Free: Contests & Raffles.
Thought I would fill you in on reporting fishers and what I learned about the future of delisting them.I spoke to Jeff Lewis at WDFW. He is the Mesocarnivore Conservation Bioligist. Who even knew there was such a thing. Anyway he was very excited to hear from me and more so when I sent him pictures.Jeff and someone from Olympic National Park, ( sorry I forgot her name) are the people to talk to if you catch a fisher. You can reach Jeff at Jeffrey.Lewis@dfw.wa.gov or call (360)902-2374. He wants to know when you caught or saw the fisher, where (As close a location as you can) your best judgement on the health of the fisher, a picture and some hair or scat from the trap if possible for genetic testing.I added all this to the fisher reporting thread stickied at the top of the page.Talked to him a bit about what it would take for them to be delisted. What a bummer! by WDFWs standards there will practically have to be one in every back yard. He said if they become abundant on the Olympic Penninsula then they would try and reintroduce them to the South Cascades. When they became abundant there then they could be downgraded to Sensitive. But to actually get a season on them they are pretty much going to have to be in every corner of the state. At least all of W WA and the Cascades, probably NE WA too.Anyway he's a nice guy who used to trap when he lived in New York. He wants to work with us so if you see or catch a fisher don't be afraid to give him a call.
Was the parky's name Patti?
I've only seen one real well and a glimpse of another. I thought they were pretty rare. I've seen more Lynx than I have Fisher.
Quote from: boneaddict on December 20, 2013, 05:12:26 AMI've only seen one real well and a glimpse of another. I thought they were pretty rare. I've seen more Lynx than I have Fisher.You have a good chance of finding them on the peninsula. The park and state did a big reintroduction program with (I think) around a 200 fishers from BC over a few years. They had decent success breeding and spreading. A lot of them left the park and hangout in the lower river valleys. They seem to like to go to the fish hatcheries, I think they kill the otters that like to hang around not the fish.
Apparently fisher don't need pristine wilderness to thrive.
Quote Apparently fisher don't need pristine wilderness to thrive.Ask anyone in the San Juans where Otters live. -Steve