Pronghorn Habitat
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Pronghorn antelope live in open areas of flat to rolling country, with very little cover. Their diet consists mostly of forbs (herb like flowering plants) and sage brush. This is an area where the prairie grasses stay brown and dry for most of the year. In Wyoming, the plains will turn green in about mid-June, and stay green until late-August or early-September. Even though Wyoming gets it's share of Winter snows, the prairies won't turn green until the snows melt, and the Spring brings the rain.
The areas where pronghorn live are prime range land for cattle and sheep. The fences that keep in the herds of cattle and sheep also block the migration paths of the pronghorn. Pronghorn can jump these fences, but they usually choose not to. Instead they find an opening near the ground and crawl under the wire. The prairies of Wyoming are also home to fuel production. Oil, coal, coal bed methane, and wind farms dot the landscape. The least invasive seems to be the turbines on the wind farms. Despite the human activity, the antelope don't seem to mind the presence of the turbines. They graze and sleep in the shadows of these great machines. Coal mines, especially those on the surface are the most invasive, as they can remove several miles of migration paths. Efforts are being taken to preserve the pronghorn population through restrictions on both hunting and energy production.
Recommendations for Development of Oil & Gas Resources within Crucial & Important Wildlife Habitats - PDF Easement deal opens pronghorn migration route - By The Associated Press - Tuesday, February 2, 2010 Pronghorn Passage - By Shauna Stephenson, Wyoming Tribune-Eagle, Feb. 22, 2010 Conservationists help protect ancient antelope migration route - By Ruffin Prevost, The Billings Gazette, Wednesday, March 31, 2010 Wyoming's scenic Red Desert garners attention - By Jeff Gearino, Casper Star-Tribune Saturday, August 21, 2010
A herd of pronghorn relaxing and feeding next to a wind turbine shaft
Photo provided by Out West Safaris
A herd of pronghorn under Canady Peak, near Saratoga, Wyoming
Photo by Kevin Wheeler |
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Today, pronghorn are frequently seen while traveling over the freeways and highways in the western plains and Rocky Mountain states. Larger herds are seen in the Fall and Winter months. These herds seem to disband in the Spring and Summer, into groups and herds of less than twenty, then regroup in November and December.





