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Study being done on Death Valley’s bighorn sheep; 60 sheep now have GPS collars

Working with bighorn sheep photo credit CDFW
National Park Service and Oregon State University biologists working with a bighorn sheep. Photo credit: California Department of Fish and Wildlife

DEATH VALLEY, Calif. – Researchers are looking at bighorn sheep in Death Valley National Park to study links between movement, genetics, and disease.

Diseases pose one the largest threats to the survival of desert bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis nelsoni). Bighorn sheep were exposed to new diseases when domestic sheep and goats were brought into the West. Some diseases are common and relatively minor in domestic sheep and goats, yet can be deadly for bighorn sheep.

However, some herds respond better to disease than others do. The question is, “Why?”

The answer could be key to protecting bighorn sheep in the West.

While most desert bighorn sheep spend their lifetimes within a single mountain range, some ewes and rams journey between mountain ranges. These wanderers create important genetic diversity, but they can also spread disease between herds.

While some herds interact with many wandering sheep, other herds are more isolated. Researchers at Oregon State University (OSU) think that difference affects how bighorn sheep immune systems evolved. This could explain why some herds are more resistant to certain diseases.

OSU is working with the National Park Service and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to study this question in Death Valley.

In November and early December, park visitors might have seen bighorn sheep hanging from a helicopter. The helicopter captured and transported 60 sheep to level ground for biologists to be able to safely do their work. Researchers collected genetic, disease, immune, and microbiome samples from each bighorn sheep. They then fitted each sheep with a GPS tracking collar.

Helicopter transporting bighorn sheep 2 NPS photo by Bill Sloan
A bighorn sheep being transported by helicopter for biologists to sample it and attach a GPS collar. NPS photo by Bill Sloan

These GPS collars will help produce the most accurate picture of the location, movement, and size of desert bighorn herds in Death Valley to date. They will also provide real time monitoring of how bighorn sheep respond to challenges like disease, human activities, and climate change.

www.nps.gov/deva-

Death Valley National Park is the homeland of the Timbisha Shoshone and preserves natural resources, cultural resources, exceptional wilderness, scenery, and learning experiences within the nation’s largest conserved desert landscape and some of the most extreme climate and topographic conditions on the planet. Learn more at www.nps.gov/deva.  

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