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Pronghorn: Ecology and Management
 
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Pronghorn: Ecology and Management [Hardcover]

Bart W. O'Gara (Author), James D. Yoakum (Author), Richard E. McCabe (Editor), Edson Fichter (Illustrator), Daniel P. Metz (Illustrator)
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Book Description

November 30, 2004 0870817574 978-0870817571
One of the fastest land animals on Earth (second only to the cheetah), the pronghorn can reach speeds of more than 50 miles per hour. It also is one of the most fascinating of all animals. For many people, the pronghorn was nearly as much a symbol of the American West as was the bison; for some, it still is. Eliminated from much of its historic range by the early 1900s, this unique North American big game species has experienced a remarkable recovery and now is found throughout the western United States, Canada, and northern Mexico. Thirty years in the making, "Pronghorn: Ecology and Management" contains the most comprehensive and up-to-date information on the behavior, physiology, migration, taxonomy, and management of this extraordinary animal.

Full chapters are devoted to distribution, nutrition and food, diseases and parasites, ecosystem management, hunting, and much more. The principal authors—the world’s preeminent pronghorn biologists, Bart W. O’Gara and Jim D. Yoakum—conclude with a thorough discussion of the future of pronghorn and their management. With 23 chapters that include contributions by 10 other wildlife professionals and more than 850 illustrations, including original artwork by Edson Fichter and Daniel P. Metz, "Pronghorn: Ecology and Management" is certain to be the definitive work on the species for years to come.


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About the Author

Bart W. OÂ’Gara, deceased, led the Montana Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit at the University of Montana, Missoula. Jim D. Yoakum, retired, was the U.S. Bureau of Land ManagementÂ’s first wildlife biologist.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 903 pages
  • Publisher: University Press of Colorado (November 30, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0870817574
  • ISBN-13: 978-0870817571
  • Product Dimensions: 11.1 x 8.7 x 2.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,043,444 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Exhaustive and exhausting, September 22, 2005
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This review is from: Pronghorn: Ecology and Management (Hardcover)
This is an exhaustive book on pronghorn. Literally everything that you might want to know about pronghorns is here. And then some. For example, the chapter on hunting not only tells you how to clean a pronghorn but provides a few recipes (tastes like veal). The two lead authors are at the end of their careers and have collected two lifetimes of learning in this book.

Reflecting all that knowledge, many of the chapters read like laundry lists of the scholarly literature. That makes it an essential reference but many chapters are a pretty dry read.

The authors haven't done enough sifting through the material, weighing its strengths and weaknesses. We never get a manifesto for future research on, say, the parasitology or anatomy of the pronghorn. This would help liven up the book.

This lack of synthesis or manifesto probably reflects the fact that O'Gara and/or Yoakum are the author or co-author of almost every chapter. Knowledgeable as they are, they can't be the leading experts on every single aspect of the pronghorn. The book would have been better served by a greater range of contributors. An excellent model of this, and a comparably exhaustive book that covers its animal better, is Mech and Boitano's "Wolves: Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation."

The authors display their own voice most strongly in those chapters on in management issues: fencing and habitat fragmentation, capture and relocation, and hunting. The authors have strong views on how to do these things and how to do them right. These chapters are also the most lively written and the easiest to read.

Even on those policy issues, O'Gara and Yoakum take the perspective of managers working within existing legal and political frameworks. From this bottom-up perspective, their best suggestions often rest on maintaining good relations among stakeholders such as hunters, landowners, and the public. It would be particularly valuable if these authors could step "outside the box" at the end and think about how they might change that regulatory environment in an ideal world. Do interspersed holdings of private land and BLM leases serve ranchers, hunters, and the animals best? Or would land swaps that consolidate private land and convert BLM land to wildlife refuges serve better? (Presumably the answer to that question depends on the share of public land in a state, since Wyoming and Nevada are not Nebraska or California.)

These authors prefer to avoid bolder steps and claims. Again, this differs dramatically from the community of wolf researchers. Essential as this book is as a desk reference for those interested in this animal, it could have been better.
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