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1 September 2002 YEARLING MALES SUCCESSFULLY BREED IN A REINTRODUCED ELK (CERVUS ELAPHUS NELSONI) POPULATION IN KENTUCKY
Jeffery L. Larkin, David S. Maehr, John J. Cox, Charles Logsdon
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Abstract

We examined reproductive performance of yearling males in a recently established free-ranging elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni, Erxleben) population in southeastern Kentucky. Sixteen of 18 (89%) adult females bred by yearling males produced a calf. The calving period, determined for 11 cows, peaked in mid-June; however, 3 females bred by yearlings did not calf until mid-July or August. It is not possible to attribute the extended calving period to breeding by yearling males, as it may have been a result of poor physical condition of females or the disruption of social bonds after translocation the previous winter.

Jeffery L. Larkin, David S. Maehr, John J. Cox, and Charles Logsdon "YEARLING MALES SUCCESSFULLY BREED IN A REINTRODUCED ELK (CERVUS ELAPHUS NELSONI) POPULATION IN KENTUCKY," Southeastern Naturalist 1(3), 279-286, (1 September 2002). https://doi.org/10.1656/1528-7092(2002)001[0279:YMSBIA]2.0.CO;2
Published: 1 September 2002
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