The Way of the Wolverine
After all but disappearing, the mammals are again being sighted in Washington's Cascade Range
- By Eric Wagner
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2012, Subscribe
Seven biologists and I crunch through the snow in the Cascade Range about 100 miles northeast of Seattle. Puffs of steam shoot from our noses and mouths as we look for a trap just off the snow-buried highway. The trap is a three-foot-tall, six-foot-long box-like structure made of tree trunks and branches. Its lid is rigged to slam shut if an animal tugs on the bait inside. When we find it, the lid is open and the trap unoccupied, but on the ground are four large paw prints. We cluster around them.
“Putative, possible or probable?” someone asks.
Keith Aubry glances at the tracks. “Putative,” he says. “At best.” He says they’re probably from a dog.
We were hoping they had been made by a wolverine, one of the most elusive and least understood mammals in North America. Up to four feet long and 40 pounds, wolverines are the largest terrestrial members of the mustelid, or weasel, family. Wolverines thrive in the cold, and can sniff out carcasses through six feet of snow. They raise their kits in caves dug into snow, with chambers and tunnels leading dozens of feet away from the den. Their feet are outsize, like snowshoes, and they can walk 50 miles or more per day across steep, snowy terrain. And they can be awfully hard to find.
We shuffle back to the trail and head deeper into the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest. There is a slight air of letdown among the field crew, but Aubry is hopeful. He nods to the high dusted peaks, the scatter of trees. “This is wolverine country,” he says.
Aubry, a biologist with the U.S. Forest Service, couldn’t have made that claim just 20 years ago. Trapped for their fur, poisoned by bait meant for wolves or regarded as pests and shot on sight, wolverines all but disappeared from these mountains in the mid-1900s. Several were caught or seen in the eastern part of Washington over the decades, but biologists believed those animals were strays that had crossed over from Montana or southern Canada, where they are far more numerous. (Wolverines also live in the boreal forests and tundra of Europe and Asia.)
Then came a blurry photograph of a wolverine in north-central Washington in 1996, and a report of a young female hit by a car in 1997. In 1998, Scott Fitkin, of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, and John Rohrer, of the Forest Service—both are in today’s wolverine scouting party—set up camera traps not far from where we are now and photographed several wolverines, suggesting the furtive creatures had returned.
Wolverines have always been mysterious and, to many people, menacing. Such was its gluttony, a Swedish naturalist wrote in 1562, that after coolly dispatching a moose, the wolverine would squeeze itself between closely growing trees to empty its stomach and make room for more food. The popular 19th-century book Riverside Natural History called it an “inveterate thief” that ransacked cabins and stole bait from trap lines set for fur animals. Even as recently as 1979, the wolverine was, to a Colorado newspaper, “something out of a nightmarish fairy tale.”
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Related topics: Carnivores Conservation Zoology Washington
Additional Sources
“On the Track of the Elusive Wolverine” by Noreen Parks, Science Findings 114, U.S. Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Station (P. O. Box 3890, Portland, Oregon 97208), 2009
“Distribution and broadscale habitat relations of the wolverine in the contiguous United States,” by K. B. Aubry, K.S. McKelvey, J.P. Copeland, Journal of Wildlife Management, 71:2147-2158, 2007.









Comments (2)
I love this magazine so much! I used it to help me with facts & pics for my research report. my family has a subscription,& we get so exited when we see it in the mailbox. We're from Washington State, so when we saw the Mt. St. Helens article in the January issue, we were so exited! My dad & I haven't been to Mt. St. Helens, so my mom wants to take us this summer.
Posted by Bailey Hannon on March 1,2012 | 05:48 PM
Interesting observations confirming observations made by scientists in Glacier Nat. Park and written about by Doug Chadwick a couple years ago.
Posted by Robert Scriba on January 6,2012 | 12:01 PM