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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119467 Table 8. I-90 Corridor 2012 Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project remote camera location descriptions. In 2012, general monitoring along the I-90 corridor east of Hyak was implemented using six cameras in five sites. Site B was located in forested habitat just north of the Gold Creek underpasses. Sites C and D were located on the south side of Lake Keechelus and the Gold Creek underpasses in forested habitat on national forest land. Sites E and F were located just north of the Rocky Run underpass, with site E directly adjacent to the underpass and site F located in higher quality habitat further from the roadway. These underpasses were being constructed throughout the season, and even in sites that utilized scent attractant it was used very sparingly. Of the five sites, only sites C, D, and E had photographic evidence of wildlife. Site B was installed, but no data is available beyond that as the camera equipment experienced a series of malfunctions throughout the season. Volunteers documented scat at the time of install for site F near Laura Lake, but the camera was stolen before any photographs were recovered. Of the three sites that had photographic evidence (C, D, and E), only level 3 species were recorded. Site D had the highest number of species recorded, while site E ranked second although no scent attractant was used due to the close proximity to the interstate. The species recorded at the I-90 sites included elk, bobcat, coyote, black tailed deer, otter and raccoon. Heavy construction was underway along this stretch of the I-90 corridor during the season which was likely a deterrent for wildlife. Even with this disturbance and a restricted use of attractant, our cameras detected wildlife in habitat directly adjacent to these crossing structures under development. This is critically important as we move out of a pre-construction monitoring mode into effectiveness monitoring for these crossing structures. I-90 Site B C D E Black Bear Bobcat Coyote Elk x x x x Black Tail Deer x x x Misc. Otter raccoon F Table 9. I-90 Corridor sites with recorded Level 3 species 20

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