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Animal Field Guide

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Additional Media
(click on image to view)
Bighorn Sheep Track - Tracks of Ovis candensis Bighorn Sheep, Color Plate, Pair  - Ovis canadensis Bighorn Sheep Range Map - Bighorn Sheep Range Map, statewide scale Bighorn Sheep, Rams In Winter - Ovis canadensis - Male bighorn sheep scour the mountainside for salt licks in Glacier National Park. Bighorn Sheep, Ewe, Closeup - Ovis canadensis Bighorn Sheep - Ovis canadensis - A pair of large rams. Bighorn Sheep - Ovis canadensis - rams on forested slope. Bighorn Ram - Bighorn sheep ram on a hillside Two Bighorn Sheep - Two bighorn sheep rams demonstrating rutting behavior. Sitting Ram - Bighorn sheep ram resting on mountainside.
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About this Guide

The Montana Animal Field Guide is the product of a partnership between Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks and the Natural Heritage Program. The Natural Heritage Program was established by the Montana State Legislature in 1983, the program is located in the Montana State Library, where it is part of the Natural Resource Information System.


Ovis canadensis
Bighorn Sheep, Closeup of Ram
Bighorn Sheep

Ovis canadensis
(Bovidae)

Global Rank: G4
State Rank: S4

Agency Status
USFWS: No Status
USFS: none
BLM: none
 

General Description
Coat grayish-brown with yellowish-white underparts; creamy-white rump patch around small brown tail; horns of adult rams massive and curled, up to 45 inches long; horns of adult ewes thin, slightly curved, 6-13 inches long; horns of yearling rams wider at the base with more divergent tips than those of ewes, and 7 1/2 - 17 inches long; old rams may exceed 300 lbs., ewes seldom exceed 150 lbs. Most sociable of Montana's big game species; herds segregate according to age and sex; ewes, lambs and yearling males band together; adult males band in herds spanning 2- or 3-year classes; subject to die-offs related to severe winter weather and pneumonia.

Migration
Uses seasonal ranges. Generally winter & summer ranges.

Habitat
Cliffs, mountain slopes, rolling foothills; sometimes cross intermountain valleys (FWP). Min. snow depth most imp. in win., avail. high quality green forage most imp. in spr. & sum. Selected elev's vary accord- ingly. Immed. or nearby cliffy-rocky areas imp. yr. rd. Semi -open to open veg. types preferred. Often use S aspects.

Food Habits
Bunchgrasses and shrubs on winter range; wide variety of grasses, sedges and forbs on summer range (FWP). Diets of graminoids, forbs, browse w/ order of importance varying btwn seasons & ranges. Generally graminoids most important but on NW ranges browse may be the dominant food during winter.

Ecology
Male agonistic interactions intense in prerut; estab. dom- inance. V. susceptible to disease, part. lungworm-pneumonia complex. Some prev. extirp. herds now doing well (e.g. Rock Creek). Compete w/ elk for win forage; cattle less so.

Reproductive Characteristics
Breed in November; usually one young; rams battle for dominance by crashing horns together; ewes usually breed at 2 1/2 years of age, but may breed as yearlings (FWP). Promiscuous. Can 1st breed as yrlings but most ewes breed during 2nd yr. Breeding begins mid-late Nov. Asynchronous estrus in ewes w/in rut. Intense mate competion amg males. Lambing occurs lt.Apr.-lt.June, (sometimes early July).

Citations & Sources
  • Foresman, K.R. 2001. The wild mammals of Montana. Special Publication No. 12. American Society of Mammalogists
  • NatureServe Explorer: An online encyclopedia of life [web application]. 2002. Version 1.6 . Arlington, Virginia, USA: NatureServe. Available: http://www.natureserve.org/explorer. (Accessed: March 20, 2003 ).
  • O'Gara, B. Identification of Montana's Big Game Animals. Montana Outdoors.
 

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This page is from the Montana Animal Field Guide. [http://fwp.mt.gov/fieldguide/speciesDetail.aspx?elcode=AMALE04010]
Sunday, July 05, 2009 - 1:39:03 PM