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Preliminary findings after two years of a four-year research project on Oklahoma's pronghorn population were provided to the Oklahoma Wildlife Conservation Commission during its regular March meeting. (Credit: Bill Carrell/iNaturalist CC-BYNCND)
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Aerial survey results in 2019 showed 2,088 pronghorns throughout Texas and Cimarron counties. That number decreased to 800 pronghorns counted this year. Hunters reported harvesting about 90 pronghorns in 2023, down from about 150 the previous year.
In response to the trend, the Wildlife Department two years ago contracted with the Oklahoma Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit to conduct a four-year study of pronghorn in Oklahoma. Graduate student researcher Matt Turnley gave a status report to the Commission.
By putting radio collars on captured pronghorns, Turnley said researchers can track animal movement and survival. He said preliminary results to this point indicate nearly all pronghorn born in the Oklahoma Panhandle spend their entire lives there. And the survival rate is about 75% annually for adult pronghorns and about 11% after about six months for fawns.
He said the study is also looking into nutritional quality and predation as contributors to the declining pronghorn population.
In other business, the Commission:
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Heard a presentation by Wildlife Division Chief Bill Dinkines recognizing Russ Horton, Assistant Chief of Wildlife, for winning the Oklahoma Award for outstanding contribution to wildlife management from the Oklahoma Chapter of The Wildlife Society.
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Received updates on various ODWC divisions from Interim Director Wade Free, including news of last week’s 88-3 vote in the state House of Representatives approving ODWC’s hunting and fishing license restructuring bill. The bill with amendments now moves to the state Senate.
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Heard a report from Communication and Education Chief Nels Rodefeld on bills that could impact the Wildlife Department if they become law in the 2024 Oklahoma Legislature.
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Recognized presentation of the Oklahoma Chapter of The Wildlife Society’s Publication and Creativity Award to ODWC’s Wildlife Diversity Program and Communication and Education Specialists Jena Donnell and Don P. Brown for the May/June issue of Outdoor Oklahoma magazine.
In new business, Commission Chairwoman Leigh Gaddis recognized ODWC Executive Assistant Rhonda Hurst for her 32 years of service, many of which serving as Commission clerk during meetings. On behalf of the Commission, Gaddis presented Hurst an engraved vase. Hurst is planning to retire later this month.
The Oklahoma Wildlife Conservation Commission is the eight-member governing board of the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation. The Commission establishes state hunting and fishing regulations, sets policy for the Wildlife Department, and indirectly oversees all state fish and wildlife conservation activities. Commission members are appointed by the governor and confirmed by the Oklahoma Senate.
The next regular Wildlife Commission meeting is set for April 1, 2024, at the John D. Groendyke Wildlife Conservation Building, 1801 N. Lincoln Blvd. in Oklahoma City.
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Gathered for presentation of the Oklahoma Award from the Oklahoma Chapter, The Wildlife Society are ODWC Wildlife Chief Bill Dinkines, award winner ODWC Wildlife Assistant Chief Russ Horton, and Colter Chitwood, chapter board member and assistant professor at Oklahoma State University. (Don P. Brown/ODWC)
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Gathered to be recognized for an Oklahoma Chapter, The Wildlife Society Publication and Creativity Award to Outdoor Oklahoma magazine are Communication and Education Chief Nels Rodefeld, Research Coordinator Kurt Kuklinski, and C&E Specialist Don P. Brown. (Micah Holmes/ODWC)
Executive Assistant Rhonda Hurst receives an engraved vase from the Oklahoma Wildlife Conservation Commission and Commission Chairwoman Leigh Gaddis in appreciation for her 32 years of service to the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation. The March 6, 2024, meeting marked the last in which Hurst served as Commission clerk. (Don P. Brown/ODWC)
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