“…Past studies have linked the survival of large herbivores to weather patterns, vegetation, predation risk (Bender, Lomas, & Browning, ; DeCesare et al, ) and other factors known to directly affect or index nutritional condition (Bishop, White, Freddy, Watkins, & Stephenson, ; Monteith et al, , ). Furthermore, some studies have suggested migratory ungulates have lower rates of survival than their resident counterparts (Nicholson, Bowyer, & Kie, ; Schuyler, Dugger, & Jackson, ), and within the migratory segment, those that migrate further may encounter more anthropogenic risks (Sawyer, Middleton, Hayes, Kauffman, & Monteith, ). Expanding this growing body of work to understand how mortality risk might be influenced by various migratory parameters could further solidify the connection between migration and demography, and importantly, refine our ability to detect, and potentially mitigate, previously unknown risk factors that regulate large herbivores populations.…”