California Fish and Wildlife Journal (Dec 2023)

A simple genetic method to distinguish mule deer and bighorn sheep fecal pellets and its application to detecting bighorn sheep colonization events in California

  • John Wehausen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.51492/cfwj.109.18
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 109, no. 4

Abstract

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Bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) habitat frequently is geographically discontinuous and the metapopulation model fits this species well. Consequently, extinction-colonization dynamics are important and need to be monitored. Much of the conservation history of bighorn sheep, however, was based on a theory that natural colonization is not part of the biology of this species. That theory is not supported by a growing body of evidence that natural colonization of vacant habitat does occur in this species. Here I present a simple PCR test that distinguishes bighorn sheep fecal pellets from those of mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) as a useful tool in documenting bighorn sheep occupancy where mule deer are present. I include examples from California of applications of this method to investigate potential colonization events.

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