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January 15, 2025

Migration memory: How caribou adapt to changing winter conditions

An adult female caribou and her calf walk across a snowy landscape. The caribou belong to the imperiled Bathurst Caribou Herd in northern Canada. Credit: Dr. Anne Gunn, CircumArctic Rangifer Monitoring and Assessment Network (CARMA)
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An adult female caribou and her calf walk across a snowy landscape. The caribou belong to the imperiled Bathurst Caribou Herd in northern Canada. Credit: Dr. Anne Gunn, CircumArctic Rangifer Monitoring and Assessment Network (CARMA)

A study in Global Change Biology shows that caribou will optimize their migration path based on their collective memories.

Caribou are the largest species on land in the Arctic. They are not only an important part of the ecology but are also a primary source of food for hundreds of communities.

The antlered deer migrate more miles than any other land-based animal but don't always take the same path each year. To figure out how and why caribou migrate during the winter, Eliezer Gurarie, a professor at the State University of New York, and fellow researchers teamed up with the National Park Service, which had put trackable collars on more than 300 female caribou in the Western Arctic Caribou Herd.

The team tracked the herd's movements and deaths as it traveled across a region spanning more than 360,000 square kilometers in northwest Alaska for 11 years, from 2009 to 2020.

The researchers discovered that when the animals wintered south of the Kobuk River, they were more likely to survive a warm, windier winter. When they wintered north of the same river, they were more likely to survive when there was more snow and less wind. The caribou decided whether to cross the river each year as an adaptive measure to maximize their chances of survival.

"A dead animal doesn't remember anything (or move again) by definition," Gurarie said. "But the general conditions that led to poor survival are certainly remembered by the other caribou."

The long-term study revealed that can not only understand risk but also use their knowledge to collectively make decisions that minimize risks for the herd. "This is a pretty clear and dramatic example of the concrete importance of social memory in predicting animal movements," Gurarie said.

This could be especially important for the species as the Arctic undergoes some of the most rapid warming on Earth.

More information: Eliezer Gurarie et al, Evidence for an Adaptive, Large鈥怱cale Range Shift in a Long鈥怐istance Terrestrial Migrant, Global Change Biology (2024).

Journal information: Global Change Biology

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Caribou optimize their migration paths based on collective memory, adapting to changing winter conditions to enhance survival. Tracking over 11 years revealed that caribou adjust their routes based on past experiences with weather conditions, such as snow and wind, to minimize risks. This adaptive behavior highlights the importance of social memory in animal movements, crucial as the Arctic experiences rapid climate change.

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