Michael Durham Photography

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  • A wild, newborn rocky mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) calf less than 24 hours old. Newborn calves like this one will lay still and do their best to hide when a threat is perceived. Sled Springs Elk Study Area, Northeast Oregon.
    newborn_elk_calf_ElkCalf2.jpg
  • A wild, male newborn rocky mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) calf less than 24 hours old. Newborn calves like this one will lay still and do their best to hide when a threat is perceived. Sled Springs Elk Study Area, Northeast Oregon.
    newborn_elk_calf_ElkCalf7.jpg
  • A wild, newborn rocky mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) calf less than 24 hours old. Newborn calves like this one will lay still and do their best to hide when a threat is perceived. Sled Springs Elk Study Area, Northeast Oregon.
    newborn_elk_calf_ElkCalf6.jpg
  • A wild, newborn rocky mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) calf less than 24 hours old. Newborn calves like this one will lay still and do their best to hide when a threat is perceived. Sled Springs Elk Study Area, Northeast Oregon.
    newborn_elk_calf_ElkCalf3.jpg
  • A wild, male newborn rocky mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) calf less than 24 hours old. Newborn calves like this one will lay still and do their best to hide when a threat is perceived. Sled Springs Elk Study Area, Northeast Oregon.
    newborn_elk_calf_ElkCalf8.jpg
  • A wild, newborn rocky mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) calf less than 24 hours old. Newborn calves like this one will lay still and do their best to hide when a threat is perceived. Sled Springs Elk Study Area, Northeast Oregon.
    newborn_elk_calf_ElkCalf5.jpg
  • A wild, newborn rocky mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) calf less than 24 hours old. Newborn calves like this one will lay still and do their best to hide when a threat is perceived. Sled Springs Elk Study Area, Northeast Oregon.
    newborn_elk_calf_ElkCalf24.jpg
  • A wild, newborn rocky mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) calf less than 24 hours old. Newborn calves like this one will lay still and do their best to hide when a threat is perceived. Sled Springs Elk Study Area, Northeast Oregon.
    newborn_elk_calf_ElkCalf23.jpg
  • A wild, male newborn rocky mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) calf less than 24 hours old. Newborn calves like this one will lay still and do their best to hide when a threat is perceived. Sled Springs Elk Study Area, Northeast Oregon.
    newborn_elk_calf_ElkCalf1.jpg
  • A bull rocky mountain elk (Cervus canadensis nelsoni) with velvet on its antlers, emerges from a forest thicket. Yellowstone National Park, Montana.
    Bull_elk_in_velvet_32808SF_ek3.jpg
  • A bull rocky mountain elk (Cervus canadensis nelsoni) browses on grass in a forest clearing. Yellowstone Narional Park, Montana.
    grazing_elk_32808SF_ek2.jpg
  • Still warm, a yearling rocky mountain elk calf (Cervus elaphus elaphus) lays were it was killed by a cougar. The cougar jumped on the animals back and then broke its neck. Wenaha cougar study area, Eastern Oregon.
    cougar_killed_elk_ElkKill7-6.jpg
  • Oregon Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) biologist Scott Findholdt checks a still warm, yearling rocky mountain elk calf (Cervus elaphus elaphus) where it was killed by a cougar. The cougar jumped on the animals back and then broke its neck. Wenaha cougar study area, Eastern Oregon.
    cougar_killed_elk_ElkKill7-4.jpg
  • Oregon Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) biologist Scott Findholdt checks a still warm, yearling rocky mountain elk calf (Cervus elaphus elaphus) where it was killed by a cougar. The cougar jumped on the animals back and then broke its neck. Wenaha cougar study area, Eastern Oregon.
    cougar_killed_elk_ElkKill7-2.jpg
  • Oregon Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) biologist Scott Findholdt checks a still warm, yearling rocky mountain elk calf (Cervus elaphus elaphus) where it was killed by a cougar. The cougar jumped on the animals back and then broke its neck. Wenaha cougar study area, Eastern Oregon.
    cougar_killed_elk_ElkKill7-3.jpg
  • Still warm, a yearling rocky mountain elk calf (Cervus elaphus elaphus) lays were it was killed by a cougar. The cougar jumped on the animals back and then broke its neck. Wenaha cougar study area, Eastern Oregon.
    cougar_killed_elk_ElkKill7-1.jpg
  • Still warm, a yearling rocky mountain elk calf (Cervus elaphus elaphus) lays were it was killed by a cougar. The cougar jumped on the animals back and then broke its neck. Wenaha cougar study area, Eastern Oregon.
    cougar_killed_elk_ElkKill7.jpg
  • Oregon Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) biologist Scott Findholdt checks a still warm, yearling rocky mountain elk calf (Cervus elaphus elaphus) where it was killed by a cougar. The cougar jumped on the animals back and then broke its neck. Wenaha cougar study area, Eastern Oregon.
    cougar_killed_elk_ElkKill7-5.jpg
  • A bachelor herd of young bull elk (Cervus canadensis nelsoni) on the Nature Conservancy's Zumwalt Prairie Preserve. Oregon.
    bachelor_elk_herd_32808SF_4V2.jpg
  • A wild, newborn rocky mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) calf less than 24 hours old. Newborn calves like this one will lay still and do their best to hide when a threat is perceived. Sled Springs Elk Study Area, Northeast Oregon.
    ElkCalf21.jpg
  • A wild, newborn rocky mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) calf less than 24 hours old. Newborn calves like this one will lay still and do their best to hide when a threat is perceived. Sled Springs Elk Study Area, Northeast Oregon.
    ElkCalf22.jpg
  • A wild ten day old rocky mountain elk calf (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) hiding in tall grass in the Sled Springs Elk Research Area
    hiding-ElkCalf18.jpg
  • A ten day old elk calf freshly released after being caught by ODFW biologists in the Sled Springs Elk Research Area. The calf is outfitted with a radio collar to allow biologists to track its movements and monitor its health as part of an elk predation study.
    radio_collar-ElkCalf20.jpg
  • A three day old elk calf stuck in a wire range fence in the Sled Springs Elk Study Area. The calf will die unless disentangled from the wire. (It was later set free by a ODFW biologist).
    trapped-ElkCalf10.jpg
  • A bull rocky mountain elk (Cervus canadensis nelsoni) in a forest thicket. Yellowstone National Park, Montana.
    Bull_elk_in_velvet_32808SF_ek1.jpg
  • Oregon Department Of Fish And Wildlife biologist Pat Matthews disentangles a panicked, three day old rocky mountain elk calf (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) from a cattle fence in the Sled Springs Elk Research Area, Oregon.
    trapped-ElkCalf12.jpg
  • Oregon Department Of Fish And Wildlife biologist Pat Matthews disentangles a panicked, three day old rocky mountain elk calf (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) from a cattle fence in the Sled Springs Elk Research Area, Oregon.
    trapped-ElkCalf13.jpg
  • A 2 day old rocky mountain elk calf (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) has blood drawn by biologist Scott Findholdt with the Oregon Department Of Fish And Wildlife. Sled Springs Study Area in NE Oregon
    wildlife_biologist-ElkCalfR4.jpg
  • A 2 day old rocky mountain elk calf is outfitted with a radio collar by biologist Scott Findholdt with the Oregon Department Of Fish And Wildlife. Sled Springs Study Area in NE Oregon
    wildlife_biologist-ElkCalfR1.jpg
  • Oregon Division Of Fish And Wildlife biologist Pat Matthews places a radio collar on a newborn elk calf in the Sled Springs Elk Study Area. The collar will allow biologists to track its movements and monitor its health.
    wildlife_biologist-ElkCalfS8.jpg
  • Oregon Division Of Fish And Wildlife biologist Pat Matthews collects data on a newborn elk calf in the Sled Springs Elk Study Area. The calf will be radio collared so that its movements and health may be studied.
    wildlife_biologist-ElkCalfS3.jpg
  • Oregon Division Of Fish And Wildlife biologist Pat Matthews collects data on a newborn elk calf in the Sled Springs Elk Study Area. The calf will be radio collared so that its movements and health may be studied.
    wildlife_biologist-ElkCalfS1.jpg
  • A panicked three day old elk calf stuck in a wire range fence in the Sled Springs Elk Study Area. The calf will die unless disentangled from the wire. (It was later set free by a ODFW biologist).
    trapped-ElkCalf11.jpg
  • Oregon Division Of Fish And Wildlife biologist Pat Matthews prepares to collect blood from a newborn elk calf in the Sled Springs Elk Study Area. The calf will be radio collared so that its movements and health may be studied.
    wildlife_biologist-ElkCalfS7.jpg
  • Oregon Division Of Fish And Wildlife biologist Pat Matthews collects data on a newborn elk calf in the Sled Springs Elk Study Area. The calf will be radio collared so that its movements and health may be studied.
    wildlife_biologist-ElkCalfS5.jpg
  • Oregon Division Of Fish And Wildlife biologist Pat Matthews collects data on a three day old elk calf in the Sled Springs Elk Study Area. The calf will be radio collared so that its movements and health may be studied. It is blind folded to help it feel less stress during the process.
    trapped-ElkCalf15.jpg
  • A small group of rocky mountain elk (Cervus elaphus elaphus) in NE Oregon.
    rocky_mountain_elk_RMelk1.jpg
  • Male and female rocky mountain elk (Cervus elaphus elaphus) in NE Oregon.
    rocky_mountain_elk_RMelk2.jpg
  • A herd of rocky mountain elk (Cervus canadensis nelsoni) on the Nature Conservancy's Zumwalt Prairie Preserve, Oregon. Elk generally find it safer in the open as mountain lions and wolves will ambush them in forest settings.
    elk_herd_32808SF_ekV5.jpg
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