North Idaho elk study in its fourth year |
January 13, 2017 |
By Phil Cooper IDFGWildlife Conservation Educator Fish and Game biologists in Idaho’s Panhandle region have started the fourth year of a comprehensive elk mortality study. Working with a private helicopter contractor, biologists have been in the field capturing and collaring elk since January 8. In this study, elk are being captured with either nets or tranquilizer darts depending upon the terrain and density of the forest canopy. Cow and calf elk are being fitted with radio collars to monitor their survival rates and movements. The plan includes collaring an additional 60 elk calves and 50 cow elk in the coming weeks if conditions permit. If the targeted numbers are achieved, there will be a total of 180 elk on the ground wearing collars in the ongoing project. The study area includes big game Units 4, 6 and 7. The most recent capture work was completed in the Silver Valley, the North Fork Coeur d’ Alene River, and the St. Joe River. The GPS collars record the animal’s location twice per day. Collars will function for several years. The location, time, and other pertinent data are transmitted to a satellite and then to biologists as an email. The study plan is to collar and follow cow and calf elk so that Fish and Game can monitor survival rates, habitat use, seasonal movements, and perhaps most importantly to determine the specific causes of elk mortality. Once an animal is restrained or under anesthesia, a handler fits the animal with a GPS collar. Blood and fecal samples (for disease and pregnancy surveillance) are taken, and estimates are recorded for the age of each animal. The elk is then released at the capture site just a few minutes later. The capture operation has gone very well in past years and is off to a good start this year. Prior to the development of GPS collars, biologists had to use an antenna in hand or on a plane to determine an animal’s location. Most locations were usually midday, during weather that allowed safe flights and good visibility. Now, locations are taken regardless of weather, giving a much better picture of what is going on with elk in the three units. A unique signal is produced if the collar is stationary for four hours, tipping biologists off that there may be a dead elk. In that event, the collar can be located as soon as possible and biologists can often (but not always) determine the cause of death. Of the elk captured in 2014 through 2016, the annual cow survival rate has been 95 percent. Calf survival has been 82 percent. New technology, such as the use of GPS collars, has changed wildlife management over time. New equipment and techniques have enabled better data collection and a better understanding of what is actually happening outside in all kinds of weather in both daylight and dark...all year long. If you see a helicopter circling in the skies at a low elevation in the Panhandle over the next few weeks, it may be a part of this study. However, wildlife managers will also be conducting the annual winter aerial surveys of elk herds, and will be spending a lot of time in the air getting trend information on elk numbers. |