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Quantifying the Influence of Climate Change on Rocky Mountain Ungulates

Dates

Start Date
2007
Info Date
2007
End Date
2008-01-01
Release Date
2008

Summary

Many ungulate populations in the Rocky Mountains are predicted to respond to declining snow levels and increased drought, though in ways that remain uncertain. This project investigated how climate change may affect the abundance of Rocky Mountain ungulates, their migration patterns, the degree to which they transmit diseases to livestock, and their herbivory impact on aspen. To complete this work we brought together a team of USGS and University scientists with experience, data, and strong agency collaboration that enabled us to quantify climate impacts and deliver products useful for wildlife managers.

Child Items (4)

Contacts

Principal Investigator :
Matthew J Kauffman
Funding Agency :
NCCWSC
CMS Group :
Climate Adaptation Science Centers (CASC) Program

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

NCCW-2008-4_MuleDeer_TrailCam_MattKauffman2.JPG
“Mule deer captured on trail camera - Credit: Matt Kauffman”
thumbnail 1.42 MB image/jpeg
NCCW-2008-4_MuleDeer_TrailCam_MattKauffman3.JPG
“Mule deer captured on trail camera - Credit: Matt Kauffman”
thumbnail 1.59 MB image/jpeg
Elk_USGS.jpg
“Elk - Credit: USGS”
thumbnail 601.46 KB image/jpeg

Project Extension

projectStatusCompleted

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