Skip to main content

Washington Mule Deer Chelan Stopovers

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2020-01-22
End Date
2022-11-25

Citation

Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, 2022, Washington Mule Deer Chelan Stopovers, in Kauffman, M.J., Lowrey, B., Berg, J., Bergen, S., Brimeyer, D., Burke, P., Cufaude, T., Cain, J.W., Cole, J., Courtemanch, A., Cowardin, M., Cunningham, J., DeVivo, M., Diamond, J., Duvuvuei, O., Fattebert, J., Ennis, J., Finley, D., Fort, J., Fralick, G., Freeman, E., Gagnon, J., Garcia, J., Gelzer, E., Graham, M., Gray, J., Greenspan, E., Hall, L.E., Hendricks, C., Holland, A., Holms, B., Huggler, K., Hurley, M., Jeffreys, E., Johnson, A., Knox, L.,Krasnow, K., Lockyer, Z., Manninen, H., McDonald, M., McKee, J.L., Meacham, J., Merkle, J., Moore, B., Mong, T.W., Nielsen, C., Oates, B., Olson, K., Olson, D., Olson, L., Pieron, M., Powell, J., Prince, A., Profitt, K., Reddell, C., Riginos, C., Ritson, R., Robatcek, S., Roberts, S., Sawyer, H., Schroeder, C., Shapiro, J., Simpson, N., Sprague, S., Steingisser, A., Tatman, N., Turnock, B., Wallace, C., and Wolf, L., 2022, Ungulate migrations of the western United States, Volume 3: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9LSKEZQ.

Summary

The Chelan mule deer herd occupies a mix of private and public lands from the Columbia River to the crest of the Cascade Range in central Washington. U.S. Highway 2, northwest of Wenatchee, Washington, serves as the southern boundary for this herd and Lake Chelan bounds the northern edge. The high-use winter range includes the southeastern shore of Lake Chelan, the breaks of the Columbia River, the lower Entiat River drainage, and the foothills east of Cashmere, Washington. In the spring, migratory individuals travel northwest into the Entiat and Chelan Mountains to their summer ranges, such as regional Wilderness areas. A small sample of Chelan mule deer was captured near the Swakane Wildlife Area in January 2020 (n = 19 adult females). [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

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

desktop.ini 244 Bytes text/x-ini
Shapefile: WA_MuleDeer_Chelan_Stopovers.zip
WA_MuleDeer_Chelan_Stopovers.dbf 539 Bytes
WA_MuleDeer_Chelan_Stopovers.prj 459 Bytes
WA_MuleDeer_Chelan_Stopovers.shp 51 KB
WA_MuleDeer_Chelan_Stopovers.shx 108 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, energy 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. The second volume described an additional 65 migrations mapped within nine western states and select tribal lands and was published in April, 2022. This third volume describes an additional 45 migrations mapped across most 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.

Map

Spatial Services

ScienceBase WMS

ScienceBase WFS

Communities

  • Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Units

Tags

Provenance

Additional Information

Shapefile Extension

boundingBox
minY47.38205911596425
minX-121.27544750793497
maxY47.97748524577766
maxX-120.27446578056521
files
nameWA_MuleDeer_Chelan_Stopovers.dbf
contentTypeapplication/unknown
pathOnDisk__disk__41/d9/5c/41d95cf458aa4e90de664c432f7482f56f045a41
size539
dateUploadedFri Nov 04 06:57:39 MDT 2022
nameWA_MuleDeer_Chelan_Stopovers.prj
contentTypetext/plain
pathOnDisk__disk__52/97/de/5297de130a49d595e02aafe1fbfe79bfa03f9b93
imageWidth580
imageHeight435
size459
dateUploadedFri Nov 04 06:57:39 MDT 2022
nameWA_MuleDeer_Chelan_Stopovers.shp
contentTypex-gis/x-shapefile
pathOnDisk__disk__e6/84/21/e68421fc84d3538196fa58b9e47775b4d961f60a
size52228
dateUploadedFri Nov 04 06:57:39 MDT 2022
nameWA_MuleDeer_Chelan_Stopovers.shx
contentTypex-gis/x-shapefile
pathOnDisk__disk__a9/3d/2e/a93d2edbded51f6310ea6d33a1852a71c1ddb926
size108
dateUploadedFri Nov 04 06:57:39 MDT 2022
nameWA_MuleDeer_Chelan_Stopovers.xml
contentTypeapplication/fgdc+xml
pathOnDisk__disk__86/21/24/862124c69afe2eb5400a2c1f88363b18e4c8f09a
dateUploadedWed Oct 04 12:33:39 MDT 2023
originalMetadatatrue
checksum
value70157cc4c3d1754f4037034349e92288
typeMD5
geometryTypeMultiPolygon
nameWA_MuleDeer_Chelan_Stopovers
nativeCrsEPSG:5070

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...