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Idaho and Nevada Elk Y P Desert Migration Routes

The Y P Desert elk herd comprises part of an Idaho-Nevada metapopulation that primarily uses a winter range in Idaho and a summer range in Nevada. Y P Desert elk follow an east-to-west migration along the South Fork Owyhee River onto the Y P Desert in Idaho and Nevada during the winter (fig. 38). In Nevada, migration routes for many ungulate herds follow mountain ranges from the north to the south. However, the neighboring Southern Owyhee Desert elk herd in Nevada (refer to the “Southern Owyhee Desert Elk” section in this report), which shares some summer range with Y P Desert elk, also follows a similar east-to-west migration. During the summer, the Y P Desert herd primarily inhabits the Bull Run Mountains of the northern Independence Mountains in Nevada. A large part of seasonal habitat and migration routes is within the Shoshone-Paiute Tribes of the Duck Valley Reservation, Nevada. Elevations range from 4,307 ft (1,313 m) in South Fork Owyhee River canyon basins of Idaho, to the 9,108-ft (2,776-m) Pennsylvania Hill of the Bull Run Mountains in Nevada. Historically, summer habitats included Great Basin communities, where mixed shrublands consisting of sagebrush and Chrysothamnus spp. (rabbitbrush) dominate lower elevations and overlap at higher elevations with mountain brush species, such as antelope bitterbrush, western serviceberry, and snowbush. However, much of the upper elevation summer habitat burned in the South Sugarloaf fire in 2018. Slope may be the primary driver of post-fire recovery because many north-facing slopes are naturally returning to mountain brush communities, and south-facing slopes have primarily converted to a mix of native bunchgrasses and invasive annuals. These higher elevation communities also include quaking aspen, mountain-mahogany, fir, and pine, although large areas of the nonriparian forest species have not yet recovered post-fire. Like many ungulate winter ranges in western Elko County, wildfires also affect the Y P Desert, where cheatgrass, mustard, various Cirsium spp. (thistle) species, and medusahead rye have invaded priority habitat. However, large expanses of sagebrush and native bunch grasses, such as basin wildrye and Idaho fescue, remain on the landscape. Growth for this herd is limited by hunter harvest, which is currently guided by population objectives outlined in the “Western Elko County Elk Management Sub-Plan” (Western Elko County Elk Management Working Group, 2003). These mapping layers show the location of the migration routes for elk (Cervus canadensis) in the Y P Desert population in Idaho and Nevada. They were developed from 59 migration sequences collected from a sample size of 15 animals comprising GPS locations collected every ~ 12.5 hours.

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Author(s) Matthew J Kauffman orcid, Blake H Lowrey orcid, Jennifer L McKee orcid, Travis Allen, Chloe Beaupre orcid, Jeffrey Beck orcid, Scott Bergen, Justin Binfet, Shelly Blair, James W Cain orcid, Peyton Carl, Todd Cornish orcid, Michelle Cowardin, Rachel Curtis, Melia DeVivo, Jennifer Diamond, Katie Dugger orcid, Orrin Duvuvuei, C.J. Ellingwood, Darby Finley, Jessica Fort, Eric Freeman, Ian Freeman, Jeff Gagnon, Emily Gelzer orcid, Jacob Gray, Evan Greenspan orcid, Curtis Hendricks, Valerie Hinojoza-Rood, Matt Jeffress, Carolyn Kyle, Zack Lockyer, Cody McKee, Jerod Merkle orcid, Jerrod Merrell, Matt Mumma, Jake Powell, Craig Reddell, Adele Reinking orcid, Robert Ritson, Sierra Robatcek, Benjamin Robb orcid, Brianna Russo orcid, Hall Sawyer orcid, Cody Schroeder, Elissa Slezak, Scott Sprague, Erik Steiner orcid, Alethea Steingisser, Tom Stephenson, Nicole Tatman, Kaitlyn Taylor, Don Whittaker, Travis Zaffarano
Publication Date 2025-02-06
Beginning Date of Data 2014
Ending Date of Data 2020
Data Contact
DOI https://doi.org/10.5066/P1YJCCQA
Citation Kauffman, M.J., Lowrey, B.H., McKee, J.L., Allen, T., Beaupre, C., Beck, J., Bergen, S., Binfet, J., Blair, S., Cain, J.W., Carl, P., Cornish, T., Cowardin, M., Curtis, R., DeVivo, M., Diamond, J., Dugger, K., Duvuvuei, O., Ellingwood, C., Finley, D., Fort, J., Freeman, E., Freeman, I., Gagnon, J., Gelzer, E., Gray, J., Greenspan, E., Hendricks, C., Hinojoza-Rood, V., Jeffress, M., Kyle, C., Lockyer, Z., McKee, C., Merkle, J., Merrell, J., Mumma, M., Powell, J., Reddell, C., Reinking, A., Ritson, R., Robatcek, S., Robb, B., Russo, B., Sawyer, H., Schroeder, C., Slezak, E., Sprague, S., Steiner, E., Steingisser, A., Stephenson, T., Tatman, N., Taylor, K., Whittaker, D., and Zaffarano, T., 2025, Idaho and Nevada Elk Y P Desert Migration Routes: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P1YJCCQA.
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Metadata Date 2025-02-06
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Harvest Source: ScienceBase
Harvest Date: 2025-02-07T05:07:48.543Z