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Elk

The elk (Cervus canadensis), or wapiti, is one of the largest species within the deer family, Cervidae, and one of the largest terrestrial mammals in its native range of North America and Central and East Asia. The word "elk" originally referred to the European variety of the moose, Alces alces, but was transferred to Cervus canadensis by North American colonists. The name "wapiti", derived from a Shawnee and Cree word meaning "white rump", is also used for C. canadensis.

Elk
Temporal range: 2.5–0 Ma
Early Pleistocene – Recent
A bull (male) in Alberta, Canada
A cow (female) with calf in Wyoming, United States
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Cervidae
Subfamily: Cervinae
Genus: Cervus
Species:
C. canadensis
Binomial name
Cervus canadensis
(Erxleben, 1777)[2]
Subspecies
Former (light green) and current (dark green) native ranges of Cervus canadensis
Synonyms

Various Cervus elaphus subspecies

Elk range in forest and forest-edge habitat, feeding on grasses, plants, leaves, and bark. Male elk have large antlers which they shed each year. Males also engage in ritualized mating behaviors during the rut, including posturing, antler wrestling (sparring), and bugling, a loud series of vocalizations that establishes dominance over other males and attracts females. Although it is currently native to North America and central/eastern Asia, it had a much wider distribution in the past. Populations were present across Eurasia into Western Europe during the Late Pleistocene and survived into the early Holocene in southern Sweden and the Alps; the extinct Merriam's elk subspecies ranged into Mexico. The elk has adapted well to countries where it has been introduced, including Argentina and New Zealand. Its adaptability may in fact threaten endemic species and the ecosystems into which it has been introduced.

Elk are susceptible to a number of infectious diseases, some of which can be transmitted to livestock. Efforts to eliminate infectious diseases from elk populations, largely by vaccination, have had mixed success. Some cultures revere the elk as having spiritual significance. In parts of Asia, antlers and their velvet are used in traditional medicines. Elk are hunted as a game species. Their meat is leaner and higher in protein than beef or chicken. Elk were long believed to belong to a subspecies of the European red deer (Cervus elaphus), but evidence from many mitochondrial DNA genetic studies beginning in 1998 shows that the two are distinct species. Key morphological differences that distinguish C. canadensis from C. elaphus are the former's wider rump patch and paler-hued antlers.

Naming and etymology

By the 17th century, Alces alces (called "elk" in Europe) had long been extirpated from the British Isles, and the meaning of the word "elk" to English-speakers became rather vague, acquiring a meaning similar to "large deer".[3] The name wapiti is from the Shawnee and Cree word waapiti (in Cree syllabics: ᐙᐱᑎ or ᐚᐱᑎ), meaning "white rump".[4] There is a subspecies of wapiti in Mongolia called the Altai wapiti (Cervus canadensis sibiricus), also known as the Altai maral.[5]

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the etymology of the word "elk" is "of obscure history". In Classical Antiquity, the European Alces alces was known as Ancient Greek: ἄλκη, romanizedálkē and Latin: alces, words probably borrowed from a Germanic language or another language of northern Europe. By the 8th century, during the Early Middle Ages, the moose was known as Old English: elch, elh, eolh, derived from the Proto-Germanic: *elho-, *elhon- and possibly connected with the Old Norse: elgr.[6] Later, the species became known in Middle English as elk, elcke, or elke, appearing in the Latinized form alke, with the spelling alce borrowed directly from Latin: alces.[6][7] Noting that elk "is not the normal phonetic representative" of the Old English elch, the Oxford English Dictionary derives elk from Middle High German: elch, itself from Old High German: elaho.[6][3]

The American Cervus canadensis was recognized as a relative of the red deer (Cervus elaphus) of Europe, and so Cervus canadensis were referred to as "red deer". Richard Hakluyt refers to North America as a "lande ... full of many beastes, as redd dere"[8] in his 1584 Discourse Concerning Western Planting. Similarly, John Smith's 1616 A Description of New England referred to red deer. Sir William Talbot's 1672 English translation of John Lederer's Latin Discoveries likewise called the species "red deer", but noted in parentheses that they were "for their unusual largeness improperly termed Elks by ignorant people". Both Thomas Jefferson's 1785 Notes on the State of Virginia and David Bailie Warden's 1816 Statistical, Political, and Historical Account of the United States used "red deer" to refer to Cervus canadensis.[9]

Taxonomy

 
Elk crossing Opal Terrace at Mammoth Hot Springs, Yellowstone National Park
 
Bull elk in late autumn, Banff National Park, Canada
 
Sparring bull elks in Banff National Park, Canada

Members of the genus Cervus (and hence early relatives or possible ancestors of the elk) first appear in the fossil record 25 million years ago, during the Oligocene in Eurasia, but do not appear in the North American fossil record until the early Miocene.[10] The extinct Irish elk (Megaloceros) was not a member of the genus Cervus but rather the largest member of the wider deer family (Cervidae) known from the fossil record.[11]

Until recently, red deer and elk were considered to be one species, Cervus elaphus,[5][12] with over a dozen subspecies. But mitochondrial DNA studies conducted in 2004 on hundreds of samples from red deer and elk subspecies and other species of the Cervus deer family, strongly indicate that elk, or wapiti, should be a distinct species, namely Cervus canadensis.[13] DNA evidence validates that elk are more closely related to Thorold's deer and even sika deer than they are to the red deer.[13]

Elk and red deer produce fertile offspring in captivity, and the two species have freely inter-bred in New Zealand's Fiordland National Park. The cross-bred animals have resulted in the disappearance of virtually all pure elk blood from the area.[14] Key morphological differences that distinguish C. canadensis from C. elaphus are the former's wider rump patch and paler-hued antlers.[15]

Subspecies

There are numerous subspecies of elk described, with six from North America and four from Asia, although some taxonomists consider them different ecotypes or races of the same species (adapted to local environments through minor changes in appearance and behavior). Populations vary in antler shape and size, body size, coloration and mating behavior. DNA investigations of the Eurasian subspecies revealed that phenotypic variation in antlers, mane and rump patch development are based on "climatic-related lifestyle factors".[15] Of the six subspecies of elk known to have inhabited North America in historical times, four remain, including the Roosevelt's (C. canadensis roosevelti), tule (C. canadensis nannodes), Manitoban (C. canadensis manitobensis) and Rocky Mountain elk (C. canadensis nelsoni).[16] The eastern elk (C. canadensis canadensis) and Merriam's elk (C. canadensis merriami) subspecies have been extinct for at least a century.[17][18]

Four subspecies described in Asia include the Altai wapiti (C. canadensis sibiricus) and the Tianshan wapiti (C. canadensis songaricus). Two distinct subspecies found in China, Mongolia, the Korean Peninsula[19] and Siberia are the Manchurian wapiti (C. canadensis xanthopygus) and the Alashan wapitis (C. canadensis alashanicus). The Manchurian wapiti is darker and more reddish in coloration than the other populations. The Alashan wapiti of north central China is the smallest of all subspecies, has the lightest coloration and is the least studied.[14]

Recent DNA studies suggest that there are no more than three or four subspecies of elk. All American forms, aside from possibly the tule and Roosevelt's elk, seem to belong to one subspecies (Cervus canadensis canadensis). Even the Siberian elk (Cervus canadensis sibiricus) are more or less identical to the American forms and therefore may belong to this subspecies, too. However, the Manchurian wapiti (Cervus canadensis xanthopygus) is clearly distinct from the Siberian forms, but not distinguishable from the Alashan wapiti. The Chinese forms (the Sichuan deer, Kansu red deer, and Tibetan red deer) also belong to the wapiti, and were not distinguishable from each other by mitochondrial DNA studies.[13] These Chinese subspecies are sometimes treated as a distinct species, namely the Central Asian red deer (Cervus hanglu), which also includes the Kashmir stag.[20]

Characteristics

 
A herd of Roosevelt's elk in California

Elk have thick bodies with slender legs and short tails. They have a shoulder height of 0.75–1.5 m (2 ft 6 in – 4 ft 11 in) with a nose-to-tail length of 1.6–2.7 m (5 ft 3 in – 8 ft 10 in). Males are larger and weigh 178–497 kg (392–1,096 lb) while females weigh 171–292 kg (377–644 lb).[21] The largest of the subspecies is the Roosevelt elk (C. c. roosevelti), found west of the Cascade Range in the U.S. states of California, Oregon and Washington, and in the Canadian province of British Columbia. Roosevelt elk have been introduced into Alaska, where the largest males are estimated to weigh up to 600 kg (1,300 lb).[22] More typically, male Roosevelt elk weigh around 318 to 499 kg (701 to 1,100 lb), while females weigh 261 to 283 kg (575 to 624 lb).[23] Male tule elk weigh 204–318 kg (450–701 lb) while females weigh 170–191 kg (375–421 lb).[24] The whole weights of adult male Manitoban elk range from 288 to 478 kilograms (635 to 1,054 lb). Females have a mean weight of 275 kilograms (606 lb).[25] The elk is the second largest extant species of deer, after the moose.[26]

Antlers are made of bone, which can grow at a rate of 2.5 centimeters (0.98 in) per day. While actively growing, a soft layer of highly vascularized skin known as velvet covers and protects them. This is shed in the summer when the antlers have fully developed.[27] Bull elk typically have around six tines on each antler. The Siberian and North American elk carry the largest antlers while the Altai wapiti has the smallest.[14] Roosevelt bull antlers can weigh 18 kg (40 lb).[27] The formation and retention of antlers are testosterone-driven.[28] In late winter and early spring, the testosterone level drops, which causes the antlers to shed.[29]

 
Rocky Mountain elk

During the fall, elk grow a thicker coat of hair, which helps to insulate them during the winter.[30] Both male and female North American elk grow thin neck manes; females of other subspecies may not.[31]: 37  By early summer, the heavy winter coat has been shed. Elk are known to rub against trees and other objects to help remove hair from their bodies. All elk have small and clearly defined rump patches with short tails. They have different coloration based on the seasons and types of habitats, with gray or lighter coloration prevalent in the winter and a more reddish, darker coat in the summer. Subspecies living in arid climates tend to have lighter colored coats than do those living in forests.[30] Most have lighter yellow-brown to orange-brown coats in contrast to dark brown hair on the head, neck, and legs during the summer. Forest-adapted Manchurian and Alashan wapitis have red or reddish-brown coats with less contrast between the body coat and the rest of the body during the summer months. Calves are born spotted, as is common with many deer species, and lose them by the end of summer. Adult Manchurian wapiti may retain a few orange spots on the back of their summer coats until they are older. This characteristic has also been observed in the forest-adapted European red deer.[14]

Behavior and ecology

 
Elk bulls sparring

Elk are among the most gregarious deer species.[31]: 52  During the summer group size can reach 400 individuals.[21] For most of the year, adult males and females are segregated into different herds. Female herds are larger while bulls form small groups and may even travel alone. Young bulls may associate with older bulls or female groups. Male and female herds come together during the mating season, which may begin in late August.[31]: 75, 82  Males try to intimidate rivals by vocalizing and displaying with their antlers.[31]: 109  If neither bull backs down, they engage in antler wrestling, sometimes sustaining serious injuries.[32]

Bulls have a loud, high-pitched, whistle-like vocalization known as bugling, which advertise the male's fitness over great distances. Unusual for a vocalization produced by a large animal, buglings can reach a frequency of 4000 Hz. This is achieved by blowing air from the glottis through the nasal cavities. Elk can produce deeper pitched (150 Hz) sounds using the larynx.[33] Cows produce an alarm bark to alert other members of the herd to danger, while calves will produce a high-pitched scream when attacked.[34]

Reproduction and life cycle

Female elk have a short estrus cycle of only a day or two, and matings usually involve a dozen or more attempts. By the autumn of their second year, females can produce one and, very rarely, two offspring. Reproduction is most common when cows weigh at least 200 kilograms (440 lb).[35] Dominant bulls follow groups of cows during the rut from August into early winter. A bull will defend his harem of 20 cows or more from competing bulls and predators.[36][31]: 92  Bulls also dig holes in the ground called wallows, in which they urinate and roll their bodies.[37][32] A male elk's urethra points upward so that urine is sprayed almost at a right angle to the penis.[38] The urine soaks into their hair and gives them a distinct smell which attracts cows.[32]

 
Elk bull inspecting a female

A bull interacts with cows in his harem in two ways: herding and courtship. When a female wanders too far away from the harem's range, the male will rush ahead of her, block her path and aggressively rush her back to the harem. Herding behavior is accompanied by a stretched out and lowered neck and the antlers laid back. A bull may get violent and hit the cow with his antlers. During courtship, the bull is more peaceful and approaches her with his head and antlers raised. The male signals his intention to test the female for sexual receptivity by flicking his tongue. If not ready, a cow will lower her head and weave from side to side while opening and closing her mouth. The bull will stop in response in order not to scare her.[31]: 100–101  Otherwise, the bull will copiously lick the female and then mount her.[31]: 115 

Younger, less dominant bulls, known as "spike bulls" because their antlers have not yet forked, will harass unguarded cows. These bulls are impatient and will not perform any courtship rituals and will continue to pursue a female even when she signals him to stop. As such, they are less reproductively successful, and a cow may stay close to the big bull to avoid harassment. Dominant bulls are intolerant of spike bulls and will chase them away from their harems.[31]: 100–105 

 
A female nursing her calf

The gestation period is eight to nine months and the offspring weigh around 16 kilograms (35 lb). When the females are near to giving birth, they tend to isolate themselves from the main herd, and will remain isolated until the calf is large enough to escape predators.[32] Calves are born spotted, as is common with many deer species, and they lose their spots by the end of summer. After two weeks, calves are able to join the herd, and are fully weaned at two months of age.[21] Elk calves are as large as an adult white-tailed deer by the time they are six months old.[39] Elk will leave their natal (birth) ranges before they are three years old. Males disperse more often than females, as adult cows are more tolerant of female offspring from previous years.[40] Elk live 20 years or more in captivity but average 10 to 13 years in the wild. In some subspecies that suffer less predation, they may live an average of 15 years in the wild.[41]

Migration

 
Elk wintering at the National Elk Refuge in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, after migrating there during the fall

As is true for many species of deer, especially those in mountainous regions, elk migrate into areas of higher altitude in the spring, following the retreating snows, and the opposite direction in the fall. Hunting pressure impacts migration and movement.[42] During the winter, they favor wooded areas for the greater availability of food to eat. Elk do not appear to benefit from thermal cover.[43] The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem elk herds comprise as many as 40,000 individuals.[44] During the spring and fall, they take part in the longest elk migration in the continental U.S., traveling as much as 168 mi (270 km) between summer and winter ranges. The Teton herd consists of between 9,000 and 13,000 elk and they spend winters on the National Elk Refuge, having migrated south from the southern portions of Yellowstone National Park and west from the Shoshone and Bridger–Teton National Forests.[45]

Diet

 
Elk pellet group

Elk are ruminants and therefore have four-chambered stomachs. Unlike white-tailed deer and moose, which are chiefly browsers, elk are similar to cattle in that they are primarily grazers. But like other deer, they also browse.[46][47] Elk have a tendency to do most of their feeding in the mornings and evenings, seeking sheltered areas in between feedings to digest. Their diets vary somewhat depending on the season, with native grasses being a year-round supplement, tree bark being consumed in winter, and forbs and tree sprouts during the summer. Elk consume an average of 9.1 kilograms (20 lb) of vegetation daily.[48] Particularly fond of aspen sprouts which rise in the spring, elk have had some impact on aspen groves which have been declining in some regions where elk exist.[49] Range and wildlife managers conduct surveys of elk pellet groups to monitor populations and resource use.[50][51]

Predators and defensive tactics

 
Single bull elk in winter are vulnerable to predation by wolves

Predators of elk include wolves, coyotes, brown and black bears, cougars, and Siberian tigers.[52][53] Coyote packs mostly prey on elk calves, though they can sometimes take a winter- or disease-weakened adult.[54] In the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, which includes Yellowstone National Park, bears are the most significant predators of calves[55] while healthy bulls have never been recorded to be killed by bears and such encounters can be fatal for bears.[56] The killing of cows in their prime is more likely to affect population growth than the killing of bulls or calves.[57]

Elk may avoid predation by switching from grazing to browsing. Grazing puts an elk in the compromising situation of being in an open area with its head down, leaving it unable to see what is going on in the surrounding area.[58] Living in groups also lessens the risk of an individual falling to predation. Large bull elk are less vulnerable and can afford to wander alone, while cows stay in larger groups for protection for their calves.[31]: 75  Bulls are more vulnerable to predation by wolves in late winter, after they have been weakened by months of chasing females and fighting.[57] Males that have recently lost their antlers are more likely to be preyed upon.[59]

Parasites and disease

At least 53 species of protist and animal parasites have been identified in elk.[60] Most of these parasites seldom lead to significant mortality among wild or captive elk. Parelaphostrongylus tenuis (brainworm or meningeal worm) is a parasitic nematode known to affect the spinal cord and brain tissue of elk and other species, leading to death.[61] The definitive host is the white-tailed deer, in which it normally has no ill effects. Snails and slugs, the intermediate hosts, can be inadvertently consumed by elk during grazing.[62] The liver fluke Fascioloides magna and the nematode Dictyocaulus viviparus are also commonly found parasites that can be fatal to elk.[63]

 
A bull elk in spring, shedding its winter coat and with its antlers covered in velvet

Chronic wasting disease, transmitted by a misfolded protein known as a prion, affects the brain tissue in elk, and has been detected throughout their range in North America. First documented in the late 1960s in mule deer, the disease has affected elk on game farms and in the wild in a number of regions. Elk that have contracted the disease begin to show weight loss, changes in behavior, increased watering needs, excessive salivation and urinating and difficulty swallowing, and at an advanced stage, the disease leads to death. No risks to humans have been documented, nor has the disease been demonstrated to pose a threat to domesticated cattle.[64] In 2002, South Korea banned the importation of elk antler velvet due to concerns about chronic wasting disease.[65]

The Gram-negative bacterial disease brucellosis occasionally affects elk in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, the only place in the U.S. where the disease is still known to exist,[66] though this can extend out to the Bighorn Mountains.[67] In domesticated cattle, brucellosis causes infertility, abortions, and reduced milk production. It is transmitted to humans as undulant fever, producing influenza-like symptoms that may last for years. Though bison are more likely to transmit the disease to other animals, elk inadvertently transmitted brucellosis to horses in Wyoming and cattle in Idaho. Researchers are attempting to eradicate the disease through vaccinations and herd-management measures, which are expected to be successful.[66] Nevertheless, research has been ongoing since 2002, and a successful vaccine has yet to be developed as of 2016.[68]

A recent necropsy study of captive elk in Pennsylvania attributed the cause of death in 33 of 65 cases to either gastrointestinal parasites (21 cases, primarily Eimeria sp. and Ostertagia sp.) or bacterial infections (12 cases, mostly pneumonia).[69]

Elk hoof disease was first noticed in the state of Washington in the late 1990s in the Cowlitz River basin, with sporadic reports of deformed hooves. Since then, the disease has spread rapidly with increased sightings throughout southwest Washington and into Oregon. The disease is characterised by deformed, broken, or missing hooves and leads to severe lameness in elk. The primary cause is not known, but it is associated with treponeme bacteria, which are known to cause digital dermatitis in commercial livestock. The mode of transmission is also not known, but it appears to be highly contagious among elk. Studies are being undertaken by government departments to determine how to halt or eliminate the disease.[70][71][72]

Distribution and status

 
Bull elk bugling during the rut

The elk ranges from central Asia through to Siberia and east Asia and in North America. They can be found in open deciduous woodlands, boreal forests, upland moors, mountainous areas and grasslands. The International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) list the species as least-concern species.[1] The habitat of Siberian elk in Asia is similar to that of the Rocky Mountain subspecies in North America. During the Late Pleistocene their range was much more extensive, being distributed across Eurasia, with remains being found as far west as France. These populations are most closely related to modern Asian populations of the elk. Their range collapsed at the start of the Holocene, possibly because they were specialized to cold periglacial tundra-steppe habitat. When this environment was replaced largely by closed forest the red deer might have outcompeted the elk. Relictual populations survived into the early Holocene (until around 3000 years ago) in southern Sweden and the Alps, where the environment remained favorable.[73]

Introductions and reintroductions

 
Bull elk on a captive range in Nebraska. These elk, originally from Rocky Mountain herds, exhibit modified behavior due to having been held in captivity, under less selective pressure

As of 2014, population figures for all North American elk subspecies were around one million. Prior to the European colonization of North America, there were an estimated 10 million on the continent.[74]

There are many past and ongoing examples of reintroduction into areas of the US. Elk were reintroduced in Michigan in 1918 after going extinct in 1875.[75] The Rocky Mountain elk subspecies was reintroduced by hunter-conservation organizations into the Appalachian region of the U.S. where the now extinct eastern elk once lived.[76] They were reintroduced to Pennsylvania beginning in 1913 and throughout the mid-20th Century.[77] Since the late 1990s, they were reintroduced and recolonized in the states of Wisconsin,[78] Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia, Virginia and West Virginia.[79] In the state of Kentucky, the elk population in 2022 had increased to over 15,000 animals.[80] In 2016, a male elk, likely from the Smoky Mountains population, was sighted in South Carolina for the first time in nearly 300 years.[81] Since 2015, elk have also been reintroduced in a number of other states, including Pennsylvania,[82][83] Missouri,[84] and introduced to the islands of Etolin and Afognak in Alaska.[85] Reintroduction of the elk into Ontario began in the early 20th century and is ongoing with limited success.[86]

Elk and red deer were introduced to Argentina in the early 20th century.[87] There they are now considered an invasive species, encroaching on Argentinian ecosystems where they compete for food with the indigenous Chilean huemul and other herbivores.[88] This negative impact on native animal species has led the IUCN to identify the elk as one of the world's 100 worst invaders.[89]

The introduction of deer to New Zealand began in the middle of the 19th century, and current populations are primarily European red deer, with only 15 percent being elk.[90] There is significant hybridization of elk with red deer.[91] These deer have had an adverse impact on forest regeneration of some plant species, as they consume more palatable species, which are replaced with those that are less favored by the elk. The long-term impact will be an alteration of the types of plants and trees found, and in other animal and plant species dependent upon them.[92] As in Chile and Argentina, the IUCN has declared that red deer and elk populations in New Zealand are an invasive species.[89]

Estimated number of elk per U.S. state

State Estimated Number of Elk
  Arizona 35,000[93]
  Arkansas 450 [94]
  California 12,500 [95]
  Colorado 280,000 [96]
  Idaho 120,000 [97]
  Kentucky 15,876 [98]
  Michigan 1,196 [99]
  Minnesota 126 [100]
  Montana 141,785 [101]
  New Mexico 70,000 - 90,000 [102]
  North Carolina 150 - 200 [103]
  Oklahoma 5,000 [104]
  Oregon 71,127 [105]
  Pennsylvania 1,400 [106]
  South Dakota 6,000 [107]
  Tennessee 400 [108]
  Texas 1,600[109]
  Utah 81,000 [110]
  Virginia 250 [111]
  Washington 60,000 [112]
  West Virginia 80 [113]
  Wyoming 110,200 [114]

Cultural references

 
A Kiowa couple. The woman on the right is wearing an elk tooth dress.

Elk have played an important role in the cultural history of a number of peoples. Neolithic petroglyphs from Asia depict antler-less female elk, which have been interpreted as symbolizing life and sustenance. They were also frequently overlaid with boats and associated with rivers, suggesting they also represented paths to the underworld.[115] Petroglyphs of elk were carved into cliffs by the Ancestral Puebloans of the southwestern U.S. hundreds of years ago.[116] The elk was of particular importance to the Lakota and played a spiritual role in their society. The male elk was admired for its ability to attract mates, and Lakota men will play a courting flute imitating a bugling elk to attract women. Men used elks' antlers as love charms and wore clothes decorated with elk images.[117]

The Rocky Mountain elk is the official state animal for Utah.[118] An image of an elk and a moose appear on the state seal and flag of Michigan.[119] The Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks (B.P.O.E.) chose the elk as its namesake because a number of its attributes seemed appropriate for cultivation by members of the fraternity.[120] Jewel encrusted, gold mounted elk teeth are prized possession of many members of the B.P.O.E.[121]

Commercial uses

 
A cut of elk meat, showing the low fat content

Although breakdown figures for each game species are not available in the 2006 National Survey from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, hunting of wild elk is most likely the primary economic impact.[122]

While elk are not generally harvested for meat production on a large scale, some restaurants offer the meat as a specialty item and it is also available in some grocery stores. The meat has a taste somewhere between beef and venison and is higher in protein and lower in fat and cholesterol than beef, pork, and chicken.[123] Elk meat is a good source of iron, phosphorus and zinc.[124]

A male elk can produce 10 to 11 kilograms (22 to 24 lb) of antler velvet annually and on ranches in the United States, Canada and New Zealand, it is collected and sold to markets in East Asia, where it is used in medicine. Some cultures consider velvet to be an aphrodisiac.[65] However, consuming velvet from elk in North America may be risky since velvet from animals infected with chronic wasting disease may contain prions that could result in a human getting variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease.[125]

Antlers are also used in artwork, furniture and other novelty items. All Asian subspecies, along with other deer, have been raised for their antlers in central and eastern Asia by Han Chinese, Turkic peoples, Tungusic peoples, Mongolians, and Koreans. Elk farms are relatively common in North America and New Zealand.[90] Native Americans have used elk hides for tepee covering, clothing and footwear.[126][127]

Since 1967, the Boy Scouts of America have assisted employees at the National Elk Refuge in Wyoming by collecting the antlers which are shed each winter. They are then auctioned, with 80% of the proceeds returned to the refuge. In 2010, 2,520 kilograms (5,560 lb) of antlers were auctioned, bringing in over $46,000.[128]

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External links

  • Arizona Elk Arizona Game and Fish Department
  • Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation
  • Yellowstone Elk – Greater Yellowstone Resource Guide
  • Smithsonian Institution - North American Mammals: Cervus (elaphus) canadensis

this, article, about, species, called, north, america, species, called, eurasia, alces, alces, moose, wapiti, redirects, here, other, uses, names, disambiguation, wapiti, disambiguation, cervus, canadensis, wapiti, largest, species, within, deer, family, cervi. This article is about the species called elk in North America For the species called elk in Eurasia Alces alces see Moose Wapiti redirects here For other uses of the names see Elk disambiguation and Wapiti disambiguation The elk Cervus canadensis or wapiti is one of the largest species within the deer family Cervidae and one of the largest terrestrial mammals in its native range of North America and Central and East Asia The word elk originally referred to the European variety of the moose Alces alces but was transferred to Cervus canadensis by North American colonists The name wapiti derived from a Shawnee and Cree word meaning white rump is also used for C canadensis ElkTemporal range 2 5 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Early Pleistocene RecentA bull male in Alberta CanadaA cow female with calf in Wyoming United StatesConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder ArtiodactylaFamily CervidaeSubfamily CervinaeGenus CervusSpecies C canadensisBinomial nameCervus canadensis Erxleben 1777 2 Subspecies C c canadensis C c alashanicus C c kansuensis C c macneilli C c manitobensis C c merriami C c nannodes C c nelsoni C c roosevelti C c sibiricus C c songaricus C c wallichii C c xanthopygusFormer light green and current dark green native ranges of Cervus canadensisSynonymsVarious Cervus elaphus subspeciesElk range in forest and forest edge habitat feeding on grasses plants leaves and bark Male elk have large antlers which they shed each year Males also engage in ritualized mating behaviors during the rut including posturing antler wrestling sparring and bugling a loud series of vocalizations that establishes dominance over other males and attracts females Although it is currently native to North America and central eastern Asia it had a much wider distribution in the past Populations were present across Eurasia into Western Europe during the Late Pleistocene and survived into the early Holocene in southern Sweden and the Alps the extinct Merriam s elk subspecies ranged into Mexico The elk has adapted well to countries where it has been introduced including Argentina and New Zealand Its adaptability may in fact threaten endemic species and the ecosystems into which it has been introduced Elk are susceptible to a number of infectious diseases some of which can be transmitted to livestock Efforts to eliminate infectious diseases from elk populations largely by vaccination have had mixed success Some cultures revere the elk as having spiritual significance In parts of Asia antlers and their velvet are used in traditional medicines Elk are hunted as a game species Their meat is leaner and higher in protein than beef or chicken Elk were long believed to belong to a subspecies of the European red deer Cervus elaphus but evidence from many mitochondrial DNA genetic studies beginning in 1998 shows that the two are distinct species Key morphological differences that distinguish C canadensis from C elaphus are the former s wider rump patch and paler hued antlers Contents 1 Naming and etymology 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Subspecies 3 Characteristics 4 Behavior and ecology 4 1 Reproduction and life cycle 4 2 Migration 4 3 Diet 4 4 Predators and defensive tactics 4 5 Parasites and disease 5 Distribution and status 5 1 Introductions and reintroductions 5 2 Estimated number of elk per U S state 6 Cultural references 7 Commercial uses 8 References 9 External linksNaming and etymology EditBy the 17th century Alces alces called elk in Europe had long been extirpated from the British Isles and the meaning of the word elk to English speakers became rather vague acquiring a meaning similar to large deer 3 The name wapiti is from the Shawnee and Cree word waapiti in Cree syllabics ᐙᐱᑎ or ᐚᐱᑎ meaning white rump 4 There is a subspecies of wapiti in Mongolia called the Altai wapiti Cervus canadensis sibiricus also known as the Altai maral 5 According to the Oxford English Dictionary the etymology of the word elk is of obscure history In Classical Antiquity the European Alces alces was known as Ancient Greek ἄlkh romanized alke and Latin alces words probably borrowed from a Germanic language or another language of northern Europe By the 8th century during the Early Middle Ages the moose was known as Old English elch elh eolh derived from the Proto Germanic elho elhon and possibly connected with the Old Norse elgr 6 Later the species became known in Middle English as elk elcke or elke appearing in the Latinized form alke with the spelling alce borrowed directly from Latin alces 6 7 Noting that elk is not the normal phonetic representative of the Old English elch the Oxford English Dictionary derives elk from Middle High German elch itself from Old High German elaho 6 3 The American Cervus canadensis was recognized as a relative of the red deer Cervus elaphus of Europe and so Cervus canadensis were referred to as red deer Richard Hakluyt refers to North America as a lande full of many beastes as redd dere 8 in his 1584 Discourse Concerning Western Planting Similarly John Smith s 1616 A Description of New England referred to red deer Sir William Talbot s 1672 English translation of John Lederer s Latin Discoveries likewise called the species red deer but noted in parentheses that they were for their unusual largeness improperly termed Elks by ignorant people Both Thomas Jefferson s 1785 Notes on the State of Virginia and David Bailie Warden s 1816 Statistical Political and Historical Account of the United States used red deer to refer to Cervus canadensis 9 Taxonomy Edit Elk crossing Opal Terrace at Mammoth Hot Springs Yellowstone National Park Bull elk in late autumn Banff National Park Canada Sparring bull elks in Banff National Park Canada Members of the genus Cervus and hence early relatives or possible ancestors of the elk first appear in the fossil record 25 million years ago during the Oligocene in Eurasia but do not appear in the North American fossil record until the early Miocene 10 The extinct Irish elk Megaloceros was not a member of the genus Cervus but rather the largest member of the wider deer family Cervidae known from the fossil record 11 Until recently red deer and elk were considered to be one species Cervus elaphus 5 12 with over a dozen subspecies But mitochondrial DNA studies conducted in 2004 on hundreds of samples from red deer and elk subspecies and other species of the Cervus deer family strongly indicate that elk or wapiti should be a distinct species namely Cervus canadensis 13 DNA evidence validates that elk are more closely related to Thorold s deer and even sika deer than they are to the red deer 13 Elk and red deer produce fertile offspring in captivity and the two species have freely inter bred in New Zealand s Fiordland National Park The cross bred animals have resulted in the disappearance of virtually all pure elk blood from the area 14 Key morphological differences that distinguish C canadensis from C elaphus are the former s wider rump patch and paler hued antlers 15 Subspecies Edit There are numerous subspecies of elk described with six from North America and four from Asia although some taxonomists consider them different ecotypes or races of the same species adapted to local environments through minor changes in appearance and behavior Populations vary in antler shape and size body size coloration and mating behavior DNA investigations of the Eurasian subspecies revealed that phenotypic variation in antlers mane and rump patch development are based on climatic related lifestyle factors 15 Of the six subspecies of elk known to have inhabited North America in historical times four remain including the Roosevelt s C canadensis roosevelti tule C canadensis nannodes Manitoban C canadensis manitobensis and Rocky Mountain elk C canadensis nelsoni 16 The eastern elk C canadensis canadensis and Merriam s elk C canadensis merriami subspecies have been extinct for at least a century 17 18 Four subspecies described in Asia include the Altai wapiti C canadensis sibiricus and the Tianshan wapiti C canadensis songaricus Two distinct subspecies found in China Mongolia the Korean Peninsula 19 and Siberia are the Manchurian wapiti C canadensis xanthopygus and the Alashan wapitis C canadensis alashanicus The Manchurian wapiti is darker and more reddish in coloration than the other populations The Alashan wapiti of north central China is the smallest of all subspecies has the lightest coloration and is the least studied 14 Recent DNA studies suggest that there are no more than three or four subspecies of elk All American forms aside from possibly the tule and Roosevelt s elk seem to belong to one subspecies Cervus canadensis canadensis Even the Siberian elk Cervus canadensis sibiricus are more or less identical to the American forms and therefore may belong to this subspecies too However the Manchurian wapiti Cervus canadensis xanthopygus is clearly distinct from the Siberian forms but not distinguishable from the Alashan wapiti The Chinese forms the Sichuan deer Kansu red deer and Tibetan red deer also belong to the wapiti and were not distinguishable from each other by mitochondrial DNA studies 13 These Chinese subspecies are sometimes treated as a distinct species namely the Central Asian red deer Cervus hanglu which also includes the Kashmir stag 20 North American group Roosevelt s elk C c roosevelti Tule elk C c nannodes Manitoban elk C c manitobensis Rocky Mountain elk C c nelsoni Eastern elk C c canadensis extinct Merriam s elk C c merriami extinct Asian Eastern group Altai wapiti C c sibiricus Tian Shan wapiti C c songaricus Manchurian wapiti C c xanthopygus Alashan wapiti C c alashanicus Tibetan red deer C c wallichii Illustration of eastern elk Illustration of Altai wapiti Illustration of Manchurian wapiti Illustration of Kashmir stagCharacteristics Edit A herd of Roosevelt s elk in California Elk have thick bodies with slender legs and short tails They have a shoulder height of 0 75 1 5 m 2 ft 6 in 4 ft 11 in with a nose to tail length of 1 6 2 7 m 5 ft 3 in 8 ft 10 in Males are larger and weigh 178 497 kg 392 1 096 lb while females weigh 171 292 kg 377 644 lb 21 The largest of the subspecies is the Roosevelt elk C c roosevelti found west of the Cascade Range in the U S states of California Oregon and Washington and in the Canadian province of British Columbia Roosevelt elk have been introduced into Alaska where the largest males are estimated to weigh up to 600 kg 1 300 lb 22 More typically male Roosevelt elk weigh around 318 to 499 kg 701 to 1 100 lb while females weigh 261 to 283 kg 575 to 624 lb 23 Male tule elk weigh 204 318 kg 450 701 lb while females weigh 170 191 kg 375 421 lb 24 The whole weights of adult male Manitoban elk range from 288 to 478 kilograms 635 to 1 054 lb Females have a mean weight of 275 kilograms 606 lb 25 The elk is the second largest extant species of deer after the moose 26 Antlers are made of bone which can grow at a rate of 2 5 centimeters 0 98 in per day While actively growing a soft layer of highly vascularized skin known as velvet covers and protects them This is shed in the summer when the antlers have fully developed 27 Bull elk typically have around six tines on each antler The Siberian and North American elk carry the largest antlers while the Altai wapiti has the smallest 14 Roosevelt bull antlers can weigh 18 kg 40 lb 27 The formation and retention of antlers are testosterone driven 28 In late winter and early spring the testosterone level drops which causes the antlers to shed 29 Rocky Mountain elk During the fall elk grow a thicker coat of hair which helps to insulate them during the winter 30 Both male and female North American elk grow thin neck manes females of other subspecies may not 31 37 By early summer the heavy winter coat has been shed Elk are known to rub against trees and other objects to help remove hair from their bodies All elk have small and clearly defined rump patches with short tails They have different coloration based on the seasons and types of habitats with gray or lighter coloration prevalent in the winter and a more reddish darker coat in the summer Subspecies living in arid climates tend to have lighter colored coats than do those living in forests 30 Most have lighter yellow brown to orange brown coats in contrast to dark brown hair on the head neck and legs during the summer Forest adapted Manchurian and Alashan wapitis have red or reddish brown coats with less contrast between the body coat and the rest of the body during the summer months Calves are born spotted as is common with many deer species and lose them by the end of summer Adult Manchurian wapiti may retain a few orange spots on the back of their summer coats until they are older This characteristic has also been observed in the forest adapted European red deer 14 Behavior and ecology Edit Elk bulls sparring Elk are among the most gregarious deer species 31 52 During the summer group size can reach 400 individuals 21 For most of the year adult males and females are segregated into different herds Female herds are larger while bulls form small groups and may even travel alone Young bulls may associate with older bulls or female groups Male and female herds come together during the mating season which may begin in late August 31 75 82 Males try to intimidate rivals by vocalizing and displaying with their antlers 31 109 If neither bull backs down they engage in antler wrestling sometimes sustaining serious injuries 32 An American elk bugling source source Problems playing this file See media help Bulls have a loud high pitched whistle like vocalization known as bugling which advertise the male s fitness over great distances Unusual for a vocalization produced by a large animal buglings can reach a frequency of 4000 Hz This is achieved by blowing air from the glottis through the nasal cavities Elk can produce deeper pitched 150 Hz sounds using the larynx 33 Cows produce an alarm bark to alert other members of the herd to danger while calves will produce a high pitched scream when attacked 34 Reproduction and life cycle Edit Female elk have a short estrus cycle of only a day or two and matings usually involve a dozen or more attempts By the autumn of their second year females can produce one and very rarely two offspring Reproduction is most common when cows weigh at least 200 kilograms 440 lb 35 Dominant bulls follow groups of cows during the rut from August into early winter A bull will defend his harem of 20 cows or more from competing bulls and predators 36 31 92 Bulls also dig holes in the ground called wallows in which they urinate and roll their bodies 37 32 A male elk s urethra points upward so that urine is sprayed almost at a right angle to the penis 38 The urine soaks into their hair and gives them a distinct smell which attracts cows 32 Elk bull inspecting a female A bull interacts with cows in his harem in two ways herding and courtship When a female wanders too far away from the harem s range the male will rush ahead of her block her path and aggressively rush her back to the harem Herding behavior is accompanied by a stretched out and lowered neck and the antlers laid back A bull may get violent and hit the cow with his antlers During courtship the bull is more peaceful and approaches her with his head and antlers raised The male signals his intention to test the female for sexual receptivity by flicking his tongue If not ready a cow will lower her head and weave from side to side while opening and closing her mouth The bull will stop in response in order not to scare her 31 100 101 Otherwise the bull will copiously lick the female and then mount her 31 115 Younger less dominant bulls known as spike bulls because their antlers have not yet forked will harass unguarded cows These bulls are impatient and will not perform any courtship rituals and will continue to pursue a female even when she signals him to stop As such they are less reproductively successful and a cow may stay close to the big bull to avoid harassment Dominant bulls are intolerant of spike bulls and will chase them away from their harems 31 100 105 A female nursing her calf The gestation period is eight to nine months and the offspring weigh around 16 kilograms 35 lb When the females are near to giving birth they tend to isolate themselves from the main herd and will remain isolated until the calf is large enough to escape predators 32 Calves are born spotted as is common with many deer species and they lose their spots by the end of summer After two weeks calves are able to join the herd and are fully weaned at two months of age 21 Elk calves are as large as an adult white tailed deer by the time they are six months old 39 Elk will leave their natal birth ranges before they are three years old Males disperse more often than females as adult cows are more tolerant of female offspring from previous years 40 Elk live 20 years or more in captivity but average 10 to 13 years in the wild In some subspecies that suffer less predation they may live an average of 15 years in the wild 41 Migration Edit Elk wintering at the National Elk Refuge in Jackson Hole Wyoming after migrating there during the fall As is true for many species of deer especially those in mountainous regions elk migrate into areas of higher altitude in the spring following the retreating snows and the opposite direction in the fall Hunting pressure impacts migration and movement 42 During the winter they favor wooded areas for the greater availability of food to eat Elk do not appear to benefit from thermal cover 43 The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem elk herds comprise as many as 40 000 individuals 44 During the spring and fall they take part in the longest elk migration in the continental U S traveling as much as 168 mi 270 km between summer and winter ranges The Teton herd consists of between 9 000 and 13 000 elk and they spend winters on the National Elk Refuge having migrated south from the southern portions of Yellowstone National Park and west from the Shoshone and Bridger Teton National Forests 45 Diet Edit Elk pellet group Elk are ruminants and therefore have four chambered stomachs Unlike white tailed deer and moose which are chiefly browsers elk are similar to cattle in that they are primarily grazers But like other deer they also browse 46 47 Elk have a tendency to do most of their feeding in the mornings and evenings seeking sheltered areas in between feedings to digest Their diets vary somewhat depending on the season with native grasses being a year round supplement tree bark being consumed in winter and forbs and tree sprouts during the summer Elk consume an average of 9 1 kilograms 20 lb of vegetation daily 48 Particularly fond of aspen sprouts which rise in the spring elk have had some impact on aspen groves which have been declining in some regions where elk exist 49 Range and wildlife managers conduct surveys of elk pellet groups to monitor populations and resource use 50 51 Predators and defensive tactics Edit Single bull elk in winter are vulnerable to predation by wolves Predators of elk include wolves coyotes brown and black bears cougars and Siberian tigers 52 53 Coyote packs mostly prey on elk calves though they can sometimes take a winter or disease weakened adult 54 In the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem which includes Yellowstone National Park bears are the most significant predators of calves 55 while healthy bulls have never been recorded to be killed by bears and such encounters can be fatal for bears 56 The killing of cows in their prime is more likely to affect population growth than the killing of bulls or calves 57 Elk may avoid predation by switching from grazing to browsing Grazing puts an elk in the compromising situation of being in an open area with its head down leaving it unable to see what is going on in the surrounding area 58 Living in groups also lessens the risk of an individual falling to predation Large bull elk are less vulnerable and can afford to wander alone while cows stay in larger groups for protection for their calves 31 75 Bulls are more vulnerable to predation by wolves in late winter after they have been weakened by months of chasing females and fighting 57 Males that have recently lost their antlers are more likely to be preyed upon 59 Parasites and disease Edit At least 53 species of protist and animal parasites have been identified in elk 60 Most of these parasites seldom lead to significant mortality among wild or captive elk Parelaphostrongylus tenuis brainworm or meningeal worm is a parasitic nematode known to affect the spinal cord and brain tissue of elk and other species leading to death 61 The definitive host is the white tailed deer in which it normally has no ill effects Snails and slugs the intermediate hosts can be inadvertently consumed by elk during grazing 62 The liver fluke Fascioloides magna and the nematode Dictyocaulus viviparus are also commonly found parasites that can be fatal to elk 63 A bull elk in spring shedding its winter coat and with its antlers covered in velvet Chronic wasting disease transmitted by a misfolded protein known as a prion affects the brain tissue in elk and has been detected throughout their range in North America First documented in the late 1960s in mule deer the disease has affected elk on game farms and in the wild in a number of regions Elk that have contracted the disease begin to show weight loss changes in behavior increased watering needs excessive salivation and urinating and difficulty swallowing and at an advanced stage the disease leads to death No risks to humans have been documented nor has the disease been demonstrated to pose a threat to domesticated cattle 64 In 2002 South Korea banned the importation of elk antler velvet due to concerns about chronic wasting disease 65 The Gram negative bacterial disease brucellosis occasionally affects elk in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem the only place in the U S where the disease is still known to exist 66 though this can extend out to the Bighorn Mountains 67 In domesticated cattle brucellosis causes infertility abortions and reduced milk production It is transmitted to humans as undulant fever producing influenza like symptoms that may last for years Though bison are more likely to transmit the disease to other animals elk inadvertently transmitted brucellosis to horses in Wyoming and cattle in Idaho Researchers are attempting to eradicate the disease through vaccinations and herd management measures which are expected to be successful 66 Nevertheless research has been ongoing since 2002 and a successful vaccine has yet to be developed as of 2016 update 68 A recent necropsy study of captive elk in Pennsylvania attributed the cause of death in 33 of 65 cases to either gastrointestinal parasites 21 cases primarily Eimeria sp and Ostertagia sp or bacterial infections 12 cases mostly pneumonia 69 Elk hoof disease was first noticed in the state of Washington in the late 1990s in the Cowlitz River basin with sporadic reports of deformed hooves Since then the disease has spread rapidly with increased sightings throughout southwest Washington and into Oregon The disease is characterised by deformed broken or missing hooves and leads to severe lameness in elk The primary cause is not known but it is associated with treponeme bacteria which are known to cause digital dermatitis in commercial livestock The mode of transmission is also not known but it appears to be highly contagious among elk Studies are being undertaken by government departments to determine how to halt or eliminate the disease 70 71 72 Distribution and status Edit Bull elk bugling during the rut The elk ranges from central Asia through to Siberia and east Asia and in North America They can be found in open deciduous woodlands boreal forests upland moors mountainous areas and grasslands The International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources IUCN list the species as least concern species 1 The habitat of Siberian elk in Asia is similar to that of the Rocky Mountain subspecies in North America During the Late Pleistocene their range was much more extensive being distributed across Eurasia with remains being found as far west as France These populations are most closely related to modern Asian populations of the elk Their range collapsed at the start of the Holocene possibly because they were specialized to cold periglacial tundra steppe habitat When this environment was replaced largely by closed forest the red deer might have outcompeted the elk Relictual populations survived into the early Holocene until around 3000 years ago in southern Sweden and the Alps where the environment remained favorable 73 Introductions and reintroductions Edit Bull elk on a captive range in Nebraska These elk originally from Rocky Mountain herds exhibit modified behavior due to having been held in captivity under less selective pressure As of 2014 population figures for all North American elk subspecies were around one million Prior to the European colonization of North America there were an estimated 10 million on the continent 74 There are many past and ongoing examples of reintroduction into areas of the US Elk were reintroduced in Michigan in 1918 after going extinct in 1875 75 The Rocky Mountain elk subspecies was reintroduced by hunter conservation organizations into the Appalachian region of the U S where the now extinct eastern elk once lived 76 They were reintroduced to Pennsylvania beginning in 1913 and throughout the mid 20th Century 77 Since the late 1990s they were reintroduced and recolonized in the states of Wisconsin 78 Kentucky North Carolina Tennessee Georgia Virginia and West Virginia 79 In the state of Kentucky the elk population in 2022 had increased to over 15 000 animals 80 In 2016 a male elk likely from the Smoky Mountains population was sighted in South Carolina for the first time in nearly 300 years 81 Since 2015 elk have also been reintroduced in a number of other states including Pennsylvania 82 83 Missouri 84 and introduced to the islands of Etolin and Afognak in Alaska 85 Reintroduction of the elk into Ontario began in the early 20th century and is ongoing with limited success 86 Elk and red deer were introduced to Argentina in the early 20th century 87 There they are now considered an invasive species encroaching on Argentinian ecosystems where they compete for food with the indigenous Chilean huemul and other herbivores 88 This negative impact on native animal species has led the IUCN to identify the elk as one of the world s 100 worst invaders 89 The introduction of deer to New Zealand began in the middle of the 19th century and current populations are primarily European red deer with only 15 percent being elk 90 There is significant hybridization of elk with red deer 91 These deer have had an adverse impact on forest regeneration of some plant species as they consume more palatable species which are replaced with those that are less favored by the elk The long term impact will be an alteration of the types of plants and trees found and in other animal and plant species dependent upon them 92 As in Chile and Argentina the IUCN has declared that red deer and elk populations in New Zealand are an invasive species 89 Estimated number of elk per U S state Edit State Estimated Number of Elk Arizona 35 000 93 Arkansas 450 94 California 12 500 95 Colorado 280 000 96 Idaho 120 000 97 Kentucky 15 876 98 Michigan 1 196 99 Minnesota 126 100 Montana 141 785 101 New Mexico 70 000 90 000 102 North Carolina 150 200 103 Oklahoma 5 000 104 Oregon 71 127 105 Pennsylvania 1 400 106 South Dakota 6 000 107 Tennessee 400 108 Texas 1 600 109 Utah 81 000 110 Virginia 250 111 Washington 60 000 112 West Virginia 80 113 Wyoming 110 200 114 Cultural references Edit A Kiowa couple The woman on the right is wearing an elk tooth dress Elk have played an important role in the cultural history of a number of peoples Neolithic petroglyphs from Asia depict antler less female elk which have been interpreted as symbolizing life and sustenance They were also frequently overlaid with boats and associated with rivers suggesting they also represented paths to the underworld 115 Petroglyphs of elk were carved into cliffs by the Ancestral Puebloans of the southwestern U S hundreds of years ago 116 The elk was of particular importance to the Lakota and played a spiritual role in their society The male elk was admired for its ability to attract mates and Lakota men will play a courting flute imitating a bugling elk to attract women Men used elks antlers as love charms and wore clothes decorated with elk images 117 The Rocky Mountain elk is the official state animal for Utah 118 An image of an elk and a moose appear on the state seal and flag of Michigan 119 The Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks B P O E chose the elk as its namesake because a number of its attributes seemed appropriate for cultivation by members of the fraternity 120 Jewel encrusted gold mounted elk teeth are prized possession of many members of the B P O E 121 Commercial uses Edit A cut of elk meat showing the low fat content Although breakdown figures for each game species are not available in the 2006 National Survey from the U S Fish and Wildlife Service hunting of wild elk is most likely the primary economic impact 122 While elk are not generally harvested for meat production on a large scale some restaurants offer the meat as a specialty item and it is also available in some grocery stores The meat has a taste somewhere between beef and venison and is higher in protein and lower in fat and cholesterol than beef pork and chicken 123 Elk meat is a good source of iron phosphorus and zinc 124 A male elk can produce 10 to 11 kilograms 22 to 24 lb of antler velvet annually and on ranches in the United States Canada and New Zealand it is collected and sold to markets in East Asia where it is used in medicine Some cultures consider velvet to be an aphrodisiac 65 However consuming velvet from elk in North America may be risky since velvet from animals infected with chronic wasting disease may contain prions that could result in a human getting variant Creutzfeldt Jakob disease 125 Antlers are also used in artwork furniture and other novelty items All Asian subspecies along with other deer have been raised for their antlers in central and eastern Asia by Han Chinese Turkic peoples Tungusic peoples Mongolians and Koreans Elk farms are relatively common in North America and New Zealand 90 Native Americans have used elk hides for tepee covering clothing and footwear 126 127 Since 1967 the Boy Scouts of America have assisted employees at the National Elk Refuge in Wyoming by collecting the antlers which are shed each winter They are 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Glycosyltransferase Genes Does Not Induce Adequate Protection against Experimental Brucella abortus Challenge Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology 6 10 doi 10 3389 fcimb 2016 00010 PMC 4748031 PMID 26904509 Hattel Arthur L Shaw Daniel P Fisher Jenny S Brooks Jason W Love Brenda C Drake Thomas R Wagner Donald C 2007 Mortality in Pennsylvania captive elk Cervus elaphus 1998 2006 Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation 19 3 334 7 doi 10 1177 104063870701900322 PMID 17459871 Archived from the original on 16 January 2021 Retrieved 21 January 2011 Treponeme associated hoof disease in Washington elk Washington Department of Fish amp Wildlife 2017 Archived from the original on 20 August 2017 Retrieved 10 August 2017 Hogan Jackson 1 June 2017 WSU Elk hoof disease will not be easy fix The Columbian Longview Washington Archived from the original on 16 January 2021 Retrieved 10 August 2017 Elk Hoof Disease Fact Sheet PDF Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Archived PDF from 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Foundation Retrieved 31 October 2021 Minnesota 2020 Elk Counts PDF Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Retrieved 7 December 2021 Montana 2021 Elk Counts PDF Montana Fish Wildlife amp Parks Retrieved 31 October 2021 Joel Gay 14 August 2019 The Elk Hunting Mecca New Mexico Magazine Retrieved 31 October 2021 Elk North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission Retrieved 23 November 2021 Ed Gofrey Oklahoma s elk population continues to grow The Oklahoman Retrieved 31 October 2021 Rocky Mountain elk population size and herd composition in Oregon 2015 2019 PDF Oregon Department of Fish amp Wildlife Retrieved 31 October 2021 Jason Nark Elk Pa s largest wild animal have become a tourism boom in the northwest part of the state The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved 31 October 2021 Elk South Dakota Game Fish amp Parks Retrieved 31 October 2021 Tennessee Elk Season Dates Regulations and Information Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency Retrieved 31 October 2021 Informer Wildlife 10 January 2021 Elk Population By State Estimates and Info Wildlife Informer Retrieved 7 December 2021 Utah Statewide Elk Management Plan PDF Utah Division of Wildlife Resources Retrieved 31 October 2021 Elk in Virginia Return of a Native Species Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources Retrieved 4 November 2021 Elk U S Fish amp Wildlife Service Retrieved 31 October 2021 Caitlin Tan 13 March 2020 Looking At W Va s Elk Herd Four Years In West Virginia Public Broadcasting Retrieved 4 November 2021 Angus M Thuermer Jr Wyoming Game and Fish issues 2 000 new elk tags WyomingNews com Retrieved 31 October 2021 Jacobson Esther 2018 The Deer Goddess of Ancient Siberia A Study in the Ecology of Belief Brill Academic Publishers pp 96 97 ISBN 9789004378780 Smith Bruce L 2010 Wildlife on the Wind A Field Biologist s Journey and an Indian Reservation s Renewal Utah State University Press ISBN 9780874217926 Archived from the original on 16 January 2021 Retrieved 2 August 2020 Duda Kathryn M Courting on the Plains 19th Century Lakota Style Carnegie Magazine Online Archived from the original on 16 January 2021 Retrieved 2 August 2020 Utah State Symbols Utah com LC Archived from the original on 16 January 2021 Retrieved 4 December 2010 The Michigan State Flag NSTATE LLC Archived from the original on 10 May 2013 Retrieved 4 December 2010 California Hawaii Elks Association Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks Archived from the original on 24 December 2016 Retrieved 23 December 2016 Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks Phoenixmasonry Inc Archived from the original on 16 January 2021 Retrieved 4 December 2010 2006 National Survey of Fishing Hunting and Wildlife Associated Recreation PDF United States Fish and Wildlife Service 2006 Archived PDF from the original on 6 December 2010 Retrieved 4 December 2010 Elk Meat Nutritional Information Wapiti net Archived from the original on 15 December 2010 Retrieved 4 December 2010 Nutritional Summary for Game meat elk raw Conde Nast Publications 2007 Archived from the original on 18 May 2008 Retrieved 4 December 2010 Angers Rachel C Seward Tanya S Napier Dana Green Michael Hoover Edward Spraker Terry O Rourke Katherine Balachandran Aru Telling Glenn C 2009 Chronic Wasting Disease Prions in Elk Antler Velvet Emerging Infectious Diseases 15 5 696 703 doi 10 3201 eid1505 081458 PMC 2687044 PMID 19402954 Colorado Indians Shelters University of North Colorado Archived from the original on 16 January 2021 Retrieved 3 December 2020 Paterek J 1996 Encyclopedia of American Indian Costume Norton pp 88 137 224 ISBN 9780393313826 43rd annual elk antler auction held in Jackson PDF Press release U S Fish and Wildlife Service 22 May 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 11 November 2012 Retrieved 4 December 2010 External links Edit Mammals portal Wikispecies has information related to Cervus canadensis Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cervus canadensis Arizona Elk Arizona Game and Fish Department Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation Yellowstone Elk Greater Yellowstone Resource Guide Smithsonian Institution North American Mammals Cervus elaphus canadensis Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elk amp oldid 1145932042, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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