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Found 836 dataset(s) matching "migratory species".
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Casa Diablo mule deer are largely traditional migrants, using a wide range primarily spread across public lands. The herd’s winter range stretches between the Benton Range and eastern Inyo...
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Casa Diablo mule deer are largely traditional migrants, using a wide range primarily spread across public lands. The herd’s winter range stretches between the Benton Range and eastern Inyo...
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Casa Diablo mule deer are largely traditional migrants, using a wide range primarily spread across public lands. The herd’s winter range stretches between the Benton Range and eastern Inyo...
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The Pacific mule deer herd inhabits 353 square miles (mi2; 914 square kilometers [km2]) of public and private lands in Placer and El Dorado counties in California, including the Eldorado National...
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The Bodie-Wassuk pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) herd contains migrants, but this herd does not migrate between traditional summer and winter seasonal ranges. Therefore, annual ranges were...
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The Bodie-Wassuk pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) herd contains migrants, but this herd does not migrate between traditional summer and winter seasonal ranges. Therefore, annual ranges were...
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The Bodie-Wassuk pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) herd contains migrants, but this herd does not migrate between traditional summer and winter seasonal ranges. Therefore, annual ranges were...
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The Bruneau elk herd comprises part of an Idaho–Nevada metapopulation that primarily uses winter ranges in Idaho and summer ranges in Nevada. Divergent migration patterns separate two subherds...
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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...
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The Southern Owyhee Desert elk herd follows an east-to-west migration pattern (fig. 40), which is unique for Nevada, where migration routes for many ungulate herds follow mountain ranges from the...
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The majority of the Fossil-Grizzly mule deer herd winters near Bear Creek and the fork of John Day River and Bridge Creek, in habitats composed of big sagebrush, western juniper, and grassland....
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The majority of the Fossil-Grizzly mule deer herd winters near Bear Creek and the fork of John Day River and Bridge Creek, in habitats composed of big sagebrush, western juniper, and grassland....
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The Juniper-Silvies mule deer herd uses three main winter ranges. Many of the southern winter ranges near Oregon Route 205 have been affected by wildfire at least once in the last 40 years,...
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The Keno mule deer herd primarily winters between Oregon Route 66 and the Oregon-California border along the slopes of the Cascade Range, but smaller wintering grounds also lie at lower elevations...
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The Keno mule deer herd primarily winters between Oregon Route 66 and the Oregon-California border along the slopes of the Cascade Range, but smaller wintering grounds also lie at lower elevations...
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The Keno mule deer herd primarily winters between Oregon Route 66 and the Oregon-California border along the slopes of the Cascade Range, but smaller wintering grounds also lie at lower elevations...
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The Mid-Columbia mule deer herd inhabits a highly variable landscape, featuring annual precipitation ranging from 112 inches (in; 285 cm) near Red Hill in the western part of this herd range to 14...
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The Ochoco mule deer herd has overlapping migration corridors and summer ranges, but can be separated into three general subherds based on winter range locations. During spring, mule deer in the...
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The Steens Mountain mule deer herd contains an estimated 3,710 individuals (ODFW 2023). Most GPS-collared mule deer are either nonmigratory or use an elevational migration route along the Steens...
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The Sumpter mule deer herd includes resident and migratory individuals. Mule deer wintering near Oregon Route 244 and La Grande, Oregon, migrate south to Wolf Creek, Glass Hill, and Elkhorn Ridge...