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Ever seen an elk with a radio collar?
Elk
Contributors to this thread:
PoudreCanyon 07-Aug-20
Z Barebow 07-Aug-20
fubar racin 07-Aug-20
Teeton 07-Aug-20
fubar racin 07-Aug-20
PoudreCanyon 07-Aug-20
cnelk 07-Aug-20
cnelk 07-Aug-20
PAOH 07-Aug-20
fubar racin 07-Aug-20
PAOH 07-Aug-20
bowbender77 07-Aug-20
Jaquomo 07-Aug-20
nogutsnostory 07-Aug-20
Willieboat 07-Aug-20
zeke 07-Aug-20
Brun 07-Aug-20
Grubby 07-Aug-20
Kurt 07-Aug-20
cnelk 07-Aug-20
Jaquomo 08-Aug-20
nmwapiti 08-Aug-20
BOHNTR 08-Aug-20
BOHNTR 08-Aug-20
BOHNTR 08-Aug-20
From: PoudreCanyon
07-Aug-20

PoudreCanyon's embedded Photo
PoudreCanyon's embedded Photo
Pulled a card on one of my cams today, and this gal showed up - a first for me. Anyone one else seen one with a collar?

From: Z Barebow
07-Aug-20
Yes. My uncle shot one last year here in ND.

From: fubar racin
07-Aug-20
When I elk hunted your area poudre I got a letter saying that the cows with collars had been treated with an experimental birth control saying it wasn’t illegal to take one but asking that we don’t. I always figured givin the opportunity she would be my target since she wasn’t contributing to the herd.

From: Teeton
07-Aug-20
Yes, I believe it was 2009 in the west elk wilderness co.

From: fubar racin
07-Aug-20
West elk was not where my letter was about

From: PoudreCanyon
07-Aug-20
Fubar - huh. I assumed that was her calf right behind her...

From: cnelk
07-Aug-20
This may be of interest - link won’t post (copy and paste) The RMEF is doing herd study around Red Feather Lakes

https://www.rmef.org/elk-network/colorado-wildlife-officials-focus-on-project-to-help-elk-herds/?utm_source=ActiveCampaign&utm_medium=email&utm_content=August+Elk+Country+News&utm_campaign=August+Elk+Country+News

From: cnelk
07-Aug-20
Here is the news release

Below is a news release from Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

Colorado Parks and Wildlife biologists are working on a project to obtain population demographic data to effectively and sustainably manage elk herds in Larimer County.

Portions of the project were made possible thanks to funding support from the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation and the Habitat Partnership Program that is funded by revenue from the sale of big game licenses.

Wildlife biologist Angelique Curtis is leading the project designed to help with management decisions for the elk herd in Data Analysis Unit (DAU) E-4.

It specifically is targeting elk in Red Feather Lakes and the Poudre Canyon geographic areas. Crews will deploy 30 GPS satellite collars on cow (female) elk to assist in data collection and help with monitoring the herd.

“The goal of this study is to get an understanding of migrational movements of the E-4 elk and gather herd composition data to better model the dynamics of the population for sustainable harvest,” Curtis said. “The collared cow elk will be used as ‘judas’ elk to perform aerial surveys for annual classification data. In this instance a ‘judas’ animal is the cow elk that we can locate from the collar that will lead us to the herd where we can then classify the whole herd.”

The GPS collars will provide enough data in the first three years of deployment to design a population model for the herd. The study will last four to five years, with the remaining data collected after year three from the collars being used to refine the parameters of the model.

Deployment of the collars started last summer by trapping or ground darting elk in the Comanche Wilderness Area. Helicopter capture was also used this past winter to deploy additional units. The few remaining collars will go out late this month via ground darting and trapping.

Collars are spatially distributed in selected geographical areas to get a representative sample of the herd. The GPS collars will give location data every 13 hours to get a rolling time frame of movements throughout the year.

“The locations are transmitted to the biologists computers and phones, so they reduce the time needed to track the animals,” Senior Wildlife Biologist Shannon Schaller said. “This also ensures we collect data in remote areas. If a collared elk stops moving for more than eight hours, it will emit a mortality signal that biologists can attempt to retrieve to help them understand mortality causes.

“This technology has been a real benefit for wildlife biologists to collect data more efficiently.”

Wildlife managers need the new data to make informed recommended license allocations for hunters, as to date there is not much known about the elk in the DAU.

Previously, hunter harvest and voluntary elk tooth submissions from 2009 to present provided data on the herd composition (sex and age) to make harvest recommendations. The last aerial survey of the elk in the DAU was in 2006.

In 2014, estimated elk populations obtained from ground surveys reached the upper end of the management objectives – the herd size was increasing past the point of the carrying capacity the landscape would support. Thus, both bull and cow elk license numbers increased to help the herd stay within the management objective. Wildlife managers are seeking better data on herd trends to assess harvest limits to align with new population models.

Starting this December, Curtis along with wildlife officers, will conduct aerial surveys to gather baseline data using the GPS collars to locate the elk.

Once more data is compiled, the new population matrix model will be built with an understanding of the areas of greatest conservation, migration corridors, calving areas and habitat enhancement opportunities all designed to keep the elk herds healthy and within the management objectives.

From: PAOH
07-Aug-20
This one in PA

From: fubar racin
07-Aug-20
Brads info is definitely more current than mine

From: PAOH
07-Aug-20

PAOH 's embedded Photo
PAOH 's embedded Photo

From: bowbender77
07-Aug-20
Oh yeah. I shot at one several years ago from a treestand and shot just under it. Still pissess me off every time I think about it. The collar was red. EERRRRRRER.

From: Jaquomo
07-Aug-20
It's kind of cool because the collar has a .22 blank inside that will literally blow the collar off when the battery gets low. That simulates an immobile animal, so they swoop in and recover the collar.

07-Aug-20

nogutsnostory's embedded Photo
nogutsnostory's embedded Photo
I harvested this cow in Idaho. IDGF said she was 14 or 15 years old. I seen her the year before and she had a calf following her and when I harvested her she had a calf also. The batteries had been dead for over ten years.

From: Willieboat
07-Aug-20
Over the years have seen close to a dozen of them with collars.

From: zeke
07-Aug-20
Three years ago in a LEA in Colorado, while packing out my bull, my son picked up a collar up off the ground. On the way back to KY., we call a wildlife office and they asked that we drop it by their office. We didn't know if it was an elk, bear, moose or what ever. We asked that they call us and let us know what it came off of. A few days later they called and said it was off a cow elk.

From: Brun
07-Aug-20
I have seen somewhere around 15 or 20 over the years.

From: Grubby
07-Aug-20
I saw a radio collar from an elk that was snagged of the bottom of the rainy river on the Mn Ontario border a few years back by some kids fishing from the dock.

From: Kurt
07-Aug-20
Not a radio collar, but rather a cow elk with a leather collar and cow bell that I saw in CO unit 39 way back in 1975. First thought there must be a domestic cow with the elk herd when I heard the bell ringing but no, it was a cow elk leading a huge herd up at timberline near Mt Evans. Asking around, turns out she had gotten hung up in a fence and apparently the local cowboys that cut her loose first collared her over a decade earlier down by Evergreen on winter range. She was the lead cow...and I guess the bell cow. Not a big cow either.

From: cnelk
07-Aug-20
^^ I know cowboys that rope elk calves when gathering cattle in the fall and cut their ears.

So, if you ever shoot an elk with split ears, it’s probably been roped. :)

From: Jaquomo
08-Aug-20
Ha, Brad! Their "daddies" got caught 30 years ago in that same area for roping and castrating bulls in winter after they'd shed. Dont remember the fine but it wasn't enough. The judge in that county is a good old boy.

From: nmwapiti
08-Aug-20

nmwapiti's embedded Photo
nmwapiti's embedded Photo
A little tough to see, but the cow on the left is wearing a dark green one. Wyoming this summer.

From: BOHNTR
08-Aug-20
I see one (cow) in Alpine just about every time I roll through there. You can pick her out of the herd with that necklace!

From: BOHNTR
08-Aug-20
I see one (cow) in Alpine just about every time I roll through there. You can pick her out of the herd with that necklace!

From: BOHNTR
08-Aug-20
I see one (cow) in Alpine just about every time I roll through there. You can pick her out of the herd with that necklace!

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