Study: Drilling behind dwindling deer, pronghorn herds

By Troy Hooper
Real AspenJuly 22, 2011
The industrialization of once wild landscapes is partly to blame for dramatic declines in mule deer and pronghorn antelope in Colorado and Wyoming, according to a new report.
A family of deer in Missouri Heights.
Troy Hooper


After reviewing population trends, hunter-harvest reports and licenses sales from the two states over the last 30 years, wildlife biologists John Ellenberger and Gene Byrne concluded that oil and gas drilling, wind farms, agricultural practices and other human encroachments are slicing and dicing critical habitat the animals have historically relied upon to survive phenomenons of drought, weather and disease. The result: A slow, inexorable decline in populations of both species.

Humans are “cutting these big legendary Western landscapes into smaller and smaller islands of habitat. Not only is the winter range not as big and leaving mule deer and pronghorn antelope with fewer options but even the summer range is being impacted and, in some cases, the corridors the animals use to move between these ranges are being restricted by industrial uses,” Steve Torbit, the National Wildlife Federation’s regional executive director, said in an interview this week. “Some of those chunks of land are just not useable and the animals’ biological response is to either leave or die.”

The study, titled “Population Status and Trends of Big Game along the Colorado/Wyoming State Line,” is the first professional review of broad statistics over such a long period of time. It focused on both sides of the Colorado-Wyoming border in an area roughly bounded by Interstate 80 to the north, the Green River to the west, U.S. Highway 40 to the south and Laramie, Wyo. and Walden, Colo., to the east.

Although the Wyoming Department of Game and Fish and the Colorado Division of Wildlife do share information for big-game management, much of the federal land along the common border is overseen by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, which is administered by state directors whose mandate is “to focus on issues specific to the state they work in” and that “can lead to decisions that may be detrimental to neighboring states,” National Wildlife Federation representatives assert.

Too often, federal land managers approve development that characterizes itself as good for jobs and good for the economy without acknowledging it is detrimental to the ecosystem, according to the report.

“The BLM must recognize the cumulative, landscape-wide impacts of its decisions and that a lease or permit granted in one area or state can directly result in added stress to migrating game herds in an adjacent state,” Torbit said. “The needs of wildlife over the entire landscape need to be fully factored in before permits for oil, gas, wind farms, agricultural practices or any other human activity are permitted.”

Biologists dismiss claims from some area residents who believe coyotes and other predators are responsible for the decline in mule deer and pronghorn populations. There are fewer predators than before, the biologists point out, and historically deer and antelope herds have recovered from nature’s killers.

“What’s changed are the intense demands we are placing on Western landscapes,” Torbit said. “It appears that the new predator is the increased development and other human activity that has picked up pace over the past several decades. Mule deer and pronghorn are now experiencing 40-acre spacing of gas drilling pads and thousands of miles of roads and pipelines.”

With oil and gas development expected to surge as new fields in the Niobrara Formation are tapped along with other wide-open tracts in the West, biologists are concerned for the future of the animals.

“Evaluations of impacts to wildlife and wildlife habitat need to be performed at the landscape level, not just localized impacts,” said Ellenberger, the study’s co-author. “We are concerned that at some point, the resiliency of these herds to recover will be lost, creating a situation where we can only expect further declines.”


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River Name / Location Stream flow, ft3/s Gage height ft
Gore Creek
At Upper Station, Near I-70 Twin Bridges n/a 5 ft
Booth Creek n/a 4 ft
Abv Red Sandstone Creek At Vail 199 6 ft
At Mouth Near Minturn 231 7 ft
Beaver Creek
At Avon 21 2 ft
Lake Creek
Near Edwards 79 1 ft
Cross Creek
Near Minturn 97 4 ft
Homestake Creek
At Gold Park 127 5 ft
Eagle River
East Fork Eagle River Near Climax n/a 2 ft
At Red Cliff 30 3 ft
Near Minturn 231 4 ft
Wastewater Treatment Plant At Avon 671 5 ft
Below Gypsum 799 5 ft
Colorado River
Near Kremmling 396 4 ft
Near Dotsero 1,620 3 ft
Below Glenwood Springs 3,200 5 ft
Near Cameo 3,650 6 ft
Below Grand Valley Div Nr Palisade 2,200 5 ft
Near Colorado-utah State Line 4,080 4 ft
Near Cisco, Ut 4,160 3 ft
At Lees Ferry, Az 12,200 9 ft
Near Grand Canyon, Az 11,700 8 ft
Yuma Main Canal Ww At Yuma, Az 997 10 ft
Roaring Fork River
Abv Lost Man Cr Near Aspen n/a n/a ft
Ab Difficult C Nr Aspen 53 1 ft
Near Aspen 77 1 ft
Near Emma 464 6 ft
At Glenwood Springs 1,150 3 ft
Hunter Creek
Near Aspen 59 2 ft
At Aspen 49 4 ft
Frying Pan River
Near Ruedi 111 2 ft
Crystal River
Abv Avalanche Crk, Near Redstone 628 2 ft
Arkansas River
Ef Arkansas R At Us Highway 24, Nr Leadville 47 3 ft
Near Leadville 84 5 ft
Below Empire Gulch Near Malta 156 3 ft
Below Granite 453 4 ft
Near Nathrop 451 4 ft
At Parkdale 469 3 ft
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