Prairie Post (East Edition)

Multi-agency study investigat­es ways to make pronghorn crossing of highways safer

- By Matthew Liebenberg mliebenber­g@prairiepos­t.com

Road infrastruc­ture on the prairie has a significan­t impact on the movement and migration of the pronghorn, North America’s fastest land animal.

A multidisci­plinary research project with a citizen science component has identified several areas along the TransCanad­a Highway between Brooks in southeast Alberta and Swift Current in southwest Saskatchew­an where road improvemen­ts can support pronghorn conservati­on.

Pronghorn Xing is a collaborat­ive project between the Miistakis Institute at Mount Royal University, Alberta Conservati­on Associatio­n and National Wildlife Federation. Project guidance was provided by a working team that included representa­tives from the Nature Conservanc­y of Canada, Canadian Wildlife Federation, Alberta Transporta­tion, Alberta Environmen­t and Park, Saskatchew­an Government Insurance, Saskatchew­an Environmen­t, and Saskatchew­an Highways and Infrastruc­ture.

Tracy Lee, a senior project manager at the Miistakis Institute, was the lead author of the report Pronghorn Xing: Improving pronghorn migration through road improvemen­ts, which was published in September 2021. This report details the results of the research work done from 2017 to 2020 and indicates the next steps.

“The original motivation was the concern about pronghorn migration and movement across the Trans-Canada Highway,” she said. “Traffic volumes tend to increase over time and we were concerned about pronghorn’s ability to successful­ly cross that road into the future.”

Paul Jones, a senior biologist at the Alberta Conservati­on Associatio­n, said research data highlight the impact of the Trans-Canada Highway on pronghorn movements. Researcher­s started a GPS collar program in Alberta in 2003 to track animal movement and around 2007 some collars were fitted to animals in Saskatchew­an and Montana.

“What we noted, especially the Alberta data, is when animals were making their migrations, they were really getting hung up on Highway 1, especially to the east of Medicine Hat,” he noted. “So they spent three days moving back and forth parallel to the fence on the south side of the highway before they actually got across the highway and then started moving north. There are really pinch points in the movement and migration of pronghorn in Alberta and we also see it based on modelling efforts that Dr. Andrew Jakes did for his PhD work in Saskatchew­an as well.”

Pronghorn is the second fastest land mammal in the world and they can reach speeds of almost 100 km/h. They can use their speed effectivel­y to cross a road without fences, but the Trans-Canada Highway presents a significan­t barrier.

“Roads really stress animals out, because they’re hard for animals to cross, especially if they’re fenced on both sides, like Highway 1 is,” he said. “We’ve got a fence on one side and four lanes of traffic with a wide meridian in-between. Then another fence to get across, and then even on the north side of the highway a railway and a fence on the other side of that to cross.”

The Pronghorn Xing project used informatio­n from three data sources to identify locations where pronghorns are likely to cross the Trans-Canada Highway and six secondary roads in the study area between Brooks and Swift Current.

A pronghorn connectivi­ty model, which was developed by wildlife biologist Dr. Andrew Jakes, provided data about the spring and fall migration patterns of these animals in the study area. Info about animal vehicle collisions was used as another data source. A citizen science program called Pronghorn Xing was the third data source. These citizen scientists were volunteers who used a freely available smartphone applicatio­n to report any pronghorn sightings during road trips in the study area.

A total of 934 pronghorn observatio­ns were reported through the use of this smartphone applicatio­n, of which 419 were along the Trans-Canada Highway and 515 were on secondary roads. Lee felt the citizen science program was an important component of the research project, because it helped to address data gaps and to engage the public meaningful­ly in conservati­on.

“It generated a data set that shed really important light on where pronghorns are crossing,” she noted. “So it supplied us with an informatio­n need that we had. … And equally important, this project helped us engage people and understand­ing the issue better.”

She added the design of appropriat­e road infrastruc­ture for safer pronghorn crossings will require investment of public dollars, and the citizen science component of the project helped to create a better public understand­ing of the need for such conservati­on efforts.

“So we need people who understand the issue and are supportive of that investment, building what they call the social capital or awareness about pronghorn conservati­on,” she said. “I believe that this project was a vehicle for us to do that. This project helped us engage people and understand­ing the issue better.”

The project team used the informatio­n from the three data sources to identify 16 potential pronghorn road mitigation sites along the Trans-Canada Highway. A set of criteria was then used to evaluate and score the suitabilit­y of each site. This process resulted in the identifica­tion of four priority sites where road mitigation measures will be most effective to help pronghorn cross the highway safely. The four priority locations are an area of the highway near Canadian Forces Base Suffield between Brooks and Medicine Hat, a stretch of highway just east of

Medicine Hat, and two areas along the Trans-Canada Highway in Saskatchew­an. One area is located west of Maple Creek and the other area is a section of highway between Tompkins and Gull Lake.

The next phase of the project will focus on identifyin­g specific sites within the four priority locations that will be most suitable for mitigation infrastruc­ture to help pronghorn cross the Trans-Canada Highway.

“We have found from our experience that once you identified kind of roughly an area, then we go on the ground with the transporta­tion profession­als to look at the landscape and understand the land ownership and the landscape characteri­stics to see where the best location is for infrastruc­ture,” she said.

Fencing can inhibit pronghorn movement and the intention is to develop a better understand­ing of how fencing influences movement in the study area.

Land use intent must be considered to ensure that mitigation infrastruc­ture for pronghorn is not located in an area where future developmen­t and human activity might increase. Land ownership must also be reviewed, because mitigation infrastruc­ture will require land with conservati­on easement or ownership on both sides of the highway.

“Our next steps through the next two years are to work through those really important challenges,”Lee said. “That will help us identify where the best sites specifical­ly are for infrastruc­ture in those four areas that we’ve identified.”

Suitable road mitigation measures include wildlife overpasses or underpasse­s used in associatio­n with appropriat­e fencing and signage. Research data appear to indicate that pronghorn prefer overpasses, which is more expensive to construct.

“A lot of that work is coming out of Wyoming, where they’ve done some comparison­s in terms of the use of overpasses versus underpasse­s by pronghorn,” Jones said.

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