Taking The Temperature Of Big Game

Jeff Martin, Ph.D., drives through a bison herd with his FLIR camera recording temperature data.
Jeff Martin, Ph.D., drives through a bison herd with his FLIR camera recording temperature data.
(TAMU)

Big game are usually resilient and adaptive mammals, but increased warming in productive regions of Alaska and the Great Plains poses a threat to populations of moose and bison.

This comes as no surprise to Jeff Martin, Ph.D., and Dan Thompson, Ph.D., both recent graduates from Texas A&M College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, who dedicated their doctoral research to examining the effects of warming temperatures on big game.

One component of Martin’s research measured heat flux in bison, while Thompson aimed to understand body temperature regulation in moose.

Understanding how large game respond to rising temperatures provides key insights into the future sustainability of moose and bison populations on landscapes where increased warming has become a concern.

Perry Barboza, Ph.D., a Texas A&M AgriLife Research professor in the Departments of Ecology and Conservation Biology and Rangeland, Wildlife and Fisheries Management,  served as Martin and Thompson’s primary mentor for the duration of their program.

“Critical areas of bison habitat and moose habitat are getting hotter and that is affecting the productivity of moose and bison,” Barboza said. “These animals are keystones to their ecology, culturally important and vital to the livelihood of many.”

Factors influencing thermoregulation of moose

Dan Thompson works full-time as a wildlife biologist for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game at the Kenai Moose Research Center, a role he also held while in graduate school.

With support from his employer and Texas A&M’s Boone and Crockett Club, Thompson was able to complete research for his doctoral dissertation, which remotely assessed the thermal tolerance of moose on the Kenai Peninsula and how they regulate body temperature.

 Dan Thompson measures respiration rate and temperature in a resting hand-raised moose. (Photo provided by Alaska Department of Fish and Game)

Thompson said his study worked off of previous research, which indicated moose exhibit signs of heat stress above a certain temperature. However, he noticed that at ambient temperatures above those thresholds, the captive moose he was working with weren’t exhibiting signs of heat stress indicated in earlier studies. His study aimed to reassess those thresholds and better understand how the moose were actually coping.

“I examined their actual body temperature by placing sensors inside them to determine what their normal ranges are and monitored them to see when they were exceeding those ranges,” Thompson said. “Then, I looked at physiological and behavioral indicators to identify ways they were able to control their body temperature.”

In addition to the body heat sensors, Thompson said they used a variety of technology to monitor the moose’s heart rate, respiration rate, respiration temperature and to collect hormone samples, all to evaluate their responses to warm environmental conditions.

Contradictory to the historical research, evidence from Thompson’s findings indicated that heat stress thresholds once identified for moose are less rigid than previously reported, suggesting a higher tolerance or resiliency of moose to heat stress.

Additionally, Thompson found that certain behaviors influence moose body temperature during the summer. Contrary to logic, Thompson found that moose body temperature decreases during low to moderate activity associated with foraging, which may be a result of ingesting large amounts of cool, wet vegetation.

A warming climate can lead to fires, which affect locations for cooling and forage. Digging deeper, he concluded that factors like intensity and duration of weather, and the capacity of moose to use physiological and behavioral responses, all affect their ability to regulate body temperature. Warm, humid weather can result in prolonged heat loads that reduce feeding and mass gain in moose especially in mid-summer, when they need to gain fat for the next winter.

Drivers of body-size change in bison

Like Thompson, Martin developed his project with support from the Boone and Crockett Club, but also received critical funding from Texas A&M AgriLife Research. Through the National Bison Association, Martin was able to leverage available resources and access a key network of bison managers, with additional support from The Explorers Club and The Mammoth Site.

 Jeff Martin working in the field with the thermal camera, taking heat flux measures of bison in Texas. (Texas A&M AgriLife photo by Rachel Short)

With a team of support behind him, he hit the open road to conduct novel research in his field—this time, alone. Martin packed up his car and hit the open road, traveling a total of 19,000 miles from Texas to Saskatchewan, Canada, to capture heat flux of bison in the summer, and again in the winter.

Using measurements from images of hundreds of animals of multiple ages, Martin was able to record and track the growth of bison from 19 different herds over multiple growing seasons for his dissertation, which focused on the drivers and consequences of body size change of bison. Another component compared heat transfers of bison using thermal imaging technology.

“I wanted to test two different mechanisms,” Martin said. “The first being how foraging changes in response to climate and how that affects bison, and the second being how climate affects the animal directly.”

Under heat stress, most animals sweat as a physiological response to reduce heat loads; but bison don’t sweat. They have to use a different mechanism.

The thermal imaging technology allowed Martin to measure that change in energy. To collect this data, he used a Forward-Looking Infrared Thermal Imaging Camera, or FLIR, along with a heat stress tracker mobile weather station.

Martin’s data suggested that slower growth in bison is driven by rising temperatures. In warmer temperatures, bison have to work harder to regulate their body temperatures, causing increased stress on the animal, which can result in slower growth rates.

“There’s a threshold somewhere for productive growth that we have yet to identify,” Martin said. “But that’s what I’m trying to work toward.”

Martin said understanding these interactions of bison with their environment will help with conservation and restoring bison to certain areas.

Continuing work for bison, moose conservation

Of all the knowledge they gained in their respective areas of expertise, the pair said their research further affirmed for them an appreciation for the resilience of both species.

“Moose are pretty unique,” Thompson said. “In certain conditions, it’s amazing what they can do to adapt and survive.”

“I echo what Dan [Thompson] says,” Martin said. “Bison gain more respect from me every day.”

Martin and Thompson’s research provides evidence which suggests that while adaptive to change, without recognition of changing conditions, future production of bison and moose in areas with increasing climate variability may not be sustainable.

Martin and Thompson graduated in August with doctoral degrees in Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences. To conduct their research, both received support from AgriLife Research and the Boone and Crockett Club Wildlife and Conservation Policy Program at Texas A&M. Thompson also received the 2019 Boone and Crockett Fellow Outstanding Achievement Award in Graduate Research. Martin was recognized in 2018 as a Rolex Scholar by the Explorers Club.

Barboza said research like Martin and Thompson’s would not exist and could not be successful without the collaborative efforts and support of their primary funders.

“Our goal is to train scientists to lead in conservation and we did that through the help of the Boone and Crockett Club and Texas A&M AgriLife Research,” Barboza said.

 

Latest News

Ranchers Concerned Over Six Confirmed Wolf Kills in Colorado
Ranchers Concerned Over Six Confirmed Wolf Kills in Colorado

Six wolf depredations of cattle have been confirmed in Colorado from reintroduced wolves.

Profit Tracker: Packer Losses Mount; Pork Margins Solid
Profit Tracker: Packer Losses Mount; Pork Margins Solid

Cattle and hog feeders find dramatically lower feed costs compared to last year with higher live anumal sales prices. Beef packers continue to struggle with negative margins.

Applying the Soil Health Principles to Fit Your Operation
Applying the Soil Health Principles to Fit Your Operation

What’s your context? One of the 6 soil health principles we discuss in this week’s episode is knowing your context. What’s yours? What is your goal? What’s the reason you run cattle?

Colombia Becomes First Country to Restrict US Beef Due to H5N1 in Dairy Cattle
Colombia Becomes First Country to Restrict US Beef Due to H5N1 in Dairy Cattle

Colombia has restricted the import of beef and beef products coming from U.S. states where dairy cows have tested positive for H5N1 as of April 15, according to USDA.

On-farm Severe Weather Safety
On-farm Severe Weather Safety

When a solid home, tornado shelter or basement may be miles away, and you’re caught in a severe storm, keep in mind these on-farm severe weather safety tips.

Quantifying the Value of Good Ranch Management
Quantifying the Value of Good Ranch Management

The value of good management has never been higher. Well managed cow-calf operations can concentrate inputs into short time frames focused on critical control points of production.