(Press-News.org) While Wyoming is home to some of North America’s most abundant populations of pronghorn that have largely been stable in recent years, a new analysis shows that many herds are experiencing long-term declines in fawn production.
Those declines are primarily a result of oil and gas development and encroachment of trees, according to researchers from the University of Wyoming, the University of Florida, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, the University of Arkansas and the Northern Plains Agricultural Research Laboratory. Their findings have been published in the journal Global Ecology and Conservation.
The study included data collected by the Wyoming Game and Fish Department for 40 pronghorn herds covering much of Wyoming -- home to about half of North America’s population of the iconic animal -- over a 35-year period from 1984-2019. In addition to analyzing the Game and Fish Department’s extensive information from annual pronghorn population surveys, the researchers looked at region-specific data regarding oil and gas development, roads, fire, invasive plants, tree encroachment and precipitation patterns.
“Long-term declines in (pronghorn) productivity were associated with increases in oil and gas development and woody encroachment,” wrote the research team, led by former University of Nebraska researcher Victoria Donovan, now with the University of Florida, and Professor Jeff Beck, of UW’s Department of Ecosystem Science and Management. They found that “both tree cover and oil and gas development have increased substantially across most herd units in Wyoming over the last 40 years.”
“Other drivers of global change viewed as threats to pronghorn -- including nonnative annual grass invasions, wildfire, roads and increased winter precipitation -- were not prominent drivers of long-term declines in pronghorn productivity,” the scientists concluded.
While oil and gas development already is widely recognized as impacting Wyoming’s rangelands and the species on those lands, the researchers noted that tree encroachment is not generally viewed as a threat to the state’s sagebrush ecosystems. That’s likely because average tree cover ranged from less than 1 percent to 18 percent across the 40 pronghorn herd unit areas.
But even low levels of invading trees have been shown to have drastic impacts on sagebrush-dependent wildlife, the scientists wrote. For Wyoming’s pronghorn, the increase in trees could be providing cover for predators; driving loss of forage associated with sagebrush and grassland cover; and causing pronghorn to avoid those areas.
The researchers suggest that efforts to prevent and manage tree growth amid sagebrush ecosystems could be important for Wyoming pronghorn to maintain their numbers. This could include manual removal of trees and controlled burning.
“Our results contribute to the overwhelming evidence that early management of invading trees within sagebrush habitat will help protect iconic rangeland species like pronghorn,” they wrote. “Preventative management and management applied in the early phases of encroachment is, thus, the most impactful and cost-effective approach.”
END
Researchers find energy development and tree encroachment impact Wyoming pronghorn
2024-03-26
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Researchers show that introduced tardigrade proteins can slow metabolism in human cells
2024-03-26
University of Wyoming researchers have gained further insight into how tardigrades survive extreme conditions and shown that proteins from the microscopic creatures expressed in human cells can slow down molecular processes.
This makes the tardigrade proteins potential candidates in technologies centered on slowing the aging process and in long-term storage of human cells.
The new study, published in the journal Protein Science, examines the mechanisms used by tardigrades to enter and exit from suspended animation when faced by environmental stress. Led by Senior Research Scientist Silvia Sanchez-Martinez in the lab of UW Department of Molecular Biology Assistant Professor Thomas Boothby, ...
Optimizing electronic health records: Study reveals improvements in departmental productivity
2024-03-26
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. – In a study published in the Annals of Family Medicine, researchers at the Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine identify transformative effects of electronic health record (EHR) optimization on departmental productivity. With the universal implementation of EHR systems, the study sheds light on the importance of collaborative efforts between clinicians and information technology (IT) experts in maximizing the potential of these digital tools.
The study, led by a team of health care professionals in a family medicine department, embarked on a department-wide EHR optimization initiative in collaboration ...
Depression in Black people goes unnoticed by AI models analyzing language in social media posts
2024-03-26
Methods researchers developed to detect possible depression through language in social media posts don’t appear to work when applied to posts by Black people on social media, according to a new analysis by researchers from Penn’s Perelman School of Medicine and its School of Engineering and Applied Science. The research, published in PNAS, points to an area to focus on for significant improvement and amplifies the importance of considering the intersection of race, health risks, and social media.
Work in the past uncovered that using first-person pronouns in posts ...
A new São Paulo School of Advanced Science at the Brazilian Center for Research in Energy and Materials is receiving applications
2024-03-26
Registrations are open for the São Paulo School of Advanced Science on 4th Generation Synchrotron Techniques (SyncLight 2024), to be held on October 14-25, 2024, at the Brazilian Center for Research in Energy and Materials (CNPEM) in Campinas, São Paulo state, Brazil
Reporters are invited reach the organizing committee through the email eventos@cnpem.br, for opportunities to visit the school and sessions.
Organized through the São Paulo School of Advanced Science (SPSAS https://espca.fapesp.br/home/) program, with support from FAPESP (https://bv.fapesp.br/en/auxilios/113004/), ...
Finance Professor at the Rotman School of Management Receives Best Young Researcher in Finance and Insurance Award
2024-03-26
Finance Professor at the Rotman School of Management Receives Best Young Researcher in Finance and Insurance Award
Toronto – Claire Célérier, an associate professor of finance at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management, is one of two recipients of the 2024 IEF/SCOR Foundation for Science 2024 Best Young Researcher Award from the Scientific Council of the Institut Europlace de Finance (IEF). The other recipient is Paul Karehnke, an associate professor of finance at ESCP Business School.
The award was presented in recognition of their previous work and future potential for new research at the Financial Risks International ...
The fear of depression recurrence is potent but not universal, new Concordia research shows
2024-03-26
Clinicians treating patients who live with or survive serious diseases such as cancer are familiar with the concept of fear of illness recurrence (FIR). FIR has been associated with greater avoidance of illness reminders, including medical appointments, ignoring symptom changes, social withdrawal and increases in anxiety and decreases in quality of life and mood.
But as a Concordia research team led by Mark Ellenbogen, a professor in the Department of Psychology, points out in a new study published in the journal BMC Psychiatry, there is little research on FIR ...
The behavior of ant queens is shaped by their social environment
2024-03-26
The queens in colonies of social insects, such as ants, bees, and wasps, are considered the veritable embodiment of specialization in the animal kingdom. The common perception is that the queen's only task is to lay eggs – and that this attribute is an inherent trait, not influenced by external factors. In contrast, recent research undertaken at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) has demonstrated that in certain ant colonies the social environment can play a crucial role in shaping the ...
College of Sciences and Mathematics at Auburn University unveils proposed Centers and Institutes in Development
2024-03-26
On Monday, March 11, the College of Sciences and Mathematics (COSAM) held an event to announce the Centers and Institutes in Development (CIDs) at the Auburn University Alumni Center.
“I cannot tell you how absolutely excited to see this many COSAM faculty here today,” said Edward E. Thomas, Jr., dean of the college. “These new endeavors will help connect faculty in our college and with other colleges at Auburn to seamlessly collaborate on bigger and bolder research projects.”
The alumni center was packed with faculty from all of COSAM’s five departments.
“Today, we are here to ...
Case Western Reserve University awarded federal contract to develop and commercialize ‘live’ replacement joints
2024-03-26
CLEVELAND—About 32.5 million people in the United States and 500 million globally suffer from the degenerative joint disease known as osteoarthritis (OA), according to the Centers for Disease Control.
OA, in which tissues in the joint break down over time, is the most common type of arthritis—especially in older people. The usual treatments target pain-relief, often with prescription opioids or prosthetic surgery, such as knee and hip replacements.
Now, backed by an award from the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H), a federal agency within the U.S. Department of Health ...
Sleeping supermassive black holes awakened briefly by shredded stars
2024-03-26
A new investigation into an obscure class of galaxies known as Compact Symmetric Objects, or CSOs, has revealed that these objects are not entirely what they seem. CSOs are active galaxies that host supermassive black holes at their cores. Out of these monstrous black holes spring two jets traveling in opposite directions at nearly the speed of light. But in comparison to other galaxies that boast fierce jets, these jets do not extend out to great distances—they are much more compact. For many decades, astronomers suspected that CSOs were simply young and that their jets would eventually travel out to greater distances.
Now, reporting in three different papers in The ...