Ninety percent of the elk in the Upper Columbia basin
winter in or near the wetlands
Winter is a critical season for elk. Particulary for the bulls that enter the winter after an exhausting fall rut. A long winter with dep snow can mean starvation or make elk so weak they become easy pickins for cougar and wolves.
One way to endure winter is to avoid it. But for animals that don’t hibernate or migrate to warmer climates it means having to cope with the snow. It seems that animals with the longest legs and largest feet in relation to weight are the best adapated for survival in deep snow. Elk have long legs but their hooves are not large enough to keep them from sinking. So when the snow depth reaches two thirds up the elk’s legs - they are in trouble as valuable energy is lost from poughing through snow and digging for food with their hoofs.
One of the advantages elk have is that they are both grazers and browsers. So when the grasses are buried too deep the elk are able to feed on the shrubs that stick out above the snow.
For news article see The Golden Scoop
For news article see The Golden Scoop
i love watching elk and listening to them too. they are such an awesome creature
ReplyDeleteI have seen elk crossing the road along hwy 93/95 north of Invermere for the first time in my 18 years in the valley. I have heard it is because there are now too many big fences disturbing their natural corridors.
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