Conservation Northwest

Summer 2016 Conservation Northwest Quarterly Newsletter

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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Conservation Northwest began monitoring for grizzly bears in the North Cascades decades ago, placing film cameras out in grizzly habitat and hooking them up to sensors. is effort was less standardized than our current Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project, but the ultimate goal was the same: to document grizzlies in the North Cascades, and in so doing, to add momentum to plans for grizzly bear restoration. e Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project (CWMP) has been sending volunteers into the North Cascades of both Washington and British Columbia in search of wildlife, for almost two decades, and for grizzly bears specifically, since 2008. By 2008, the remote cameras being deployed were digi- tal, easier to use, and more efficient, much to the joy of every- one involved in the project. Protocol for grizzly bear moni- toring has varied slightly from year to year, and beginning in 2014, our CWMP began to work in coordination with the Cascades Carnivore Connectivity Project (CCCP). Working closely with biologists who lead the CCCP, our CWMP now follows strict protocol when determining where and how to set up grizzly monitoring sites. Teams of volun- teers are assigned to survey hexagons specified in the CCCP protocol, many located in some of the most beautiful and remote parts of Washington. Installing and checking griz- zly monitoring sites requires an overnight backpacking trip, bushwhacking, strenuous hiking, excellent navigational skills, and very stinky scent attractant ("grizzly goo," a mixture of fer- mented cow blood and dead fish). Teams scout extensively to find the perfect location for their monitoring site, construct a pile of woody debris, pour the scent attractant over it, and set a camera aimed to capture photos of curious bears as they come to investigate. In 2016, we are sending two teams of volunteers into some of the most isolated terrain in the North Cascades. Snow has prevented our teams from installing their cameras before July. Each team will set up a camera monitoring site, check the im- ages on the camera aer a month, uninstall that site, and then install a new site in a second, designated hexagon. We are thrilled to begin yet another season monitoring for grizzly bears in the North Cascades. And we're hopeful that someday soon our volunteers will document one of the last "ghost bears" of this wild place! Grizzly bear search citizen wilDlife monitoring ProJect Top: One of our wildlife monitoring volunteers hangs a remote camera. Bottom: A young black bear photographed at a North Cascades grizzly bear camera site. Photos: CWMP aleah Jaeger Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project Coordinator, aleah@conservationnw.org Monitoring for grizzly bears Keeping the Northwest wild Summer 2016 9

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