collapse

Advertisement


Author Topic: Goat Release Information: How have they done so far?  (Read 1476 times)

Offline Bushcraft

  • Non-Hunting Topics
  • Trade Count: (+3)
  • Sourdough
  • *****
  • Join Date: Aug 2008
  • Posts: 1170
  • Location: Olympic Peninsula
  • Groups: NRA, SCI, NSSF, RMEF, RMGA, MDF, WSF, DU, HHC, WWC, WDAC
Goat Release Information: How have they done so far?
« on: July 01, 2019, 09:51:48 AM »
I've had a few people ask me how the goats are doing that were translocated last year. I just received this summary hot off the press from him and I thought I'd pass it along to the forum. - AE

Dr. Richard B. Harris
Section Manager, Game Division, Wildlife Program, WDFW

  • Most animals wearing GPS collars moved around quite a bit after release. All of them hunkered down for the winter, moving very little. Some stayed together with others released at the same time; most did not. We have observed movement up into alpine areas in June 2019. In winter, goats generally find places at lower elevations with less snow cover; we saw a similar pattern among translocated goats.
  • It is too early to know if goats will find each other, begin breeding, and begin creating mother/young groups typical of thriving mountain goat populations. We expect to gain some preliminary information this summer; ground crews from Western Washington University will backpack up into summer habitat with spotting scopes to document reproduction.
  • Among translocated animals older than kid, approximately 70% were still alive as of early June 2019. This is lower survival than we’d generally expect to observe for resident adult mountain goats, but not lower than we’d anticipated, given the particular challenges facing translocated animals.
  • Preliminary analyses indicate that no activities related to capture/translocation and under our control predicted whether an adult goat would survive to June 2019. For example, we have no evidence of differences in survival by whether a goat was captured using immobilizing drugs or a net gun, whether it was injured during the capture or not, or how long it took for it be transported and released.
  • However, these same analyses indicated that the body condition of the mountain goat when captured did predict whether it survived to June 2019. Veterinarians gave a ‘score’ to each animal when examining it, which largely reflected its underlying nutritional condition. Animals in better condition were more likely to survive than animals in poorer condition. This pattern is expected in populations of free-roaming, wild animals.
  • Kid/mother pairs captured, translocated, and released together in September 2018 were generally no longer together by winter. However, five of the 10 kids we have followed were still alive in May or June 2019. Most had found other goats to follow. Acknowledging this small sample size, we find this encouraging because 50% mortality is typical of mountain goat kids that have not been moved or lost contact with their mothers.
Socialism is the philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy; its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery. - Winston Churchill

Work hard. Hunt hard. Lift other hunters up.

*Proud supporter of NRA, NRA-ILA SCI, SCIF, SCI-PAC, NSSF, RMEF, RMGA, MDF, WSF, DU, WWA, HHC, WWC

Offline Jpmiller

  • Political & Covid-19 Topics
  • Trade Count: (+2)
  • Frontiersman
  • *****
  • Join Date: May 2016
  • Posts: 4107
  • Location: Martin, ND
Re: Goat Release Information: How have they done so far?
« Reply #1 on: July 01, 2019, 10:00:10 AM »
I read that as good news, thanks for sharing.

Offline Russ McDonald

  • Trade Count: (+1)
  • Old Salt
  • ******
  • Join Date: Oct 2011
  • Posts: 8208
  • Location: Enumclaw
  • USN ET3 SW 87-92, USS Excel MSO 439
  • Groups: NWTF, NRA
Re: Goat Release Information: How have they done so far?
« Reply #2 on: July 01, 2019, 10:03:40 AM »
I just received this also this morning.  Was going to post but work got in the way.  Pretty good to hear.

Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
« Last Edit: July 01, 2019, 12:38:24 PM by Russ McDonald »
Russell McDonald
President South Sound NWTF Chapter

 


* Advertisement

* Recent Topics

Traditions Hawken Woodsman need repair? by ghosthunter
[Today at 01:25:30 PM]


RRS Lever Release Clamp for Ball Head by Pnwrider
[Today at 01:24:38 PM]


!!!HELP!!! McNary wildlife refuge duck hunting by Solomcb
[Today at 12:36:50 PM]


Roosevelt Elk. Please nudge me in the right direction. I feel hopeless. by blackveltbowhunter
[Today at 11:32:45 AM]


How is late season whitetail hunting? Good, bad, decent? GMU 105/117? by WoodHacker
[Today at 10:56:33 AM]


Multi season elk by Sundance
[Today at 10:39:42 AM]


High end binocs by Snakeriver
[Today at 10:12:09 AM]


Any MT deer updates? by Tbob
[Today at 10:09:28 AM]


Guidance to hunting new area by MADMAX
[Today at 09:50:56 AM]


WTS: reloading components by Smkn_brl00
[Today at 09:43:03 AM]


Taneum Elk Cow tag problem by Ewoiwod
[Today at 08:12:32 AM]


My Wenaha bull by Gonehuntin01
[Today at 08:08:05 AM]


BNSF Land Access by Sandberm
[Today at 06:58:18 AM]


Slide Ridge Quality tag holders by Britt-dog
[Today at 06:09:06 AM]


2025 elk success thread!! by jeffitz
[Today at 04:04:14 AM]


My Entiat Late tag thread by scottfrick
[Yesterday at 10:15:40 PM]


Stevens double barrel 410 by scotsman
[Yesterday at 09:39:58 PM]


Xlr element vs mdt hnt26 by dmoua
[Yesterday at 09:30:35 PM]


2025 blacktail rut thread by HntnFsh
[Yesterday at 08:55:39 PM]


East Side Quail Numbers? by Goshawk
[Yesterday at 08:55:20 PM]

SimplePortal 2.3.7 © 2008-2025, SimplePortal