Moose - National
Park Service
Moose
(Alces alces shirasi Nelson), the largest member of the deer
family, were reportedly very rare in northwest Wyoming when Yellowstone
National Park was established in 1872. Subsequent protection from hunting
and wolf control programs may have contributed to increased numbers
but suppression of forest fires probably was the most important factor,
since moose here depend on mature fir forests for winter survival.
Moose breed
from early September to November and one to three calves are born in
May or June. Calves weigh 25 to 35 pounds at birth but grow rapidly;
adult females (cows) weigh up to 800 pounds and males (bulls) up to
1300 pounds. Bulls are readily identified by their large, palmate antlers,
which are shed annually, and their bells, an apparently useless dewlap
of skin and hair that dangles from the throat. Moose live mostly solitary
lives, and die from disease, starvation, or predation by wolves and,
occasionally, by grizzly bears.
Surveys
in the late 1980s suggested a total park population of fewer than 1000
moose. Research on radio-collared moose in northern Yellowstone has
shown that when snow depth forces moose from low-elevation willow stands
in November, they move up to as high as 8500 feet, to winter in mature
stands of subalpine fir and Douglas-fir. They browse fir almost exclusively
during the deep-snow winter months. Tyers (unpubl. data) found that
moose ate 39.6 percent subalpine fir, 25.5 percent willows, 10.6 percent
lodgepole pine, 4.6 percent gooseberry, and 4 percent buffaloberry.
Snow is not as deep under a canopy of conifer branches since some snow
remains on them, and a crust that may restrict moose movements is less
likely to form on shaded snow. However, Tyers found that moose could
winter in areas where snow considerably deeper than that which elk could
withstand.
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The moose
calf crop has been declining since the fires of 1988. During that summer
there was also high predation of moose by grizzly bears in small patches
of surviving timber. The winter following the fires many old moose died,
probably as a combined result of the loss of good moose forage and a
harsh winter. The fires forced some moose into poorer habitats, with
the result that some almost doubled their home range, using deeper snow
areas than previously, and sometimes browsing burned lodgepole pines.
Unlike moose habitat elsewhere, northern Yellowstone does not have woody
browse species that will come in quickly after a fire and extend above
the snowpack to provide winter food. Therefore, the overall effects
of the fires were probably detrimental to moose populations. Park managers,
in cooperation with staff from the adjacent Gallatin National Forest
and the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks continue to seek
good methods to monitor the status of moose in northern Yellowstone.
Aerial surveys of willow habitats in spring have shown some promise
of providing an index of moose population trends in Yellowstone, although
their current population and distribution remain largely unknown.
Moose are
commonly observed in the park's southwestern corner along the Bechler
and Falls rivers, in the riparian zones around Yellowstone Lake, in
the Soda Butte Creek, Pelican Creek, Lewis River, and Gallatin river
drainages, and in the Willow Park area between Mammoth and Norris. Summer
moose migrations from south and west of the park into Yellowstone have
been confirmed by radiotelemetry
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