The wily wolverine: Iconic species making comeback in state

A Snohomish man recently captured video of two wolverines near Glacier Peak.

By Kari Bray

The Everett Herald

GLACIER PEAK — Josh Adams had his binoculars and a point-and-shoot camera with a 35x zoom.

He’d hiked up to White Chuck Glacier looking for birds.

Instead, he captured video of a rare and iconic animal that has been making its comeback in the Washington wilderness.

The 15-second clip shows two wolverines bounding away from him across the rocky terrain near a snowfield on Aug. 28.

Adams, 37, of Snohomish, was trekking back from his campsite on a two-day backpacking trip when the wolverines “jumped out, almost right in front of me,” he said.

“My initial reaction was, ‘Wow, those are big marmots.’ Fortunately, I always have binoculars on me, so I held them up and realized what they were.”

He was on the south side of Glacier Peak when he saw the wolverines, he said. He made the trip hoping to spot some wildlife that live in those remote reaches. Birding is a hobby, and he’s set a goal to see as many species as possible this year in Snohomish County.

The wolverines were a surprise.

“It’s kind of a joke that people who are into birds aren’t going to get excited about other animals,” he said. “But my birder friends have said they’d happily trade a couple of the rare birds they’ve seen to see a wolverine.”

The notoriously tough and tenacious mammals once roamed mountains in North America and thrived in the Cascade Range. But hunting, trapping and efforts to control predator numbers decimated the population last century. Scientists believe the family line of wolverines that once lived in Washington was wiped out.

“The historical population was extirpated, totally gone,” said John Rohrer, a wildlife biologist with the U.S. Forest Service Methow Valley Ranger District.

In recent years, wolverines regained a foothold in the North Cascades. There’s been documentation of the species farther south, as well. Researchers concluded animals from Canada have migrated south.

Wolverines have large home ranges, often 500 square miles or larger, and travel widely to find food or mates. There was a chance that wolverine sightings in Washington were visitors that roamed down from Canada.

A male wolverine named “Beatie” at a wildlife camera station in the North Cascades. (U.S. Forest Service/Washington State Department of Transportation)

A male wolverine named “Beatie” at a wildlife camera station in the North Cascades. (U.S. Forest Service/Washington State Department of Transportation)

A 10-year study found that the state does have resident wolverines.

From 2006 through 2015, researchers studied the animals for a project based out of Winthrop. Rohrer was the field coordinator. The final report was released in February 2016.

During that study, scientists recorded reproductive dens and what appeared to be parental pairs. Wolverines were trapped and collared so their movements could be tracked. Crews set up stations to capture images of the animals and genetic samples, such as fur.

Biologists compared the DNA samples from modern Washington wolverines with historical specimens from the late 1800s and early 1900s. They determined that wolverines were previously gone from this region. They have not found any evidence that the family line from a century ago lives on today.

Wolverines’ historic habitat included areas across the northern United States and as far south as New Mexico and Southern California. Now, small populations also have been documented in Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Wyoming. Experts estimate that no more than 300 wolverines remain in the continental U.S. In Washington, there could be 30 to 35, Rohrer said.

There’s a proposal to list the wolverine as a threatened species. It has not yet been designated as threatened or endangered. Conservation and wildlife groups previously took the issue to court.

“There’s been a longstanding debate about whether they should be listed as an endangered species across their range,” said Chase Gunnell, communications director for Conservation Northwest. “We feel strongly that they deserve an endangered designation.”

Gunnell has helped with volunteer monitoring of wolverines. Knowing where the animals are, and how many there may be, helps with planning for forestry and recreation projects, he said. It also informs wildlife protection efforts, such as new crossings under and over Interstate 90 so animals can safely navigate from one side of the highway to the other. In July, a wolverine was struck and killed on I-90 between North Bend and Snoqualmie Pass.

The wolverine population faces direct and indirect threats as the animals slowly recolonize former habitats, said Aja Woodrow, a wildlife biologist with the U.S. Forest Service in the Cle Elum Ranger District. The animal that died on I-90 is an example of the direct threat of human activity, he said.

Climate change is an indirect, but serious, danger for the species.

Wolverines are making their comeback in the North Cascades of Washington. (Zach Winters / U.S. Forest Service)

Wolverines are making their comeback in the North Cascades of Washington. (Zach Winters / U.S. Forest Service)

The No. 1 factor in predicting where wolverines will live is whether there is snow on the ground in late April or early May.

Wolverines give birth in the middle of winter, in high country where the snow is deep, Rohrer said. Mother wolverines will burrow 10 to 15 feet into the snow. They build shelter around something solid — usually a large rock, overturned tree or root wad. Often, it’s avalanche debris. There, they are hidden from other predators and insulated by the snow for warmth.

Climate change threatens to decrease snowpack and reduce habitat, according to the wildlife biologists and Conservation Northwest.

“We’re lucky that the North Cascades is an area with some of the best snowpack in the Northwest and it remains into the summer,” Gunnell said.

However, there are many unknowns for the future. Decades from now, will there be enough snowy habitat for wolverines to reproduce and shelter their kits?

“We tend to think of wildlife as trying to survive the winter and get to the good times of summer, and that’s true for a lot of wildlife. They’ll hibernate or migrate,” Rohrer said. “For wolverines, it’s the opposite. They thrive in cold, snowy conditions. It’s what they’re built for. It’s almost like they have to get through the summer time so they can get back to winter when they do best.”

They prefer remote and rough terrain. They need space. Wolverines, the largest member of the weasel family to live on land, will defend their territory, including from one another, Woodrow said.

The “legend and lore,” he said, is that a 30-pound wolverine will stand its ground to protect its dinner from a grizzly bear.

“I think people really admire and respect the little guy who can and will defend itself against a much larger competitor,” Woodrow said.

He admires their determination.

“They just don’t give up. If they encounter an obstacle, they’ll often times go right over it,” he said. “There’s GPS data from the Rockies of them going up routes that human alpinists could not repeat. They’ve tried.”

Josh Adams, of Snohomish, near White Chuck Glacier on the morning he captured video of two wolverines in August 2018. (Courtesy of Josh Adams)

Josh Adams, of Snohomish, near White Chuck Glacier on the morning he captured video of two wolverines in August 2018. (Courtesy of Josh Adams)

Baited camera stations and citizen reporting continue in an effort to keep tabs on wolverines as they resettle in Washington. It’s not easy to track animals that travel far distances in cold, treacherous conditions, Rohrer said. Researchers still are experimenting with how to set up camera stations in the fall that can last through a harsh mountain winter without maintenance, then be retrieved in the spring.

Meanwhile, it seems the wolverines’ territory in Washington is expanding. Between 2015 and 2016, a camera set up in backcountry west of Lake Chelan captured eight separate visits by wolverines, including photos of two wolverines together. That camera had been placed as part of Conservation Northwest’s Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project. Earlier this year, a mother wolverine in the southern stretch of the Washington Cascades was documented, the first known mother that far south since the species returned to the state.

“I think people sense that to have these animals in our backyard makes it a really special place,” Gunnell said. “Many of us who enjoy the outdoors can sympathize with the wily wolverine. They’re out there making a living in wild, rugged places.”

He calls them “one of the most iconic species in North America.” Rohrer considers them “the ultimate alpine survivor.”

Whenever someone can capture a glimpse of them in the wild, in a photograph or video, it helps track the return of a resilient predator once thought gone.

It’s rare to have a video as clear and high quality as the one Snohomish’s Josh Adams captured this summer near White Chuck Glacier, Rohrer said. Often, he sees photographs with a brown dot that may just be a hoary marmot.

Woodrow hasn’t seen a wolverine in the wild, but he keeps hoping.

“When I go hiking with my family, I just keep looking up on the hill on the off-chance that I might see one of them,” he said. “It’s a fun thought that I might someday see one in the fur, so to speak. I imagine it’s a pretty special experience.”

Kari Bray: 425-339-3439; kbray@heraldnet.com.

A male wolverine named “Beatie” at a wildlife camera station in the North Cascades. (U.S. Forest Service/Washington State Department of Transportation)

A male wolverine named “Beatie” at a wildlife camera station in the North Cascades. (U.S. Forest Service/Washington State Department of Transportation)

The wily wolverine: Iconic species making comeback in state

A male wolverine named “Beatie” at a wildlife camera station in the North Cascades. (U.S. Forest Service/Washington State Department of Transportation)