The
caribou belongs to the deer family and is the only member where both
male and female counterparts carry antlers. The antlers of the female
are smaller than those of the male, but they are carried for a longer
period of time. Caribou start growing their antlers each spring and are
normally done the process by August. Male caribou shed their antlers in
November or December, after mating, while females will often carry them
until June, after they have given birth. Antlers are a sign of
dominance, and it is usually only the pregnant caribou that keep the
antlers that late. It allows them to defend their feed and displace
large caribou from favoured sites while nourishing their babies.
There
are many subspecies of caribou. They can be found dwelling in forests,
on mountains, in the tundra, and even migrating each year between the
forests and tundra of the Far North. Approximately half of Canadian
caribou are barren-ground caribou. This means they spend almost all of
the year, sometimes even the full year, on the tundra from Alaska to
Baffin Island.
The woodland
caribou, the largest and darkest of the species, can be found in the
boreal, or northern, forests from British Columbia and the Yukon
Territory to Newfoundland and Labrador. In mountainous western areas the
woodland caribou make seasonal movements from their winter range on the
mountainside to their summer range on the tundra. Those in eastern
areas occupy mature forest and open bogs and ferns, or low-lying wet
areas.
The Peary caribou are
a smaller subspecies and are light-coloured. They can only be found on
the islands of the Canadian arctic archipelago and their population is
numbered at 10,000. This subspecies does not normally have significant
migrations
Canadian caribou
can be found from the United States-Canada border to northern Ellesmere
Island, and from British Columbia and the Yukon Territory to the island
of Newfoundland. There are 2.4 million caribou in Canada. But many are subspecies and populations that are threatened or extinct.
You
can join is on one of our tours to Yukon when we track down herds in
the vast landscapes.
Please see this web page for all our Yukon Workshops, http://northof49photography.com/photo-workshops/
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