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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16 Moose Porcupine Raccoon Striped Skunk/ Spotted Skunk Snowshoe hare and smaller mammals (squirrels, rodents, American pika) Livestock (cow and sheep) Human (non-volunteer) includes: domestic dog with human, horse and rider, bicycle, and vehicles Of note: while not one of our priority species, the Virginia opossum is a non-native mammal which we have detected over the years at various locations, and we have included it where detected. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION During the 2017 monitoring season, volunteers collected data year-round with the majority of the cameras deployed from May through October. Over the course of the season, CWMP project volunteers established and maintained 30 survey areas with 72 sites. These survey areas were defined through communications with Conservation Northwest program staff and scientists, our Advisory Council and distributed throughout the Cascade Mountain Range, northeastern Washington, and into the southern regions of British Columbia. The following results cover all of the mammal species detected on our camera traps, including all events involving priority species for the project as outlined above. Only species falling within the three priority levels are included. Due to increasing interest in the interaction of wolves and livestock in Washington, any observed domestic livestock and human activity has also been included in this analysis. Though our program expands knowledge of wildlife presence in Washington, limitations to the breadth of our data do exist. Our data cannot ascertain species diversity—a measure of evenness of distribution of different species, population size—or species absence. Rather, our data focuses on species richness, the number of different species counted within an ecosystem or area, which has invaluable applications to the conservation and management of rare and sensitive species in Washington. In addition to assessing species richness, we assess the number of observed events of identified priority-level species per study area. For the purposes of this project, an event is defined as any visit of a single animal (or group of animals belonging to the same species) to a camera installation with no gap greater than five minutes between images. Results for this year are organized by target species, as in 2015 and 2016. The number of discrete remote camera installations at each survey area and the total number of trap nights, or 24-hour monitoring periods, is presented below as an index of relative survey effort in each area, this year we have added an overview of our program effort and percent of the total for the entire project (Table 1, Figure 2).

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