Cenizo Journal Winter 2015 | Page 12

Pronghorns return to Big Bend Story and photograph by Carolyn Miller O ur area of West Texas is home to one of the most beautiful animals in the world. Most of us call them antelope, but technically they are pronghorn. Although the antelope looks much like our prong- 12 Cenizo horn, they are not found in North America and most are native to Africa and Asia. The pronghorn reside in the US, Canada and Mexico, preferring grasslands in altitudes of 3,000 to 5,900 feet. First Quarter 2015 The pronghorn have called West Texas or the Trans-Pecos high desert grasslands home for many years and numbered over 17,000 in the early 1980s. By 2008 they numbered around 10,000 and between 2008 and 2012 they were down to around 2,750. After seeing a decline over the past thirty years, they are making a slow but steady comeback due to very concen- trated efforts by various agencies and local ranchers.