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Inspection committee

Pronghorn "antelope" (Antilocapra americana) bucks in extreme western Utah, not far from the Nevada line near the old site of Gandy. Pronghorns are not true antelope but the last surviving representatives of a group of ruminants (Antilocapridae) intermediate between deer and cows/true antelope. They are native to North America and have made a remarkable recovery after having been hunted nearly to extinction by the early 20th century.
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23 comments

Jeff Farley said:

A great shot Sig and many thanks for posting to Fur, Fin and Feather.
6 years ago

William Sutherland said:

Majestic capture!

Admired in:
www.ipernity.com/group/tolerance
6 years ago ( translate )

Jaap van 't Veen said:

Beautiful wildlife image.
Have a nice weekend.
6 years ago ( translate )

Andy Rodker said:

Interesting! Are true antelopes and cows as closely as you suggest? I will have to investigate as I've never thought about it before, except so far as to assume that deer and antelope were more closely related to each other than either would be to a cow!
6 years ago

slgwv replied to Andy Rodker:

It's in the headgear! True deer have antlers without a bony core that are shed annually, and they're found only on the males. Both true antelope and bovines have horns that are keratin-sheathed but with a bony core, and the keratin sheath is not shed routinely. In addition, both sexes have horns, the females' being much smaller. In pronghorns, the keratin sheath is shed (IIRC) annually, just as in deer, but both sexes have horns.
6 years ago

slgwv said:

Thanks, everyone! It's nice they've made such a comeback after having been hunted nearly to extinction by the early 20th century.
6 years ago

Don Barrett (aka DBs… said:

So the one's I photographed (with much less camera capability) 15 years ago in about the same area are probably pronghorns? www.flickr.com/photos/donbrr/3699876001
6 years ago

slgwv replied to Don Barrett (aka DBs…:

Definitely pronghorns! The coloring is distinctive, as is the horn shape. One of those "Amazing Wildlife Facts" you hear is that they can make the hairs on the white rump stand up so as to catch the sun, evidently as a warning that a predator is in the vicinity.
6 years ago

Don Barrett (aka DBs… replied to slgwv:

And they're (rightly) assuming that we're predators.
6 years ago

slgwv said:

As a followup, I've commented elsewhere that pronghorns have made an astonishing comeback since being hunted nearly to extinction around the turn of the last century. It's estimated (IIRC) that only ~14K individuals were left in the early 20th century, down from a pre-Columbian population of millions. When I was a kid, we never used to see them in these Great Basin valleys. The Nevada Dept. of Wildlife, and I'm sure other states', has had a program for a number of years of reintroducing pronghorns into their historic range where they'd died out, and it seems to have worked. Sometimes there _is_ progress!
6 years ago

slgwv said:

And on checking with that Fount of Knowledge Wikipedia:

True antelope, along with cattle, goats, and sheep, all belong to the family Bovidae. Deer belong to Cervidae, and pronghorns are the last surviving representatives of Antilocapridae. All these animals belong to infraorder Pecora in the ruminants, along with another couple of small families (Giraffidae, giraffes & okapis) and musk deer (Moschidae). In fact, pronghorns are more closely (if still distantly) related to giraffes & okapis than to true antelope.

There are no true native antelope in North America, but some other bovids (bison "buffalo," bighorn sheep, and the Rocky Mountain goat) are native. The Rocky Mountain goat, however, is in its own genus (Oreamnos), different from Old World goats (Capra).
6 years ago

Don Barrett (aka DBs… replied to slgwv:

I'm surprised somewhat by the number. I took Amtrak from SF to Chicago way back in the late 70's and it seemed that we passed very many pronghorns across central Nevada then.

I've seen them relatively often across central Nevada -- below is a link (on that other site) to a photo near Round Mountain where I labeled them antelopes (I should change that): www.flickr.com/photos/donbrr/6719186427
6 years ago

Roger (Grisly) said:

Good to see a strong recovery of the species Steve.
6 years ago

slgwv replied to Roger (Grisly):

Sometimes things go right!
6 years ago

slgwv replied to Don Barrett (aka DBs…:

Apparently the establishment of the Charles Sheldon Antelope Refuge in far northern Nevada, greatly enlarged by FDR in the height of the Depression, was a key factor. David Goulart used to post lots of pix from there. The Thousand Creek Gorge is on the eastern side:
www.ipernity.com/doc/289859/47565872
6 years ago