Conservation Northwest

2017 Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project Report_FINAL_WithoutAppendices

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

Issue link: http://conservationnw.uberflip.com/i/948963

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 26 of 28

27 State University, and Selkirk College researchers monitoring Canada lynx in northeast Washington and southeastern British Columbia. 6. Ensure early coordination with other monitoring efforts throughout our coverage area, including professional and citizen-based research. 7. Evaluate our new data management system to facilitate data exchange between volunteers and project staff. Look for new methods of data collection that may ease data management for volunteers and project staff. 8. Provide expanded opportunities for connections between volunteers, other ongoing wildlife field research in our state, and field skill trainings. 9. Maintain clear communication with all team leaders in order to ensure that data is collected and submitted in an accurate and efficient manner. Ensure that all protocol materials are easily accessible and well-understood at the beginning of the season, particularly during the spring training. 10. Refine the training system for volunteers and develop new incentives for teams to submit data in a timely manner. 11. Continue inputting current and past year's data from the project into the new online relational database. Provide a simplified process for reporting project results and more detailed and refined analysis of project findings, and facilitate sharing with project partners. 12. Improve genetic sample collection techniques by recognizing key areas for potential sample collection and having a backup team that can visit specific sites if needed. 13. Advise volunteers to visit the site more frequently and retrieve the samples as soon as they can to ensure a high quality sample is collected to improve efficacy of analysis. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We appreciate supportive grants from WDFW ALEA Cooperative Grants Program, Norcliffe Foundation, Deacon Charitable Foundation, Lucky Seven Foundation, and an anonymous foundation that supported CWMP in 2017. This project would not be possible without your generous support. We are also very grateful for the following individuals who adopted teams for the 2017 season: Barbara Hawkins and Jeff Daffron. We appreciate your support! We would like to thank the individual advisory council members, specific survey area advisers, and project collaborators for the talent, time, and guidance they provided: (Cascades Carnivore Project) Jocelyn Akins; (Colville National Forest) Chris Loggers; (BC Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resources) Aaron Reid; (Gifford Pinchot National Forest) Carol Chandler, John Jakubowski; (Mt. Baker Snoqualmie National Forest) Sonny Paz, Jesse Plumage; (North Cascades National Park) Roger Christophersen, Regina M. Rochefort, Ph.D.; (Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest) Monte Kuk, Patty Garvey-Darda, Joan St. Hilaire, Matt Marsh, Jesse McCarty, Jo Ellen Richards, John Rohrer, Aja Woodrow, Don Youkey; (PNW Research Station, USDA Forest Service) Keith Aubrey, Cathy Raley; (US Fish and Wildlife Service) Gregg Kurz; (WA Conservation Science Institute) Bill Gaines; (WA Dept. of Fish and Wildlife) Dana Base, Scott Becker, Ben Maletzke, William Moore, Annemarie Prince, Trent

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Conservation Northwest - 2017 Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project Report_FINAL_WithoutAppendices