Skip to main content

Oregon Mule Deer Northside Stopovers

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2015
End Date
2022

Citation

Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife, 2024, Oregon Mule Deer Northside Stopovers, in Kauffman, M.J., Lowrey, B., Beaupre, C., Bergen, S., Bergh, S., Blecha, K., Cain, J.W., Carl, P., Casady, D., Class, C., Courtemanch, A., Cowardin, M., Diamond, J., Dugger, K., Duvuvuei, O., Fattebert, J., Ennis, J., Flenner, M., Fort, J., Fralick, G., Freeman, E., Gagnon, J., Garcelon, D., Garrison, K., Gelzer, Greenspan, E., Hinojoza-Rood, V., Hnilicka, P., Holland, A., Hudgens, B., Kroger, B., Lawson, A., McKee, C., McKee, J.L., Merkle, J., Mong, T.W., Nelson, H., Oates, B., Poulin, M.-P., Reddell, C., Riginos, C., Ritson, R., Sawyer, H., Schroeder, C., Shapiro, J., Sprague, S., Steingisser, A., Stephens, S., Stringham, B., Swazo-Hinds, P.R., Tatman, N., Turnock, B., Wallace, C.F., Whittaker, D., Wise, B., Wittmer, H.U., and Wood, E., 2024, Ungulate migrations of the western United States, volume 4: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9SS9GD9

Summary

The winter ranges of the Northside mule deer herd can be broadly separated into northern and southern subgroups. The majority of the southern subgroup winters at low elevations near the John Day River in areas dominated by big sagebrush communities, Columbia Basin grasslands, and western juniper. The northern subgroup is more spatially dispersed, wintering by Cottonwood Creek, the North Fork John Day River, and the Middle Fork John Day River in ranges containing more conifer forest than those of the southern subgroup. Both subgroups summer in the same general area, migrating either northeast or southeast to reach ranges featuring mixed-conifer, Picea spp. (spruce), Ponderosa pine, and western juniper forests with scattered Columbia [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

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

desktop.ini 246 Bytes text/x-ini
Shapefile: OR_MuleDeer_Northside_Stopovers.zip
OR_MuleDeer_Northside_Stopovers.dbf 539 Bytes
OR_MuleDeer_Northside_Stopovers.prj 464 Bytes
OR_MuleDeer_Northside_Stopovers.shp 4.57 MB
OR_MuleDeer_Northside_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. The third volume described an additional 45 migrations mapped across most western states and select tribal lands. This volume, the forth in the report series, details migrations and seasonal ranges from an additional 31 new herds throughout nine western states. 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, federal and Tribal 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
minY44.07659836982584
minX-120.01267609384104
maxY45.389910525212215
maxX-118.0202922027353
files
nameOR_MuleDeer_Northside_Stopovers.dbf
contentTypeapplication/unknown
pathOnDisk__disk__9d/d9/36/9dd936e30c2d2eb8eb70a166bfed202839a2c6f3
size539
dateUploadedThu Dec 21 15:00:45 MST 2023
checksum
valuec0328fb7f4778c3e45d43f5ef33a1c15
typeMD5
nameOR_MuleDeer_Northside_Stopovers.prj
contentTypetext/plain
pathOnDisk__disk__60/29/c5/6029c540132dd28c2d54a09778a0930b9061c15f
imageWidth580
imageHeight435
size464
dateUploadedThu Dec 21 15:00:45 MST 2023
checksum
value5123ddeca83cfbd707147f834c56d427
typeMD5
nameOR_MuleDeer_Northside_Stopovers.shp
contentTypex-gis/x-shapefile
pathOnDisk__disk__65/73/52/65735290da4771acdd7170c1610d222d03b428d1
size4796592
dateUploadedThu Dec 21 15:00:45 MST 2023
checksum
value6680695b311ae22de4626a6753186017
typeMD5
nameOR_MuleDeer_Northside_Stopovers.shx
contentTypex-gis/x-shapefile
pathOnDisk__disk__90/98/c1/9098c1ff7d90f0e77154de263175116f0bb03d5a
size108
dateUploadedThu Dec 21 15:00:45 MST 2023
checksum
value724ecf712bffe49bdf1ffde03bec06be
typeMD5
nameOR_MuleDeer_Northside_Stopovers.xml
contentTypeapplication/fgdc+xml
pathOnDisk__disk__dd/13/f5/dd13f5b13fdd83c9e5bf349bbfd5348edd3f07a2
dateUploadedWed Apr 10 13:38:06 MDT 2024
originalMetadatatrue
checksum
value275832d4054cd62a67c2428f1482418f
typeMD5
geometryTypeMultiPolygon
nameOR_MuleDeer_Northside_Stopovers
nativeCrsEPSG:5072

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...