John Hervert has an eagle's-eye view of the endangered Sonoran pronghorn. Every week Hervert,
an Arizona Game and Fish Department biologist, flies over a broad swath of the Sonoran Desert
and listens for the beeping of radio-collared pronghorn. He's seen their tawny forms against the
desert sands. He's watched them streak at 60 miles an hour across the creosote-dotted flats. He
knows where to expect them. And he knows where not to expect them.
"In four years we haven't documented a single crossing of a paved road or of the boundary
fence with Mexico," he says. "We'll often see the pronghorn 50 meters from the
fence, moving along it. They never cross it."
The Sonoran is one of five subspecies of pronghorn, one of
the world's swiftest animals. The creatures are uniquely adapted to their home in the West, but
they are unable to outrun or adapt to some of the changes that humanity has imposed on them. As
a result, pronghorn have vanished from about 75 percent of their original range, including
California's Central Valley and large swaths of the Great Plains. Significant population declines
have occurred since the species' numbers peaked at about 1 million in the early 1990s.
Nowhere in the United States are pronghorn in greater trouble than in the Sonoran Desert. Here,
on both sides of the United States-Mexico border, an estimated 400 to 500 Sonoran pronghorn
comprise the last remnants of a subspecies that once roamed as far as Southern California.
"We think there is a very significant risk of extinction in the next 50 to 100 years,"
says Hervert. "That's what scares me."
Pronghorn as a species were mistakenly dubbed "antelopes" by American explorers
and settlers because of their similarity to various African antelopes. In fact, pronghorn are in their
own family, Antilocapridae, and not related to the African animals, though "antelope"
persists as a common name.
Like the African antelopes, pronghorn are well adapted to open, exposed places. Their hollow,
layered hairs insulate against severe cold or become erect to dissipate summer heat. Pronghorn
thrive on a wide range of forbs, shrubs and cactus. Given succulent plants to eat, they survive
without drinking water. Their huge eyes spot far-off predators.
But their signature trait is speed. John Byers, a University of Idaho biologist who has studied
them on Montana's National Bison Range since 1981, recalls pacing a buck while driving just
outside the preserve's perimeter fence.
"The animal was on the other side of the fence," he says. "As I came around a
corner he started to accelerate and kept trying to get ahead of me. I maintained a steady 45 miles
per hour. The pronghorn was on the other side of the fence leaping over dips and swales, and
didn't look like he was maxed out at all. After a mile I had to slow down, and he kept
going."
A pronghorn's sprint speed of nearly 60 miles per hour is bested only by that of a cheetah, but
unlike a cheetah it can keep up a fast pace for miles. It could beat the best human runner in a
marathon--even if the human had an 18-mile head start.
This ability interested Stan Lindstedt, an animal physiologist at Northern Arizona University. By
studying two orphaned young on treadmills, he found that pronghorn simply maximize the
capabilities other mammals share. Thanks to an extra-large windpipe and increased diffusion in the
lungs, pronghorn can consume five times as much oxygen as a similarly sized goat; their hearts are
three times larger. They have more red blood cells, allowing faster transport of oxygen to
muscles. They have virtually no extra baggage in the form of fat. "They're a machine
designed for endurance," says Lindstedt.
Pronghorn run so superbly that biologists have questioned what they're designed to run
from. Before the devastation of predators that accompanied European settlement of the
West, they had to contend with lengthy pursuits by packs of wolves, but even wolves can't run as
fast as pronghorn. Byers postulates that pronghorn, whose lineage goes back 20 million years in
North America, evolved as the prey of now-extinct predators. "Pronghorn are ridiculously
too fast for any modern predator," he says. But in the Pleistocene they were preyed on by
packs of hyenas, which chased their quarry long distances; by short-faced bears, which attacked
from ambush; and by American cheetahs, which were sprinters. As a result, says Byers, pronghorn
evolved the ability to sprint and run long distances.
Modern predators are not too slow to catch pronghorn fawns, however. Adult females bear twins
in the spring, just when coyotes, bobcats and golden eagles have young of their own to feed. All
three predators eagerly take pronghorn fawns--when they can find them. Virtually scentless and
well camouflaged, fawns are tough to locate. They grow quickly on a diet of mother's milk, which
contains three times as much fat as a cow's. At a couple of days of age they can outrun a human.
Still, at least half the year's young usually fall prey.
"Mother Nature seems to have compensated for the fact that at least 50 percent of the
fawns are generally taken each year by having does produce two each year," says Jim
Yoakum, a biologist who spent 47 years studying pronghorn for the federal Bureau of Land
Management and is now a consultant.
Predation on adult pronghorn is uncommon, but adults face other problems. There is, for
example, that odd reluctance to jump over even a low fence.
"Pronghorn have been living in wide-open terrain for so long that their behavior doesn't
allow them to jump a fence, even though they can physically do it," says Yoakum.
Even a simple barbed-wire fence over which deer spring with ease can form an insurmountable
barrier. Though some ranchers and wildlife managers have retrofitted fences with high, barbless
lower strands under which pronghorn can squeeze themselves without injury, fences continue to
split much of the West into what are, to pronghorn, discrete islands.
Highway traffic, too, can keep pronghorn from moving, even on narrow two-lane roads.
"They look left, they look right, and they see Ôpredators' coming at them from both
directions," says Charles van Riper, a researcher with the U.S. Geological Survey who
recently documented how pronghorn at Arizona's Petrified Forest National Park refuse to cross
highways. "They are a diurnal species and apparently do not cross the freeway at night,
when there is less traffic."
Sonoran pronghorn have long epitomized successful adaptation to a harsh environment. Slightly
smaller and paler than the other four pronghorn subspecies, they are even better equipped to
handle drought. They range on public land in Arizona: some of it, on Cabeza Prieta National
Wildlife Refuge and Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, is designated wilderness; much of
the rest comprises the Barry M. Goldwater Air Force Range, where military training heavily
impacts some areas but leaves vast stretches of desert relatively untouched. The area is so wild
that a proposal was recently floated to establish a 5,000-square-mile Sonoran Desert National
Park.
Here pronghorn are free from development pressure and, except in a small area, from competition
with cattle. There's even some evidence that military training benefits them, as they favor target
areas where bombing destroys the prevalent but largely inedible creosote, thereby fostering the
growth of nutritious annuals.
But the full picture of how human activities in this uninhabited area affect pronghorn is complex.
Live-ammunition bombing and strafing is a danger. Low-level flights by military jets or Border
Patrol helicopters may cause stress to wildlife. Low-flying aircraft are one of the potential stresses
to pronghorn cited in a recent lawsuit against the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and 10 other
federal agencies by the conservation group Defenders of Wildlife. The lawsuit is slowly wending
its way through the courts, and how it will affect management is still unknown.
In recent decades, the size of the herd hasn't grown much despite full legal protection (the
subspecies was listed as federally endangered in 1967). "The does bear twins every year.
Because of that, they have tremendous potential to increase their numbers," says John
Hervert. "But every year we have the frustration of seeing most of the fawns die."
In other areas fawn mortality generally occurs in the first month, when fawns are small and most
vulnerable to predators. Here most deaths occur in the third or fourth month, after the young are
weaned. Hervert suspects poor nutrition may be to blame for fawn mortality.
Adult Sonoran pronghorn forage extensively on cactus during the dry months of early summer,
especially on the fruits of chain-fruit cholla. Cactus isn't nutritious, but it does contain a great deal
of water--probably all the water adults need. Growing fawns may need more moisture, or more
nutritious forage, than adults. Chain-fruit chollas grow tall, and it may be that fawns can't reach
their fruits. Even if they can, this food may not be nutritious enough to sustain them. That's the
downside of pronghorns' leanness: they can't store energy in the form of fat and can't go for long
without food.
Because food supplies are scarce and localized here, Sonoran pronghorn roam widely. Hervert
tracked one radio-collared female over 1,500 square miles in a year (in lusher areas a few square
miles may make up a year-round territory).
"They can take advantage of a small rain shower in one valley when it might be dry in the
next valley," he says.
And yet amidst all this space they're locked in. They apparently do not cross Interstate 8 or
Highway 85, which mark the north and east boundaries of the Air Force range. To the south, the
border fence with Mexico is more of a barrier to them than it is to illegal immigrants and drug
smugglers. To the west, the desert becomes too dry even for pronghorn.
These barriers prevent genetic mixing of the American and Mexican herds. They also prevent
pronghorn from reaching the Gila River, north of I-8, and the Rio Sonoyta in Mexico. Those river
corridors probably once provided succulent forage during lean summer months. But now the
pronghorn can't get to these corridors. Even if they could, the rivers and their vegetation have
been reduced by agriculture and urban use. Trapped in the most arid part of their historic range,
Sonoran pronghorn are stretched thin.
"If we go into a long period of below-average rainfall, we could have no recruitment, and
that could lead to extinction," says Hervert.
To forestall that possibility, state and federal wildlife officials are currently attempting to
determine whether habitat appropriate for reintroductions exists elsewhere within the subspecies'
historic range. "Most likely we won't be able to recover the species without
reintroductions," says Hervert.
That's a big hurdle. A reintroduction would require 25 or 30 individuals. No one wants to remove
that many from the currently small Arizona population, so it will likely not take place unless the
herd grows on its own, and then only if an appropriate new site can be found where human
impacts would be minimal.
John Hervert, meanwhile, continues to watch pronghorn from above. He's pleased that a wet El
Niño year, 1998, allowed a bumper crop of fawns to reach adulthood. He finds himself in
the same position as desert dwellers throughout history: He hopes for rain and prepares for its
lack. He makes plans to water the desert or to help reintroduce the species elsewhere, all the
while hoping that nature will make those plans unnecessary.
"If we have very good conditions for a while, we won't have to lift a finger for them,"
he says. "After all, they would have gone extinct a long time ago had they not had the
ability to live here."
Arizona free-lancer Peter Friederici last saw a band of Sonoran
pronghorn streaking across the desert in January.
NWF Priority: Saving Sonoran Pronghorn
The Sonoran pronghorn (above) is one of 25 imperiled animals and plants highlighted in the
National Wildlife Federation's Keep the Wild AliveTM
campaign. As part of the campaign's effort to educate the public and important decision makers
about the challenges facing rare wildlife, NWF is featuring a different campaign species each
month on its web site (www.nwf.org/keepthewildalive/). During the month
of September, check out this web site for information about the Sonoran pronghorn, including visuals and an interview with
a pronghorn expert. The site will also provide suggestions on how you can get involved in helping
to save the Sonoran pronghorn.