Effective Pronghorn Translocation Methodology: A Long-Term Summary

Pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) populations in North America were once estimated at nearly 30 million. However, unrestricted harvest of pronghorn was one of the major factors that led to 25,000 individuals by 1924. Through rigorous management, pronghorn populations rebounded to an estimated 1 mill...

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Veröffentlicht in:Wildlife Society bulletin 2020-09, Vol.44 (3), p.599-609
Hauptverfasser: GANN, WHITNEY J., GRAY, SHAWN S., DITTMAR, ROBERT O., GONZALEZ, CARLOS E., HARVESON, LOUIS A.
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 599
container_title Wildlife Society bulletin
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creator GANN, WHITNEY J.
GRAY, SHAWN S.
DITTMAR, ROBERT O.
GONZALEZ, CARLOS E.
HARVESON, LOUIS A.
description Pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) populations in North America were once estimated at nearly 30 million. However, unrestricted harvest of pronghorn was one of the major factors that led to 25,000 individuals by 1924. Through rigorous management, pronghorn populations rebounded to an estimated 1 million individuals by 1984. Within Texas, USA, by the late 1980s, the pronghorn population had recovered to a new estimated historic high of 17,226 individuals through restoration efforts. However, by 2010, the Texas Trans-Pecos population declined to approximately 4,700 individuals, and declined even further to only 2,751 in 2012. A main contribution to successful recovery has been large-scale translocations. Since the early 1920s, >30,000 pronghorn have been translocated in 17 states. As one large restoration project in Texas, translocation of pronghorn from the Texas Panhandle to Marfa and Marathon grasslands in the Trans-Pecos region occurred in January–February 2011, 2013, 2014, 2016, and 2017. However, within the available literature on pronghorn translocations, it was difficult to find a scientific paper that provides sufficient detail to guide the translocation process. Our intent is to summarize the effective methodology behind 5 years of pronghorn translocations, inform others to make evidencebased recommendations and justifiable-decisions when selecting translocation methodology, and provide insight regarding design and application of our translocation methodology. Based on our translocation experience, we recommend using halperidol as a sedative given to pronghorn at the site of capture and keeping handling times to ≤4 minutes as well as maintaining pronghorn body temperatures below 40° C during processing. Flunixin meglumine should be used when body temperatures exceed 40° C. In addition, we also recommend utilizing larger, more spacious livestock trailers to transport captured pronghorn versus transport boxes or smaller, more enclosed trailers. We also recommend releasing a minimum of 50–100 individuals/release site to minimize stress from group separation and improve long-term population sustainability.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/wsb.1102
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However, unrestricted harvest of pronghorn was one of the major factors that led to 25,000 individuals by 1924. Through rigorous management, pronghorn populations rebounded to an estimated 1 million individuals by 1984. Within Texas, USA, by the late 1980s, the pronghorn population had recovered to a new estimated historic high of 17,226 individuals through restoration efforts. However, by 2010, the Texas Trans-Pecos population declined to approximately 4,700 individuals, and declined even further to only 2,751 in 2012. A main contribution to successful recovery has been large-scale translocations. Since the early 1920s, &gt;30,000 pronghorn have been translocated in 17 states. As one large restoration project in Texas, translocation of pronghorn from the Texas Panhandle to Marfa and Marathon grasslands in the Trans-Pecos region occurred in January–February 2011, 2013, 2014, 2016, and 2017. 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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Antilocapra americana
pronghorn
Texas
Tools and Technology
translocation
Trans‐Pecos
title Effective Pronghorn Translocation Methodology: A Long-Term Summary
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