates.

“But it’s not necessarily the distance of migration. It’s the act of migrating and obtaining access to more profitable seasonal ranges outside of the desert ecosystem which allow deer to maintain adult survival and robust population growth,” says the paper’s Lead Author Anna Ortega, a UW PhD graduate and now lead researcher at Western Wildlife Research Collective LLC.

The long-term study was conducted in collaboration with the Wyoming Game and Fish Department (WGFD), as the migration traverses both their Green River and Pinedale regional offices.

“Since 2016, the agency has had a focus on mapping and protecting migration corridors across the state,” says Brandon Scurlock with the WGFD’s Pinedale Field Office. “This study makes it very clear why it is so important to sustain the migrations Wyoming’s mule deer require.”

Research findings 

Overall, migrants had more body fat than residents, buffering the migrants from extreme weather. Fatter migrating deer at the beginning of winter had higher survival than residents during winters with deep snow. Migrants ultimately lived longer than residents and consistently had more twins.

“Basically, it’s terrible to live in the desert and not migrate,” Ortega says. “It’s a really difficult – and unproductive – lifestyle for these deer.”

The study’s years of demographic data also point to migration allowing deer to be more resilient in the face of a decade-long drought which has gripped the common landscape used by all three strategies. 

While the migrant population continued to show robust growth despite dry years, the residents’ combination of reduced survival and few offspring was indicative of a population in decline. 

In fact, their analyses indicate residents could go extinct in 40 to 50 years, and this timeline could be accelerated with more extreme droughts under current climatic conditions.

The study emphasizes how critical these migrations are for mule deer and other ungulates across the American West. 

“Over four million mule deer inhabit the western U.S., but encroaching subdivisions, fencing, roads and energy infrastructure create obstacles limiting or blocking migrations entirely,” Kauffman says. “It’s a cautionary note for mule deer across the western U.S., most of which are migratory. If we lose those migrations, our western landscapes will support far fewer deer.”

This story was originally published on UW News on Feb. 10. For more information, visit uwyo.edu/news.

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