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Pronghorn Migration Corridors - Likely Tables - 2014-2020 [ds2934]

Metadata Updated: August 23, 2025

The project lead for the collection of this data was Richard Shinn. Pronghorn (30 adult females and 1 adult male) were captured and equipped with GPS collars (Sirtrack, Havelock North, NZ) transmitting data from 2014-2020. The Likely Tables herd contains migrants, but this herd does not migrate between traditional summer and winter seasonal ranges. Instead, much of the herd displays a somewhat nomadic migratory tendency, slowly migrating north for the summer using various high use areas as they move. Therefore, annual home ranges were modeled using year-round data to demarcate high use areas in lieu of modeling the specific winter ranges commonly seen in other ungulate analyses in California. A high use area being used during winter by many of the collared animals is west of the Warner Mountains, east of Highway 395, and north of the Modoc County line. Additionally, a few individuals persist east of Highway 395, seemingly separated from the rest of the herd. Summer ranges are spread out, with some individuals moving into the Modoc National Forest and as far north as Goose Lake. A few outliers in the herd moved long distances south or east. GPS locations were fixed between 1-4 hour intervals in the dataset. To improve the quality of the data set as per Bjørneraas et al. (2010), the GPS data were filtered prior to analysis to remove locations which were: i) further from either the previous point or subsequent point than an individual pronghorn is able to travel in the elapsed time, ii) forming spikes in the movement trajectory based on outgoing and incoming speeds and turning angles sharper than a predefined threshold , or iii) fixed in 2D space and visually assessed as a bad fix by the analyst. The methodology used for this migration analysis allowed for the mapping of the herd’s home range and the identification and prioritization of migration corridors. Brownian Bridge Movement Models (BBMMs; Sawyer et al. 2009) were constructed with GPS collar data from 17 migrating pronghorn, including 29 migration sequences, location, date, time, and average location error as inputs in Migration Mapper. The average migration time and average migration distance for pronghorn was 15.42 days and 38.02 km, respectively. Corridors and stopovers were prioritized based on the number of animals moving through a particular area. BBMMs were produced at a spatial resolution of 50 m using a sequential fix interval of less than 27 hours. Due to varying fix rates in the data, separate models using Brownian bridge movement models (BMMM), with an adaptable variance rate, and fixed motion variances of 1000 were produced per migration sequence and visually compared for the entire dataset, with best models being combined prior to population-level analyses (72% of sequences selected with BBMM). In general, fixed motion variances were used when BBMM variances exceeded 8000. Home range analyses were based on data from 20 pronghorn and 25 year-round sequences using a combination of BBMMs and fixed motion variances of 1000 (84% of sequences selected with BBMM). Home range designations for this herd may expand with a larger sample, filling in some of the gaps between home range polygons in the map. Large water bodies were clipped from the final outputs.Corridors are visualized based on pronghorn use per cell, with greater than or equal to 1 pronghorn and greater than or equal to 3 pronghorn (20% of the sample) representing migration corridors and high use corridors, respectively. Stopovers were calculated as the top 10 percent of the population level utilization distribution during migrations and can be interpreted as high use areas. Stopover polygon areas less than 20,000 m2 were removed, but remaining small stopovers may be interpreted as short-term resting sites, likely based on a small concentration of points from an individual animal. Home range is visualized as the 50th percentile contour of the home range utilization distribution.

Access & Use Information

Public: This dataset is intended for public access and use. Non-Federal: This dataset is covered by different Terms of Use than Data.gov. License: See this page for license information.

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Dates

Metadata Created Date July 24, 2025
Metadata Updated Date August 23, 2025

Metadata Source

Harvested from State of California

Additional Metadata

Resource Type Dataset
Metadata Created Date July 24, 2025
Metadata Updated Date August 23, 2025
Publisher California Department of Fish and Wildlife
Maintainer
Identifier 1e24e484-3a52-4788-9bc5-e4da60c3c09c
Data First Published 2022-11-28T18:05:41.000Z
Data Last Modified 2025-07-24T15:23:49.558Z
Category Natural Resources
Public Access Level public
Metadata Context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
Schema Version https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
Catalog Describedby https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
Harvest Object Id fa21764a-f37b-440a-a6a4-0bd809428a83
Harvest Source Id 3ba8a0c1-5dc2-4897-940f-81922d3cf8bc
Harvest Source Title State of California
License http://www.opendefinition.org/licenses/cc-by
Source Datajson Identifier True
Source Hash 6cae7cc0c76b40014ebf7c576c2016fb70e3f47f65629b951f20719a4aaae2c5
Source Schema Version 1.1

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