Conservation Northwest

2018MonitoringReport_Final_NOAppendices

Conservation Northwest protects and connects old-growth forests and other wild areas from the Washington Coast to the British Columbia Rockies, vital to a healthy future for us, our children, and wildlife. Since 1989, Conservation Northwest has worke

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6 The CWMP has enhanced its positive impact through an Advisory Council (listed in Acknowledgements) made up of project partners, government agency biologists and professional researchers. Our Advisory Council provides valuable input to the review of our program and steers our yearly monitoring objectives and site locations. Council members assist in developing our protocols, confirm identification of priority images from the season, and provide a scientific audience for the results of our work. These collaborations between project partners and advisers are crucial to the success of the program year to year. Collaboration keeps our efforts scientifically informed and relevant, ensures coordination rather than duplication of monitoring efforts statewide, and adds valuable, on-the-ground information to the conservation community. In 2018, we concentrated our study area in two distinct landscapes – the Cascade Mountains in Washington and the transboundary Kettle River Mountain Range of northeast Washington and southern British Columbia, including the Rossland Range in B.C. Within the Cascade Mountains, we have divided the study area into three regions: 1. Washington's North Cascades: North of Interstate-90 (North Cascades) 2. I-90 Corridor: Between Snoqualmie Pass and Easton along I-90 3. Washington's South Cascades: South of I-90 (South Cascades) At the start of each year, monitoring objectives are established by project staff with feedback and guidance from the Advisory Council. In 2018, our monitoring objectives were to: 1. Monitor the recovery of gray wolves (Canis lupus) in the Cascade Mountains, with a particular focus south of Interstate 90 in the Southern Recovery Zone identified by Washington's Wolf Conservation and Management Plan. Our sites were determined based on areas identified as high-quality habitat where wolves are expected to expand their existing range. 2. Document the presence of wolverines (Gulo gulo) in the North and South Cascades. In addition to visual documentation through remote cameras, these sites are set up to collect valuable genetic information for wildlife agencies, primarily through "hair snags". 3. Document grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) and other rare carnivores in the federally-designated North Cascades Grizzly Bear Recovery Zone, approximately from Interstate 90 north to the U.S.-Canada border. 4. Observe the behavior and presence of all wildlife species in key habitat connectivity areas along Interstate 90 between Snoqualmie Pass and Easton, where wildlife crossing structures are completed, under construction or planned for construction as part of the I-90 Snoqualmie Pass East Project. 2 5. Detect transboundary wildlife activity between northeast Washington and British Columbia with a specific 2 The I-90 Snoqualmie Pass East Project is designed to improve wildlife movement across I-90 between Hyak and Easton. The I-90 project design includes 14 key animal-travel areas, where one or more improvements will be made to allow for wildlife to better move across the interstate and waterways under the interstate. Maps of the identified areas for wildlife passage can be found at: wsdot.wa.gov/NR/rdonlyres/F6513B4C-12AE-43D3-ABA1- 95104CAAD29D/72075/I90_Project_Folio_ConstWeb.pdf

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