Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 26, 1995
Pronghorn: Return of the Native
By Steve Mark

Shirley Briggs in Arthur S. Einarsen, The
Pronghorn Antelope, Washington, DC: The Wildlife Management
Institute, 1948, p. 1.
One of the reasons people come to
national parks is to see large animals. The most ubiquitous large
animals in North American national parks have been called ungulates.
Although this classification for exclusively herbivorous mammals with
horns or antlers is no longer used, three families comprise the order
Artiodactyla, or hoofed mammals. Members of two families,
Cervidae (deer and elk) and
Antilocapridae (pronghorn antelope), are found in Crater Lake
National Park.
A glimpse of the common Columbian black
tail deer, Odocoileus hemionus columbianus, is enough for many
visitors to stop and take a second look. The larger and lighter-colored
Odocoileus hemionus hemionus whose comparatively long ears give it
the name "mule deer" is also often seen. Sometimes it can be difficult
to tell these subspecies apart because they can hybridize along the
crest of the Cascade Divide, where their respective ranges overlap. Much
more rarely seen is the yellow tail deer, Odocoileus virginianus
ochrourus.
It should not be confused with the two subspecies of O. hemionus
or their hybrid because this animal has a distinguishing and largely
white tail.
A bigger member of the family
Cervidae is the wapiti, though often referred to as elk. The names
are a small point of distinction in that wapiti is a Shawnee word from
eastern North America, whereas elk originally referred to European
moose. Most of them seen in the park are members of a herd which
migrates circuitously from the Prospect area (20 miles southwest of
Crater Lake) to the northern Klamath Basin. They often utilize the
meadows in Munson Valley throughout the summer and into fall. Being no
strangers to the southern rim of the Crater Lake caldera, nor even to
the top of Crater Peak, the elk can sometimes be seen kicking up dust
throughout August and September.
Like the two subspecies of deer, there
is reason to believe that the wapiti have undergone some degree of
hybridization. This is because of the general belief that hunters
greatly depleted the native Roosevelt elk, Cervus canadensis
roosevelti, by the early years of this century. State game officials
brought a herd of Rocky Mountain elk,
Cervus canadensis nelsoni, from Yellowstone National Park and
released them into the wild near Fort Klamath in 1917. The two
subspecies probably interbred because the Roosevelt elk had not been
completely extirpated from the west slope of the Cascade Range in
southern Oregon. The park thus plays an important role in perpetuating
the existence of a large and striking animal-- though one not fully
native by lineage.
Less evident than deer or elk at Crater
Lake National Park are pronghorn antelope, Antilocapra americana
oregona. As a fully native wild species, the pronghorn is known for
its speed (up to 60 mph) and keen eyesight which allows them to spot
moving objects three to four miles away. These creatures are generally
the size of a small deer and bear cinnamon-buff coloration. Supplying
emphatic contrast are black and white markings on the head and neck.
Pronghorn have a rump patch which can be spread when the animal is
alarmed into a large white rosette, or remain small and inconspicuous
when closed. They are not true antelope (in this regard they are like
the "elk"), but belong instead to a family of one pronged hollow- horned
animals peculiar to this continent. It differs from other hollow-horned
mammals by having permanent horn cores. A horn-like sheath covering
these bony processes is shed annually.
Within the boundaries of what is now
Crater Lake National Park, the earliest record of pronghorn is from
1887. During September of that year one explorer encountered
sufficiently large numbers of them on the Pumice Desert to name the
place "Antelope Prairie. " Several hundred pronghorn could still be seen
there during the late summer of 1896, but hunting pressures associated
with encroaching settlement forced their general retreat into the high
desert east of the park shortly thereafter. Despite a report of two
antelope on the south rim of Crater Lake in 1931, none had been seen in
other parts of their original range (which extended from southeastern
Oregon to the Cascade Range and included the Klamath Basin) for several
decades. By the 1940s, researchers doubted whether anyone might ever
again see pronghorn west of U.S. highway 97.
More recent observations, however, show
that antelope use the park each summer by way of the Desert Creek
drainage. A disappearing snowpack in this part of the park usually makes
June and July the best times to see them, though other times of the year
should not be discounted. In recent years several individuals have even
been spotted near Roundtop, along Crater Lake's northeast rim. They
appear to be part of a herd which migrates from the Fort Rock area, some
70 miles northeast of the park. When they are present, the pronghorn
seem to prefer the forested habitat between Pumice Desert and the park's
east boundary instead of more open areas. This may be due to the
pronghorn's characteristically slow natural return to former range, even
when hunting has been restricted for more than 80 years. Upon their
return to former range, researchers have noticed the pronghorn's
inclination to take up forested habitat more often associated with mule
deer. These areas can offer sanctuary for antelope, though they may be
somewhat different from the open places so characteristic of where they
roam.
What makes pronghorn reappearance at
Crater Lake interesting is that it seems to be part of a general
reclamation of their range after being absent in many places for most of
the past century. Even in the flat and open country of the Klamath
Basin, where sightings had not been recorded since 1886, antelope have
reappeared. Several weeks after an acquaintance of mine noticed a herd
of 20 pronghorn in an open field ten miles south of Klamath Falls, I
came across a single antelope on highway 62 near Klamath Agency. This
occurred in December 1994, when a foot of snow sat along the roadside.
Since antelope do not hurdle perceived barriers, it started running
along the highway's fog line. By the time we reached a road intersection
(which resulted in the antelope heading west toward Agency Lake while I
continued southward), we were traveling almost 50 mph. There are few
things more impressive than antelope in full flight, but speed alone is
not responsible for their apparent recovery in this part of Oregon.
Restrictions on hunting, accompanied by state and federal agencies
managing for pronghorn throughout eastern Oregon, have brought about
this success story.
Like the antelope, deer and elk
populations within the park appear to be viable, meaning that they are
capable of continuing to perpetuate themselves in this habitat. High
elevation and winter conditions, however, make the park a refuge for
only part of the year. These animals are dependent on management
practices outside park boundaries to sustain them, whether this means
protection from poaching or controlled hunting for herd reduction so
that starvation is averted.
Steve Mark is the park historian
at Crater Lake. He has been editor of Nature Notes since its revival in
1992.

A loping pronghorn antelope. Note the spread rump
patch "rosette".
Briggs in Einarsen, p. 47.