1 / 41

Counting Wolves & Other Carnivores (with a little help from our friends)

Counting Wolves & Other Carnivores (with a little help from our friends). Jane E. Wiedenhoeft Sarah Boles Adrian P. Wydeven. Welcome to Wisconsin Volunteer Carnivore Tracking Program. Who made this trail?. Who Can Become a Volunteer Tracker?. What’s Expected of Volunteer Trackers?.

rigg
Télécharger la présentation

Counting Wolves & Other Carnivores (with a little help from our friends)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Counting Wolves & Other Carnivores (with a little help from our friends) Jane E. Wiedenhoeft Sarah Boles Adrian P. Wydeven

  2. Welcome to Wisconsin Volunteer Carnivore Tracking Program

  3. Who made this trail?

  4. Who Can Become a Volunteer Tracker?

  5. What’s Expected of Volunteer Trackers? • 1. Attend training - Wolf Ecology Workshop Track Training Course

  6. Wolf Ecology Workshops

  7. Track Training Courses Wisconsin CanidsF4 h4 C Gray Wolf Coyote Dog Red Fox Gray Fox

  8. Track Test

  9. What is Expected of Volunteer Trackers? 1. Attend training • 2. Conduct 3 good track surveys following DNR guidelines

  10. What is Expected of Volunteer Trackers? 1. Attend training 2. Conduct 3 track surveys • 3. Notify coordinator of 1st wolf, or any other rare species tracks you encounter

  11. JaneWiedenhoeft Park Falls DNR 715 762-3204 4” 3.5” VT 2 wolves - tx Yes - attached 16 37N 1E Tx of 2 wolves crossed Price the road traveling along the creek. Scat on road. Cross Cut Rd. 1 mi. east of Phillips Went into tag alders along creek 11-7-03, ~8:00 a.m.

  12. What is Expected of Volunteer Trackers? 1. Attend training 2. Conduct 3 track surveys 3. Notify coordinator of 1st wolf, or any other rare species tracks you encounter • 4. Turn in results of your surveys on time

  13. Goals • 1. To determine wolf numbers, distribution, breeding status, & identify wolf packs.

  14. No. of wolves No. of packs

  15. Goals 1. To determine wolf numbers, distribution, breeding status, & identify wolf packs. • 2. To develop an index of the abundance and distribution of other carnivore species.

  16. Goals 1. To determine wolf numbers, distribution, breeding status, & identify wolf packs. 2. To develop an index of the abundance and distribution of other carnivore species. • 3. To determine the existence of rare carnivores such as lynx & puma.

  17. Why Volunteers? • More wolves in more places • Limited # of DNR trackers • No extra $

  18. Recruiting • Initially from wolf ecology workshops • Personal contacts • News articles • Radio • Pamphlet • Website

  19. How Many Volunteers? From 1995-2003 > 450 volunteers > 5,000 hours > 40,000 km

  20. Winter Track Surveys in Wisconsin by WDNR and Volunteers

  21. Survey Blocks Tracked by DNR & Volunteers 2003-2004

  22. Can we use the Data Volunteers Collect? The Big Question -

  23. Tracks Detected/100 miles (1995-2000)Co-surveyed blocks Training is Important Untrained volunteers 54% of WDNR rate Trained volunteers 70% of WDNR rate but isn't enough

  24. Wolf Detection Rates Volunteer vs. DNR Trackers in Co-Surveyed Blocks

  25. Wolf Detection RatesDNR vs. Volunteer TrackersWith Varying Experience

  26. Formula for Volunteer Success Training + Experience = Useable Data

  27. HOW DO WE USE VOLUNTEER DATA? • To provide information for survey blocks DNR trackers don’t survey • To alert DNR to wolf activity in new areas • To help estimate the state’s wolf population, distribution, and breeding status when volunteers have adequate training & experience

  28. Program Evolution • More survey blocks • More training • Proving the data is useable • Communication • Regional coordinators

  29. Where do we go from Here? • More volunteer administration • Recognitions • Certification of trackers? • Changes in wolf monitoring • Population estimate vs. counts

More Related