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
(Page 3 of 3)
Working with colleagues in the United States, Canada, Finland, Norway and Sweden, Aubry confirmed that the key to wolverine territory was snow—more precisely, snow cover that lasted into May. Every single reproductive den in North America, as well as about 90 percent of all wolverine activity in general, was in sites with long-lasting snow cover.
Scientists working in the Rocky Mountains then found that snow cover even explained the genetic relationships among wolverine populations. Wolverines interbreed along routes that go through long-lasting snow.
“We have a better sense of what they need, where they like to live,” Aubry says now of the wolverines in the North Cascades. “But no one can say with any certainty how many we have here.”
He points to a string of tracks running along the side of the road. “That 1-2-1 pattern, that’s classic mustelid. And look how big they are.”
We gather around. These tracks are the only sign we’ll see of the wolverine, but for Aubry that’s how things usually go. “Most of our contact is like this,” he says. “Very indirect.”
Cathy Raley, a Forest Service biologist who collaborates with Aubry, carefully carves one footprint from the snow with a big yellow shovel and holds it out, like a cast. Aubry guesses the tracks are probably two or three days old, judging by their crumbling edges and the light dusting of snow on top of them. It’s worth knowing where the tracks go—maybe to find some hair or scat, something that could be analyzed to determine if they were made by a previously identified animal. So we follow them, looking after them as far as we can, as they wend across the soft relief of the hillside, until they disappear into the broken forest.
Eric Wagner has written for Smithsonian about cranes in Korea and sperm whales near Mexico.
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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