March 05, 2013

Tracked at the molecular level: Wolverines return to the North Cascades


Logan was live-captured for the first time on January 24, 2013
near Easy Pass. (Photo by U.S. Forest Service).
Wolverines are one of the rarest and most elusive mammals in North America. After being hunted to extinction in Washington state in the 1930s, they’re finally starting to return to the northern Cascade Range.

Keith Aubry, research wildlife biologist with the U.S. Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station, has led a study to track wolverines found in Washington since 2006. Each winter, he and his team carefully live-capture wolverines, like “Logan,” the young male in the photograph to the right, to document their appearance, sex, age, and condition.

Many are fitted with a radio collar so the team can track their movement and learn more about their range. In addition, the researchers collect a small tissue sample from the ear to get a permanent molecular snapshot of the wolverine before releasing it back into the wild.
Sharon Birks, genetic resources collection
manager at the Burke, opens one of the five
large freezers that hold tissue samples.

After doing some initial research, Aubry’s team sends the wolverine tissue samples to the Burke Museum where they are added to our genetic resources collection, one of the largest of its type in the world. With tissue samples from more than 50,000 birds, 8,000 mammals, and 1,000 reptiles and amphibians, the collection is essentially a library of biodiversity – and a resource for researchers everywhere.

Tissue samples contain valuable genetic information that can help researchers in many ways. For example, researchers might use this information to verify the identity of the animal, look at genetic diversity and trends across wolverine populations in Washington versus other populations, or even to do basic research on their genes to understand how they occupy a particular ecological niche.

The Burke's mammalogy collection has wolverine bone and skin specimens from past years, but Jeff Bradley, mammalogy collections manager, is particularly excited that these tissue samples come from wolverines still living in the wild – with some tissues coming from the same wolverine at different stages in its life.

This information, along with any bone or skin specimens the Burke might receive in the future, is a valuable resource for future researchers. “As technology improves, we are able to use our specimens to ask new questions," said Bradley. "In one-hundred years, researchers will be using our collections to answer questions we we can't even dream of today."


More information about wolverines in Washington:

Posted by Cathy Britt, Digital Communications
Special thanks to Keith Aubry for contributing information and photos to this post.

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