Conservation Northwest

2018MonitoringReport_Final_WithAppendices

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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40 2018). Observations made at Mt. Baker, Sourdough Gap, and Cascade River road add valuable clues regarding the western and southern extents of wolverine distribution in the Cascades. Discussion At a time when resources for winter wolverine monitoring in the North Cascades are limited, we successfully deployed seven stations in two major watersheds of the eastern North Cascades Ecoregion, and detected wolverines in three locations. Our detection at the Hairpin of Stella, a female wolverine, on February 28, 2018 is relevant to questions regarding long-term wolverine recovery and fine scale habitat use by female wolverines amidst recreational activity. The Hairpin is regularly used for backcountry skiing, snowmobiling, and heli-skiing with a trend towards increasing recreational traffic in the coming years. Keeping track of female wolverines and identifying denning habitat—the limiting factor to wolverine recovery—in the North Cascades will help land managers determine how to regulate the recreational use of public lands. Engaging the broader winter recreational community in an inclusive and educational way is essential to mitigating the potentially negative impacts to wolverine recovery, and can possibly aid biologists by extending citizen science into the winter season. With photographs, talks, social media, web resources, and volunteer coordination, we reached upwards of a few thousand people, many of which were likely outside of the typical conservation-minded demographic. Next winter, we plan to boost monitoring in the North Cascades as needed, in coordination with the Multi-State Wolverine Study, North Cascades Wolverine Project, Cascades Carnivore Project, and the CNW Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Program. We will continue to develop tools to better enable winter recreationists identify and report rare species observations. Literature Cited AUBRY, K. B., K. S. MCKELVEY, AND J. P. COPELAND. 2007. Distribution and broadscale habitat relations of the wolverine in the contiguous United States. Journal of Wildlife Management. AUBRY, K. B., ET AL. 2016. Wolverine distribution and ecology in the north cascades ecosystem. Final progress report. COPELAND, J. P., ET AL. 2010. The bioclimatic envelope of the wolverine (Gulo gulo): do climatic constraints limit its geo- graphic distribution? Canadian Journal of Zoology.

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