Skip to main content

Migration Corridors (WGFD Designated) of Mule Deer in the Platte Valley Herd in Wyoming

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2011-01-01
End Date
2013-01-01

Citation

Wyoming Game and Fish Department, 2020, Migration Corridors (WGFD Designated) of Mule Deer in the Platte Valley Herd in Wyoming in Kauffman, M.J., Copeland, H.E., Cole, E., Cuzzocreo, M., Dewey, S., Fattebert, J., Gagnon, J., Gelzer, E., Graves, T.A., Hersey, K., Kaiser, R., Meacham, J., Merkle, J., Middleton, A., Nunez, T., Oates, B., Olson, D., Olson, L., Sawyer, H., Schroeder, C., Sprague, S., Steingisser, A., and Thonhoff, M., 2020, Ungulate Migrations of the Western United States, Volume 1: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9O2YM6I.

Summary

The Platte Valley Herd Corridor was designated by the Wyoming Game and Fish Department in 2018 (fig. 30). The Platte Valley herd contains approximately 11,000 mule deer. The corridor is based on two wintering populations, including a south segment from Saratoga, Wyoming, to the Colorado State line, and a north segment from Saratoga to the Dana Ridge area north of I-80. Winter ranges in the Platte Valley are more dispersed than winter ranges in other parts of the state, so deer migrate in many different directions. Many deer in the southern segment follow the Platte River south to summer ranges in Colorado. Most deer migrations in the north radiate south and east from winter ranges along I-80. The WGFD collared 45 additional mule deer [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

Shapefile: MD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.zip
MD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.CPG 5 Bytes
MD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.dbf 702 Bytes
MD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.prj 435 Bytes
MD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.sbn 196 Bytes
MD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.sbx 132 Bytes
MD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.shp 32.93 KB
MD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.shx 140 Bytes

Purpose

Across the western United States, many ungulate herds must migrate seasonally to access resources and avoid harsh winter conditions. Because these corridors traverse vast landscapes (i.e., up to 150 miles), they are increasingly threatened by roads, fencing, subdivisions and other development. Over the last decade, many new tracking studies have been conducted on migratory herds, and analytical methods have been developed that allow for population-level corridors and stopovers to be mapped and prioritized. In 2018, the U.S. Geological Survey assembled a Corridor Mapping Team to provide technical assistance to western states working to map bison, elk, moose, mule deer, and pronghorn corridors using existing GPS data. Based out of the Wyoming Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, the team consists of federal scientists, university researchers, and biologists and analysts from participating state agencies. In its first year, the team has worked to develop a standardized analytical and computational methods and a workflow applicable to data sets typically collected by state agencies. In 2019, the team completed analyses necessary to map corridors, stopovers, and winter ranges in Arizona, Idaho, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming. A total of 26 corridors, 16 migration routes, 25 stopovers, and 9 winter ranges, were mapped across these states and are included in this project. The Ungulate Migrations of the Western United States report and associated map archive provides the means for corridors to be taken into account by state and federal transportation officials, land and wildlife managers, planners, and other conservationists working to maintain big game corridors in the western states.

Map

Spatial Services

ScienceBase WMS

ScienceBase WFS

Communities

  • Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Units

Tags

Provenance

Additional Information

Shapefile Extension

boundingBox
minY40.96015528478035
minX-106.96483133960064
maxY41.85276152013609
maxX-106.23312073557877
files
nameMD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.CPG
contentTypetext/plain
pathOnDisk__disk__13/89/a2/1389a2577f75eb2f1647ced08dc2c770aaa991e5
size5
dateUploadedMon Oct 19 09:53:29 MDT 2020
nameMD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.dbf
contentTypeapplication/unknown
pathOnDisk__disk__c0/9a/2b/c09a2b0320b31bae93a4d3be92f13bc79acedb01
size702
dateUploadedMon Oct 19 09:53:29 MDT 2020
nameMD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.prj
contentTypetext/plain
pathOnDisk__disk__5d/b9/77/5db9775ef93d2a338b87417f8b0dfa9c229ebc17
size435
dateUploadedMon Oct 19 09:53:29 MDT 2020
nameMD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.sbn
contentTypex-gis/x-shapefile
pathOnDisk__disk__60/ce/a4/60cea4846bfe0e9f935cb8d6f3a1551bb9320147
size196
dateUploadedMon Oct 19 09:53:29 MDT 2020
nameMD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.sbx
contentTypex-gis/x-shapefile
pathOnDisk__disk__2e/e1/2e/2ee12e1f19a724f357ff61038c0001c5c1de2669
size132
dateUploadedMon Oct 19 09:53:29 MDT 2020
nameMD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.shp
contentTypex-gis/x-shapefile
pathOnDisk__disk__d1/de/6b/d1de6b52f321bf973da9be7c7b827f6a97ed5fa1
size33716
dateUploadedMon Oct 19 09:53:29 MDT 2020
nameMD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.shx
contentTypex-gis/x-shapefile
pathOnDisk__disk__9a/77/4b/9a774b835467cc833082f7bff6d684e38a8345fc
size140
dateUploadedMon Oct 19 09:53:29 MDT 2020
nameMD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018.xml
contentTypeapplication/fgdc+xml
pathOnDisk__disk__ad/bd/4d/adbd4d02f2b57c6596d8fe25a67a8298dfc3c3e4
dateUploadedMon Oct 26 11:34:54 MDT 2020
originalMetadatatrue
checksum
valuea794e299fd8e53e5a6e4406dc0c93127
typeMD5
geometryTypeMultiPolygon
nameMD_WY_PlatteValleyWGFDDesignatedCorridor_Ver1_WGFD2018
nativeCrsEPSG:5070

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...