I was reading an article about ORGAN PIPE CACTUS NATIONAL MONUMENT in Arizona and ran across this. Never knew there was a different species of antelope in the US.
http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/4/23/arizona-park-once-deemed-most-dangerous-in-the-us-reopens-to-public.html
The park service also supports conservation projects, including one to bring the skittish Sonora pronghorn back from the brink of extinction. It has succeeded in boosting their numbers in the monument to 50 from 22. Research projects include an archaeological study by a team from the U.S., Mexico and the sovereign Tohono O'odham nation to uncover traces of the ancient Hohokam salt and shell trading route that for centuries beat a path across the blazing desert to the Sea of Cortez.
Anybody ever seen a "Sonora antelope"?
More info about them
http://www.nps.gov/orpi/learn/nature/pronghorn.htm
They are now on my list of animals to see before I die. Sounds almost like a mini antelope. Pretty cool.
http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/4/23/arizona-park-once-deemed-most-dangerous-in-the-us-reopens-to-public.html
The park service also supports conservation projects, including one to bring the skittish Sonora pronghorn back from the brink of extinction. It has succeeded in boosting their numbers in the monument to 50 from 22. Research projects include an archaeological study by a team from the U.S., Mexico and the sovereign Tohono O'odham nation to uncover traces of the ancient Hohokam salt and shell trading route that for centuries beat a path across the blazing desert to the Sea of Cortez.
Anybody ever seen a "Sonora antelope"?
More info about them
http://www.nps.gov/orpi/learn/nature/pronghorn.htm
They are now on my list of animals to see before I die. Sounds almost like a mini antelope. Pretty cool.