Conservation Northwest

2012-2013-fall-spring-citizen-wildlife-monitoring-report

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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Additionally, she found in her analysis that these individuals were new to researchers. Hair samples that allowed genetic testing for identification were only collected for one individual. According to Cathy, "We believe the genetic sample goes with the wolverine identified as CHWK-01 in the attached file. This is the individual that was detected most frequently in April and May. Regardless of the genetic results, the photos alone were enough for us to conclude that this was a new wolverine….Comparing the markings we could see to those of our known study animals, and the fact that this animal did not have a collar, we were able to positively determine that this wolverine was not one that we have previously captured or detected at a run-pole camera station. So all 3 wolverines detected at Chiwaukum are in addition to individuals we have positively identified thus far." Figure 7: Comparison of markings for identification of three individual wolverines documented during 2012 in our project. Credit: Cathy Raley, PNW Research Station The confirmation in December 2012 that our camera sites documented three previously unknown individual wolverines is yet another example of the efficacy of citizen monitoring efforts that supplement professional wildlife research. Installation of hair snares into our protocol for all wolverine stations will allow for the collection of hair samples which can provide a host of genetic information about individual wolverines lineage, source population, and shared genetics with other wolverine 17

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