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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In the Cascade Mountains, our sites are broken into 4 categories: • • • • North Cascades – North of US 2 and west of US 97 Central Cascades – Between I-90 and US 2 I-90 corridor – Hyak to Easton Southern Cascades – South of I-90 We only have one category to discuss our sites in northeast Washington, which is defined as the area north of US 2 and east of US 97. Wolf Monitoring Wolf recovery and management has been a major focus for Conservation Northwest's broader wildlife recovery and connectivity goals since 2008, when our volunteer led remote camera teams in the Methow Valley documented the first pack in Washington in over 70 years. Washington has eight confirmed packs of wolves: two in the Cascades and six in northeastern Washington. Four additional packs are suspected by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW), but were unconfirmed as of October 2012. Conservation Northwest works with WDFW and other partner organizations to implement the state's wolf conservation and management plan that was adopted in December 20114. Understanding the presence and range of our state's wolf population helps to inform management actions including measures to reduce conflicts between this recovering species and other land uses (i.e. ranching, recreation, vegetation management). Our project goals for monitoring wolves this season were both to: 1) Monitor this species presence in known locations where agencies seek greater information on the visual characteristics, pack size, and range; and 2) Monitor high quality habitat where wolves have been documented to capture evidence of dispersing wolves into new and previously undocumented areas of Washington. Fourteen of our twenty-four total remote camera sites were dedicated to wolf monitoring and their distribution reflected the three recovery zones delineated by the state: Eastern Washington, North Cascades, and the Southern Cascades. The Southern Cascades recovery zone includes the Olympic Peninsula and southern Washington coast, which were two areas we did not include in this year's monitoring efforts as there is no indication of current wolf presence or likelihood of wolf presence in the near future due to the lack of a nearby source population and other significant barriers such as road infrastructure and high concentrations of human development in the southern Puget region. 4 Washington Wolf Conservation and Management Plan, http://wdfw.wa.gov/publications/00001/ 7

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