Taxonomy
Biology
Behavior
Range and Habitat
Cultural Uses
Management


Taxonomy

Scientific name
• Cervus elaphus

Subspecies
• Rocky Mountain (Rocky Mountain West)
• Roosevelt's (Pacific Coast)
• Tule (Central California)
• Manitoban (northern Great Plains)
• Merriam's (Southwest and Mexico) - Extinct
• Eastern (east of the Mississippi) - Extinct

Deer family
• Elk
• Moose
• Caribou
• Mule deer
• White-tailed deer


Biology

Who's Who
Bull Male elk
Cow Female elk
Calf Baby elk
Spike Yearling bull elk

Size
Newborn calf 35 pounds (16 kg)
Cow 500 punds (225 kg)
4 1/2 feet (1.3 m) at the shoulder
6 1/2 feet (2 m) from nose to tail
Bull 700 pounds (315 kg)
5 feet (1.5 m) at the shoulder
8 feet (2.4 m) from nose to tail

Color
• Body varies from deep copper brown to light tan
• Rump patch light beige
• Legs and neck often darker than body

Calves
• Typically born in late May through early June
• Calves are born spotted and scentless
• They spend their first few weeks hiding motionless while their mothers feed

Diet
• Summer grasses and forbs
• Spring and fall grasses
• Winter grasses, shrubs, tree bark and twigs
• Elk may supplement their diet at licks, where they take in minerals that may help them grow healthy coats and produce nutritious milk
• An elk's stomach has four chambers: the first stores food, and the other three digest it

Antlers
• Only male elk have antlers
• Bulls shed and grow a new set of antlers every year
• New antlers are covered in fuzzy skin called velvet
• Antlers harden by late summer and the velvet peels away
• By September, antlers are solid bone
• A set of antlers on a mature bull can weigh up to 40 pounds

Ivories
• An elk's top two canine teeth are called ivories
• Scientists believe ivories are remnants of saber-like tusks that ancestral species of elk used in combat
• Most hunters save ivories as a memento of the hunt

Thermoregulation

Winter

• Elk grow winter coats consisting of long, waterproof guard hairs covering dense, woolly underfur
• During the day, elk feed on open, sunny slopes
• Elk bed down in the trees at night to seek shelter from wind and cold temperatures

Summer
• An elk's summer coat consists of short, stiff, relatively sparse hairs
• Elk bed down in cool, shady forests during the day
• Elk wade or lie in streams, rivers, ponds and lakes to seek relief from heat and biting insects
• Blood pumping through the veins in the velvet on a bull's antlers cools before it returns to the heart to help cool the animal 


Behavior

Social Organization
• Cows, calves and yearlings live in loose herds or groups
• Bulls live in bachelor groups or alone
• During the rut, cows and calves form harems with one or two mature bulls

Body Postures
• When alarmed, elk raise their heads high, open their eyes wide, move stiffly and rotate their ears to listen
• If a harem cow wanders, a bull stretches his neck out low, tips up his nose, tilts his antlers back and circles her
• Elk threaten each other by curling back their upper lip, grinding their teeth and hissing softly
• Agitated elk hold their heads high, lay their ears back and flare their nostrils, and sometimes even punch with their front hooves

Vocalizations
LISTEN Bull elk bugle to attract cows and advertise their dominance to other bulls
Bull elk grunt at cows straying from the harem
LISTEN Cows bark to warn others of danger
LISTEN Cows mew to keep track of one another
Cows signal to their calves by whining softly
Calves in distress bleat for their mothers

Staying Comfortable
• In cold snowy climates, cows, calves and young bulls migrate to foothills and valleys in winter
• An experienced elk, usually the lead cow, guides a herd between seasonal ranges

The Rut
• Elk breed in the fall
• Bulls gather cows and calves into small groups called harems
• Bulls wallow in mud to coat themselves with "perfume" to attract cows
• They also bugle and rub trees, shrubs and the ground with their antlers to attract cows and intimidate other bulls
• Bulls aggressively guard their harems from other bulls
• Sometimes, bulls wage violent battles for a harem, occasionally even fighting to the death


Range and Habitat

Range
• Prior to European settlement, more than 10 million elk roamed nearly all of the United States and parts of Canada
• Today, about one million elk live in the western United States, Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Arkansas, Kentucky, Tennessee and North Carolina, and from Ontario west in Canada

Habitat
• Food, water, shelter and space are essential to elk survival
• Elk live in a variety of habitats, from rainforests to alpine meadows and dry desert valleys to hardwood forests.


Cultural Uses

American Indians
• Hunted elk for food
• Used hides for clothing and blankets
• Fashioned bones and antlers into tools
• Decorated garments with ivories, or traded them for goods

Lewis and Clark
• The Corps of Discover killed and ate at least 375 elk during the Lewis and Clark Expedition
• Each man consumed roughly eight pounds of meat daily
• They used elk hides for clothing, moccasins, blankets, ropes, patching canoes and to cover gear

European Settlers
• Hunted elk for food
• Used hides for clothing

Modern-day Hunters
• Hunt elk for food
• Hang antlers on their walls to remember the hunt and celebrate the animal
• Wear gloves, coats and chaps made of elk hide
• Use antlers to make belt buckles, knife handles and chandeliers
• Adorn rings, bracelets and key chains with ivories


Management

• European settlers reduced the elk population from 10 million to less than 100,000 by 1900
• Hunters and wildlife managers began transplanting elk all over the United States and Canada in the early 1900s
• They captured elk from Yellowstone National Park and transported them by wagon, truck and train
• Elk herds re-established in most western states, and in Pennsylvania
• State and provincial game agencies eventually restored herds in Arkansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Ontario, Kentucky, Tennessee and Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
• State and provincial game managers conduct annual elk counts and use the data to set hunting seasons and the number of licenses issued
• State and federal agencies team with groups like the Elk Foundation to purchase and improve wildlife habitat

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