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May 30, 2008
Kemmerer, WY -- Six highway underpasses are being
installed on U.S. Highway 30 in Nugget Canyon to assist migrating
mule deer cross the highway safely and protect motorists from
colliding with game animals.
Installation of the highway underpasses is a joint project
between the Wyoming Department of Transportation (WYDOT) and the
Wyoming Game and Fish Department and will augment the two
underpasses already in use by big game.
Dave Neilson, transportation technician with WYDOT, is the
on-site supervisor for the wildlife underpass project and says
their goal is to install all six underpasses in time for this
fall's deer migration.
"I spent the past three winters monitoring this 12-mile stretch
of Highway 30, locating deer tracks and determining where the deer
were crossing the highway," said Neilson. "That way, we know for
sure where the best location is to install the underpasses. Proper
location and installation will mean protection for migrating deer
and keep motorists from colliding with the deer."
Nugget Canyon sits in the middle of one of Wyoming's largest
big game winter ranges. U.S. Highway 30 is also one of Wyoming's
busiest highways, with heavy tractor-trailer use. During spring
and fall migration there is a steady stream of deer and elk
crossing the rail line and the highway in Nugget Canyon between
Kemmerer and Cokeville. This migration provides an opportunity to
view wildlife, but it also creates hazards for motorists and deer
alike.
Neilson was a Kemmerer High School graduate in 1986 when the
Wyoming legislature passed the Nugget Canyon Wildlife Migration
Project Act to protect migrating wildlife.
"This underpass construction project means more to me than just
another project, " Neilson said. "I think it's neat that, when I
graduated in 1986, I worked for the construction company that
built the original highway fences to protect the deer. Now, I am
supervising another phase of the project, installing the six
additional highway underpasses and more fences. I grew up right
next to this mule deer herd and everyone wants to see these deer
saved. It feels good to be a part of such a meaningful project."
Neilson said only state funds and no federal funds are being
used to construct the highway underpasses and the project is a
high priority with WYDOT.
"WYDOT crews use a crane to swing the underpasses into place
under the highway. Then wing-shaped fences are installed to funnel
the deer into the underpass boxes. The placement of the boxes must
be highly visual to the deer. There can't be any bumps at the ends
of the underpasses or the deer won't use them. After the
underpasses are installed we will erect seven miles of eight-foot
high fencing along the highway through the canyon."
The problem of wildlife and vehicle collisions has existed as
long as the highway has been there. An average of more than 200
mule deer continue to die each year in collisions with motorists.
Most of the game mortalities are the result of motorists,
including truck drivers, not adjusting their speeds or paying
attention to the flashing warning lights and signs.
Bill Rudd, Game and Fish assistant wildlife division chief,
says since 1986, experiments using a variety of warning devices
and safety measures have been tried in the canyon to reduce game
mortalities.
"We have tried many ways to solve the migration problems in the
canyon," Rudd said. "Graduate students installed an infrared
flashing light sensing system, called FLASH, to warn motorists
when deer are crossing the highway with some success. Volunteer
labor and moneys were contributed by the Overthrust Wildlife
Association to pay for the flashing lights, highway signs and
deer-proof fencing. Interpretive signs were installed to educate
people about the migrating animals and to get motorists to slow
down, and WYDOT constructed highway pullouts in Nugget Canyon for
motorists to safely pull over and view wildlife. At one point,
motorists could tune into an AM radio message and hear about the
mule deer herd in Nugget Canyon."
"We were losing large numbers of deer in the Wyoming Range mule
deer herd and it seemed like the underpasses would help save this
important mule deer herd. So, in 2001, WYDOT installed two highway
underpasses and by Thanksgiving, hundreds of mule deer were
crossing under the highway."
Rudd says the Nugget Canyon Wildlife Migration Project is
ongoing and involves many volunteers, students from the University
of Wyoming, state agencies and groups like the Mule Deer
Foundation.
"I have always said that I wanted to see this project completed
in my career and it will, thanks to the efforts of so many people.
This is truly a great success story for Wyoming, protecting both
motorists and deer," Rudd said. "The underpasses will protect a
major migration corridor for one of our most popular deer herds,
the Wyoming Range herd. The credit for this project goes to the
WYDOT, under the leadership of Del McOmie and John Eddins, and to
the WYDOT and Game and Fish field folks who made this project
happen."
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