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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91 Scent lures should be applied in a way that fits with the type of behavior the lure is designed to elicit. For a scent lure designed to trigger a scent marking response apply the lure to an object that would typically be marked by wolves or other animals. This might be a branch or log along the side of a travel route, or a prominent rock along the route. For lures designed to trigger a foraging/feeding response, creating a small dig along the edge of the route and applying the lure to the inside of the dig can mimic the caching behavior wolves are familiar with or the work of a small rodent. Scent lures along trail sets are not designed to draw in wolves from a long distance but reroute or stop them once they are in the general vicinity. As such, applying the lure high in a tree, or applying a lot of lure may not increase their effectiveness and may trigger wariness of trap shy wolves. On roads and trails where there is human traffic, another consideration for the camera set will be avoiding detection and theft by people. Besides a security box and cable lock, setting the camera in a location that is obscured from the typical field of view for walking or driving humans can help with this, such as setting it on a tree with branches hanging over it and the camera aimed towards the ground in front of the camera where an attractant has been applied (Gabe Spence, pers. com.). This sort of set can help reduce the number of hits from human traffic along the main part of the road by taking this out of the field of the camera's sensor. Figure 8. Remote camera trap set along a game trail incorporating a scent lure. Note the camera is looking down the trail rather than just across it. This should increase the amount of time an animal ends up in the view of the camera. Illustration by Jenn Wolfe.

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