Below is a news release from the Wyoming Game and Fish Department.
Most elk, and other big game, typically show pretty solid fidelity to their seasonal ranges each year, but that is not always the case. During the winter of 2017-18, nearly all of the 2500 or so elk that have traditionally wintered in the Gros Ventre drainage went elsewhere. Most went down drainage to the National Elk Refuge near Jackson, but others went to the Dubois area to the northeast, the Upper Green to the east and even the Bondurant area to the south. This was all verified through radio-collared animals. While it’s not unusual for a few animals to try out different seasonal ranges now and then, it was unprecedented to have virtually all the elk in the Gros Ventre vacate their traditional winter range.
Go here to watch video of the movement via computer animation.
Since then, local Game & Fish managers have worked to increase monitoring of these elk in a variety of ways, including remote cameras at known migration bottle necks, additional aerial flights and equipping cow elk with GPS collars to provide a clearer picture of elk movements throughout the year.
Over the past three winters, a total of 41 additional cow elk in the Gros Ventre drainage have been fitted with GPS collars. Recently, Jackson Wildlife Biologist Aly Courtemanch put the animals’ year-round locations in motion to provide an animated picture of how these Gros Ventre elk have been using the landscape.
(Photo source: Wyoming Game and Fish Department)