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Study shows multiple factors shape timing of birth in mule deer


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IMAGE: Mule deer move across a sagebrush-covered basin in western Wyoming, where new research by University of Wyoming scientists challenges the long-held assumption that animals match offspring birth with the peak.
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Credit: Joe Riis
A five-year study of mule deer does and newborn fawns in western Wyoming shows that migrating deer have a lot to balance when it comes to birth timing.
The study led by University of Wyoming scientists challenges the long-held assumption that animals match offspring birth with the peak green-up of forage at the birth site. Instead, only deer that migrated long distances and followed the flush of spring green-up from low elevation winter ranges to higher-elevation summer ranges were able to match birth with peak green-up. Other deer migrated shorter distances and gave birth earlier, but birth was out of sync with green-up. ....

University Of Wyoming , United States , Tayler Lasharr , Ellen Aikens , Samantha Dwinnell , Gary Fralick , Jill Randall , Matt Kauffman , Kevin Monteith , Rhiannon Jakopak , Mark Thonhoff , Fish Department , Bureau Of Land Management , Us Forest Service , Wyoming Game , Rusty Kaiser , Developmental Reproductive Biology , Ecology Environment , Nutrition Nutrients , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் வயோமிங் , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , எல்லன் ஐகேன்ஸ , கேரி ப்ரலிக்க் , ஜில் ரேண்டால் , மேட் காஃப்மந் , கெவின் மான்டித் ,

UW-Led Study Shows Multiple Factors Shape Timing of Birth in Mule Deer | News


April 9, 2021
Mule deer move across a sagebrush-covered basin in western Wyoming, where new research by UW scientists challenges the long-held assumption that animals match offspring birth with the peak green-up of forage at the birth site. (Joe Riis Photo)
A five-year study of mule deer does and newborn fawns in western Wyoming shows that migrating deer have a lot to balance when it comes to birth timing.
The study led by University of Wyoming scientists challenges the long-held assumption that animals match offspring birth with the peak green-up of forage at the birth site. Instead, only deer that migrated long distances and followed the flush of spring green-up from low elevation winter ranges to higher-elevation summer ranges were able to match birth with peak green-up. Other deer migrated shorter distances and gave birth earlier, but birth was out of sync with green-up. ....

University Of Wyoming , United States , Tayler Lasharr , Ellen Aikens , Samantha Dwinnell , Gary Fralick , Jill Randall , Kevin Monteith , Matt Kauffman , Rhiannon Jakopak , Mark Thonhoff , Fish Department , Bureau Of Land Management , Us Forest Service , Joe Riis Photo , Wyoming Game , Rusty Kaiser , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் வயோமிங் , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , எல்லன் ஐகேன்ஸ , கேரி ப்ரலிக்க் , ஜில் ரேண்டால் , கெவின் மான்டித் , மேட் காஃப்மந் , குறி தோன்ோப்ப் , மீன் துறை ,