Conservation Northwest

2017 Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project Report_FINAL_WithAppendices

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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74 Purpose A variety of means have been developed to detect lynx and other carnivores. The purpose of this protocol is to add reliability, efficacy, and representativeness to the process of lynx detection. Each element of the protocol has been designed to achieve this end. Representativeness. While it can be argued that selective sampling (where one goes to the "best" places and samples) may provide detections at lower cost, the data generated using these methods is much less valuable. Non-representative surveys at best can provide simple occurrence data. Other more meaningful metrics: where lynx are present and absent, the habitat relationships of lynx, minimum viable population estimates, and current range all require representative sampling. Hair-pad methods were chosen because they allow sampling during the snow-free period, are durable, inexpensive, and lightweight. A lightweight, inexpensive sampling scheme which could be implemented in the summer was a necessity for representative sampling. Areas that are dangerous or away from roads will not be representatively sampled in the winter, and very expensive or high-maintenance detection stations can only be placed at a few locations. Representative sampling requires unbiased and uniform placement rules for the sample points. To this end, the protocol is grid-based and uses simple placement rules which can be applied to most landscapes. Efficacy. Even if sampling is representative, if detection rates are too low, the method will fail the test of efficacy. To address this, we tested 5 commercial scent lures on wild lynx in Canada to determine which lure produced the highest detection rate. While all lures were "hit" by lynx, one lure, a combination of beaver castorium and catnip oil was twice as effective as the others. Additionally, we made use of transects to sample lynx in Canada. Over a 2-4 week period, we had hits on nearly half (35/78 = 45%) of these 5-station line transects. Based on these results, we use line transects and the most effective lure.

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