Los antílopes son una especie apreciada de caza mayor y una parte icónica de Wyoming y el Oeste. Aunque muchos pueden verlos como un lugar común en Wyoming, son una especie ecológicamente notable con un conjunto de rasgos que difieren drásticamente de cualquier otra especie de caza salvaje en América del Norte. En Wyoming, los berrendos son una parte fundamental del paisaje y representan una importante especie de caza que genera millones de dólares anuales para la conservación y el manejo de la vida silvestre a través de la caza.
We sampled harvested pronghorn in central to south-central Wyoming to learn about horn size, age structure, and potential hunter opportunity. We sought to understand how pronghorn grow horns as they age, and whether growth is affected by habitat and weather or climactic conditions. This information may allow wildlife managers to adjust hunting seasons to improve hunter opportunities.
This project concluded in summer 2023, and the findings are in the process of being published in peer-reviewed journals.
Hallazgos principales
Finding 1: Pronghorn grow big horns early in life.
Pronghorn reach impressive sizes within the first few years of life. By 3 years of age, males have attained over 95% of peak horn sizes, surpassing horn growth of all other big game species in North America.
Finding 2: Early experiences shape horn growth of pronghorn.
When hunters put their boots to the ground in the fall, what they find during their hunt may depend on environmental conditions in previous years. In the year a male was born, snow depth and the moisture of that winter positively influenced how big his horns grew for the remainder of his life. With increased moisture, mothers may have access to more or better food and can provide their sons with a good start to life—a good start that remains evident in the horns they grow for their entire lives.
Finding 3: Horn size and age of pronghorn did not translate to sex ratios of the population.
For most big game, just how many boots hit the ground is a balancing act that wildlife managers face annually: too many hunters may mean fewer big-horned animals on the landscape. For pronghorn, however, their fast pace of life attenuated the typical tradeoff between harvest pressure and horn size. The sex ratio of populations, which can indicate the age structure of males, had no influence on either the age or horn size of pronghorn males, indicating an increase in harvest is possible for pronghorn
Lider del proyecto
Lee Tafelmeyer
Colaboradores, socios y financiadores
Este proyecto se produce en colaboración con el Wyoming Game and Fish Department. El proyecto es apoyado por el Wyoming Game and Fish Department y el Wyoming Governor’s Big Game License Coalition.