Skip to main content

Migration Corridors of Elk in the San Francisco Peaks Herd in Arizona

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2009
End Date
2017

Citation

Arizona Game and Fish Department, 2022, Migration Corridors of Elk in the San Francisco Peaks Herd in Arizona, in Kauffman, M.J., Lowrey, B., Beck, J., Berg, J., Bergen, S., Berger, J., Cain, J., Dewey, S., Diamond, J., Duvuvuei, O., Fattebert, J., Gagnon, J., Garcia, J., Greenspan, E., Hall, E., Harper, G., Harter, S., Hersey, K., Hnilicka, P., Hurley, M., Knox, L., Lawson, A., Maichak, E., Meacham, J., Merkle, J., Middleton, A., Olson, D., Olson, L., Reddell, C., Robb, B., Rozman, G., Sawyer, H., Schroeder, C., Scurlock, B., Short, J., Sprague, S., Steingisser, A., and Tatman, N., 2022, Ungulate Migrations of the Western United States, Volume 2: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9TKA3L8.

Summary

The San Francisco Peaks elk (Cervus canadensis) herd comprises a migratory portion of the larger herd units in Arizona’s Game Management Units (GMU) 7 and 9. GMU 7 and 9 had a combined population estimate of 5,200 in 2019. These data were generated from two elk research projects by the Arizona Game & Fish Department: one to assess elk-vehicle collisions on Interstate 40 (Gagnon et al. 2012) and the other to evaluate aerial survey methods for elk abundance (Bristow et al. 2019). While many of the elk reside in the same general areas year-round, the migratory portion of this herd migrates an average of 42 miles between summer and winter range. Summer range, primarily in GMU 7, consists of high elevation open meadows and ponderosa pine [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

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

desktop.ini 244 Bytes text/x-ini
Shapefile: ELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.zip
ELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.cpg 5 Bytes
ELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.dbf 533 Bytes
ELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.prj 435 Bytes
ELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.sbn 276 Bytes
ELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.sbx 132 Bytes
ELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.shp 164.41 KB
ELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.shx 220 Bytes

Purpose

Migration is widespread across taxonomic groups and increasingly recognized as fundamental to maintaining abundant wildlife populations and communities. Many ungulate herds migrate across the western United States to access food and avoid harsh environmental conditions. With the advent of global positioning system (GPS) collars, researchers can describe and map the year-round movements of ungulates at both large and small spatial scales. The migrations can traverse landscapes that are a mix of different jurisdictional ownership and management. Today, the landscapes that migrating herds traverse are increasingly threatened by fencing, high-traffic roads, oil and gas development, and other types of permanent development. Over the last decade, a model of science-based conservation has emerged in which migration corridors, stopovers, and winter ranges can be mapped in detail, thereby allowing threats and conservation opportunities to be identified and remedied. In 2018, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) assembled a Corridor Mapping Team (CMT) to work collaboratively with western states to map migrations of mule deer, elk, and pronghorn. Led by the USGS Wyoming Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, the team consists of federal scientists, university researchers, and biologists and analysts from participating state and tribal agencies. The first set of maps described a total of 42 migrations across five western states and was published in 2020 as the first volume of this report series. This second volume describes an additional 65 migrations mapped within nine western states and select tribal lands. As the American West continues to grow, this report series and the associated map files released on USGS’s ScienceBase will allow for migration maps to be used for conservation planning by a wide array of state and federal stakeholders to reduce barriers to migration caused by fences, roads, and other development.

Rights

Unless otherwise stated, all data, metadata and related materials are considered to satisfy the quality standards relative to the purpose for which the data were collected. Although these data and associated metadata have been reviewed for accuracy and completeness and approved for release by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), no warranty expressed or implied is made regarding the display or utility of the data on any other system or for general or scientific purposes, nor shall the act of distribution constitute any such warranty.

Map

Spatial Services

ScienceBase WMS

ScienceBase WFS

Communities

  • Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Units

Tags

Provenance

Additional Information

Shapefile Extension

boundingBox
minY35.24864670405117
minX-112.0147171508665
maxY36.00138293494627
maxX-111.53928371123752
files
nameELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.cpg
contentTypetext/plain
pathOnDisk__disk__a9/fe/46/a9fe46e21dfca1906df5c2698df321c267a26278
imageWidth580
imageHeight435
size5
dateUploadedThu Feb 17 06:15:30 MST 2022
nameELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.dbf
contentTypeapplication/unknown
pathOnDisk__disk__be/9b/88/be9b88cffbaa063e81cbea93d7988432b8a47e0a
size533
dateUploadedThu Feb 17 06:15:30 MST 2022
nameELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.prj
contentTypetext/plain
pathOnDisk__disk__1f/63/7c/1f637c1e9addf1448df426efca55a8ea42f2ad4d
imageWidth580
imageHeight435
size435
dateUploadedThu Feb 17 06:15:30 MST 2022
nameELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.sbn
contentTypex-gis/x-shapefile
pathOnDisk__disk__cc/87/e6/cc87e60054e6e6afc02c84949410e8aa2a737650
size276
dateUploadedThu Feb 17 06:15:30 MST 2022
nameELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.sbx
contentTypex-gis/x-shapefile
pathOnDisk__disk__53/f7/bd/53f7bd277b76bdf3d6826e82143935c3c27972fb
size132
dateUploadedThu Feb 17 06:15:30 MST 2022
nameELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.shp
contentTypex-gis/x-shapefile
pathOnDisk__disk__92/b3/f0/92b3f0d1a8c79f1c346443b2c1bd88db53ad5bfc
size168360
dateUploadedThu Feb 17 06:15:30 MST 2022
nameELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.shp.xml
contentTypeapplication/fgdc+xml
pathOnDisk__disk__d7/a9/f4/d7a9f4025ef9ae43555f2b38cd07fed02f5e0102
dateUploadedThu Apr 07 10:17:58 MDT 2022
originalMetadatatrue
nameELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021.shx
contentTypex-gis/x-shapefile
pathOnDisk__disk__a6/1b/27/a61b27f83a01ef4ff75926c30c3a8a122cdc00b4
size220
dateUploadedThu Feb 17 06:15:30 MST 2022
geometryTypeMultiPolygon
nameELK_AZ_SanFranciscoPeaks_Corridors_Ver1_2021
nativeCrsEPSG:5070

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...