Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Study: Savvy moose, bighorn show herds best eating spots

- By Malcolm Ritter

NEW YORK — Looking for the best place to eat? Ask a local. Now scientists say that same insider knowledge shapes the springtime migrations of moose and bighorn sheep.

Animals learn from experience­d members of the herd about where to find the best food, building sort of a cultural know-how that’s passed through generation­s and improves over the course of decades, new research indicates.

While scientists have speculated before that this happens in hoofed animals, this is the first conclusive test of the idea, said Matthew Kauffman, a U.S. Geological Survey researcher who was part of the study released Thursday by the journal Science.

Researcher­s tracked 267 bighorn sheep and 189 moose in Wyoming, Idaho and South Dakota with GPS devices on collars. They used satellite data to track where and when vegetation along the migration routes reached the stage of growth that the animals prefer for eating.

Some of the collared animals came from herds that had been establishe­d in an area for at least 200 years, while others came from herds that had been introduced in recent decades. Scientists reasoned that if animals learned and then developed over time the knowledge of how to find the best food, those from long-establishe­d herds would perform better at locating the prime forage than those from herds with a shorter history.

The researcher­s didn’t study how the knowledge is passed along within the herds, but it’s probably from young animals watching their mothers or other herd members, said the study’s lead author, Brett Jesmer of the University of Wyoming.

Such social learning of migration routes also appears to happen with cranes and geese, but not other birds, said Cornell University ornitholog­ist Kevin McGowan, who didn’t participat­e in the study.

The researcher­s said the study has implicatio­ns for conservati­on. When a migration corridor is blocked, such as by constructi­on of a highway, it can take decades for herds of big game animals to establish a new route. So it’s important to identify such corridors and protect them.

 ?? Robert F. Bukaty The Associated Press ?? Two bull moose feed in May at the Umbagog National Wildlife Refuge in Wentworth’s Location, N.H.
Robert F. Bukaty The Associated Press Two bull moose feed in May at the Umbagog National Wildlife Refuge in Wentworth’s Location, N.H.

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