Study shows multiple factors shape timing in mule deer births

Posted 4/13/21

A five-year study of mule deer does and newborn fawns in western Wyoming shows that migrating deer have a lot to balance when it comes to timing births.

The study, led by University of Wyoming …

This item is available in full to subscribers.

Please log in to continue

E-mail
Password
Log in

Study shows multiple factors shape timing in mule deer births

Posted

A five-year study of mule deer does and newborn fawns in western Wyoming shows that migrating deer have a lot to balance when it comes to timing births.

The study, led by University of Wyoming scientists, challenges the long-held assumption that animals match offspring birth with the peak green-up of forage at the birth site. Instead, only deer that migrated long distances and followed the flush of spring green-up from low elevation winter ranges to higher-elevation summer ranges were able to match birth with peak green-up. Other deer migrated shorter distances and gave birth earlier, but birth was out of sync with green-up.

The researchers’ work appears in the journal Ecology.

To examine the factors shaping birth timing, researchers integrated highly detailed data on female deer. That included movement data from GPS collars, body condition and gestational development from ultrasonography of adult female deer and intensive fieldwork to locate newborn fawns.

“In contrast to existing theory, which predicts that conditions at the birth site should shape optimal birth timing, our results provide a clear example of birth timing being shaped by trade-offs arising from events occurring away from the birth site and from other parts of the annual cycle,” the researchers wrote.

Migration results in animals having to time important events, such as reproduction, within tight time schedules. In general, mule deer in western Wyoming give birth in early June, generally after migration is over but early enough that fawns can grow large enough to survive winter. The deer in the study included animals that migrated long distances between winter and summer ranges, as well as those that migrated shorter distances.

Among the study’s findings:

• Most deer completed migration well before giving birth: Across the five-year period of the study, animals completed migration, on average, 23 days before giving birth.

• Does that ended migration earlier gave birth earlier.

• Only animals that surfed the green wave and ended migration just before giving birth matched birth with peak green-up, whereas most gave birth after peak green-up.

• Although matching birth with peak green-up likely increased access to high-quality forage, doing so resulted in delayed birth and, therefore, less time for offspring to grow and develop before fall migration.

• Does appear to trade off early birth and increased time of offspring growth with matching birth to peak green-up.

• Animals that migrated long distances had less developed fetuses in March, thereby allowing them to complete migration before giving birth — without sacrificing the ability to surf the green wave along their migratory route.

The researchers say the link between movement tactics and timing of birth has important conservation and management implications. For example, human-caused disturbances to migration patterns could harm deer reproduction until animals have time to adjust. Additionally, the diversity of movement behaviors among western Wyoming mule deer is important to preserve, as animal populations with greater life-history diversity have been found to be more able to withstand environmental changes.

UW researchers involved in the project were Ellen Aikens, Samantha Dwinnell, Tayler LaSharr, Rhiannon Jakopak, Matt Kauffman and Kevin Monteith. Other contributors were Gary Fralick and Jill Randall of the Wyoming Game and Fish Department; Rusty Kaiser of the U.S. Forest Service; and Mark Thonhoff of the Bureau of Land Management.

Comments