Herds of elk, mule deer, and pronghorn antelope have migrated hundreds of miles over North America for millennia-driven by their DNA, their routes follow ancient travel paths
Winner of 2017 Gold Nautilus Book Award in Animals and Nature and 2018 Silver Independent Publisher Book Award in Environment, Ecology, and NatureLarge animal migrations are among the primordial rhythms of life on Earth, and, as scientists have recently discovered, the American West is home to some of the planets most magnificent migrations.
Yellowstone Migration takes readers into the heart of the vast, wild landscapes found in Americas West, and shows us that it is possible to preserve the natural heritage of this iconic region and protect these last intact natural wildlife corridorsso that these animals can carry out the migrations that are essential to their survival.
The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, which is a dozen times the size of Yellowstone National Park, harbors the last great populations of migrating elk, pronghorn antelope, and mule deer. Thousands of these grand animals move with the changing seasons to feed and give birth. During their four-month long journey, mule deer navigate not only the natural challenges of rivers, lakes, and sand dunes, but also manmade obstacles such as three major highways and more than 100 fences, many with barbed wire.
In
Yellowstone Migrations, wildlife photojournalist Joe Riis follows three primary migrations:
The Path of the Pronghorn from Grand Teton National Park to southwest Wyoming;
The mule deer migration from Red Desert to Hoback, Wyoming; and
The Cody elk migration on the Absaroka front.
People who care about the American West face a choice: we can manage our public and private lands in ways that allow and encourage these migrations, or we can encumber these animals with unchecked development, changing climate, pollution, and barriers. Riiss stunning imagery and on-the-ground experiences shed light on these amazing animals and how, for them, migration is a matter of life or death.
To learn more about Braided River and its mission: inspiring people to protect wild places through images and stories that change perspectives, please visit www.braidedriver.org