Bighorn sheep populations declined significantly between the mid-1800s and the mid-1900s and have never fully recovered. Habitat disturbance and loss from human activities, effects of a changing climate, and predation all impact wild sheep. However, the most significant threat to bighorn sheep herds is respiratory disease (pneumonia) caused by bacteria transmitted from domestic sheep or goats or other infected wild sheep. Despite intensive efforts, including moving animals to re-establish populations, bighorn sheep populations are a fraction of their historic numbers and currently occupy only a small proportion of their original range.
Thinhorn sheep distributions remain mostly intact and are not reported to have pneumonia outbreaks, however, some populations have declined dramatically in recent decades, primarily from severe weather events and climate effects on their habitats. Disease remains a huge concern with thinhorns, but their more remote locations have protected them to date.