Re: Marten thread
[Re: Gulo]
#1628383
12/01/09 08:23 PM
12/01/09 08:23 PM
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Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 35,639 McGrath, AK
white17
"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington"
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"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington"
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 35,639
McGrath, AK
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By the way, takotna...
Those male:female ratios look great! Your YOY:ADU ratios, however, look like things might have taken a downturn. Man! It's really tough being down here in the lowest 48, remembering all the marten work... I guess that's what they call arm-chair, Monday-morning quarterbacking.
Keep it up, takotna... This is exactly what I found last year and why I quit trapping marten last year. I think Craig found a very similar pattern all over the upper Kukso. Takotna's ratios aren't quite as skewed as mine were.
Mean As Nails
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Re: Marten thread
[Re: takotna]
#1628964
12/01/09 11:37 PM
12/01/09 11:37 PM
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Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 5,543 Oregon
alaska viking
OP
"Made it two years not being censored"
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OP
"Made it two years not being censored"
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 5,543
Oregon
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Well, we certainly have a bio on our hands! As for the ageing methods, you lost me at the Latin part, and my father is a doctor! Of course I can only Play doctor, but I diverse. I know for certain that I have seen a downward trend in marten on my line for a couple years, and noticed a decline in red-backed voles as well as shrews about a year prior to the spiral. I now am seeing an up-swing in the rodents, and hope the marten will be a year behind them. I know this might be optimistic, as the litters these guys have is rather small,(2 or three?). That said, the habitat I trap is indeed prime marten country, and I can't help but think that the severe winters we have had these last three years has effected the movements and patterns of them, and perhaps they have become a bit more transient in thier movements to secure food. Ideas?
Just doing what I want now.
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Re: Marten thread
[Re: piperniner]
#1629205
12/02/09 07:20 AM
12/02/09 07:20 AM
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Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 2,927 Idaho, Lemhi County
Gulo
"On The Other Hand"
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"On The Other Hand"
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 2,927
Idaho, Lemhi County
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Okay, you guys be nice. Not only do I have three hands (there, it's out in the open now) but I also have 2 PhDs (Posthole Diggers; out in the garage), and yes, I have been called a bit anal retentive concerning marten population management.
takotna... Really good to hear you're still out there catching marten. I know you trap quite an extensive area, and your previous-years ratios have always looked pretty good. I suspect you've got adequate reservoirs of unhammered country, so your catch remains pretty consistent. All interested... What I really like to see, especially from those areas where the marten trapper density is a bit high (traplines that are no more than 10 miles apart)is a ratio in the harvest of not less than 4 YOY (males and females combined) for every ADU female. I've seen populations at better than 20:1, and I've also seen ratios at less than 1:1. Any of you remember the late 80s in the western interior when marten were bringing better than $100/copy, and they were pretty much gone? Total young/ADU female ratioswere coming in at about 2:1. We shortened the season a bit (with the idea that it would probably save a few of those late-caught adult females), and by the early 90s, we again had pretty good marten numbers. I'm not a fan of government intervention and jacking around season dates, and am of the opinion that individual trappers can manage their own lines better than ADF&G can. On the other hand (there, White17) Craig is one of the best darned biologists and friend to the trappers of anybody I know, and will make the right choice. With all that said, I encourage any of you guys to keep an eye on your YOY:ADU FEMALE ratios in your annual harvest. As White17 said about his line last year, when he was getting a relatively high proportion of adult females and very few YOY animals in his harvest, he backed off. For the long-term maximization of numbers of marten on the boards, this is precisely what should be done.
Enough for this morning's diatribe. I may grab another cup of mud, and be back here at the keyboard, but (on the other hand) I gotta go see if there are any whitetails lounging about the "yard" wanting to reside for a while in my freezer...
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Re: Marten thread
[Re: yukon254]
#1629882
12/02/09 04:01 PM
12/02/09 04:01 PM
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Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 2,927 Idaho, Lemhi County
Gulo
"On The Other Hand"
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"On The Other Hand"
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 2,927
Idaho, Lemhi County
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yukon254... Good questions all, and I take no offense whatsoever. This is certainly not a one-way street; I'm trying to learn as well.
I worked in Idaho throughout the 70s on cougars, badgers, eagles, otter, and mink. Had some real fine mentors. School at U of I through the late 70s when they still had some real fine, practical professors. Worked for Alaska F&G for 27 years, mostly in the research arena (wolves, moose, wolverine, brown bears), with a 12 year stint in management in the interior and southeast. One year in Russia trapping tigers, bears, and leopards. Back in Idaho now, doing finishing touches on house-building project. Fur trapper throughout the entire time. Even though it was rarely in my job description, I continued to necropsy 1,000 or so marten every year, just trying to understand what makes the populations tick.
The low marten populations in western interior Alaska during the 80s was at a time when pelt prices were at about $100/copy. Lots of trapper effort, as you might imagine. Total young:adult female ratios were running about 1:1. Following the shortened season (as I remember we cut off the February season), populations rebounded, and we were up to about 4:1 in two years' time. I'm not saying that the shortened season was the reason for the turnaround. It was probably a variety of factors. But, the turnaround coincided with the season shortening. Certainly, could have been a coincidence. Nobody will ever know. I wasn't then, and certainly am not now, in favor of government regulations and jacking the trappers around. Each and every one of you know your respective marten areas better than I or any biologist will ever know. That is the reason I'm interested in learning more about what makes marten populations tick; to suggest to you guys and gals in the field ways you may be able to maximize your long-term catch. Good management, whether it is done by you, or by the government, is my goal. First and foremost, I think of the resource; secondarily, I think about the users of that resource.
I agree that there are more than a handful of good biologists out there (Craig in Fairbanks is one of the hardest working, best field biologists there is. Anywhere. Period.). As with any other profession, there is also no shortage of slinkies. Yes, any agency employee has political constraints (A few years ago, I had a boss that told me I was "politically naive" regarding the wolf issue I was painfully involved in). It's nice now that I'm not working for an agency, that I can afford to be "politically naive".
I'm of the firm opinion that you cannot "bank" marten. In places where traplines are not overlapping or continuous over the landscape, there are refugia (untrapped reservoirs) that continually provide incomers. For a few years recently I trapped a place close to Fairbanks (my plane was broke) where traplines were contiguous and often overlapping. Access was just too good, and there are too many people in Fairbanks. It was "good" marten habitat, but a dozen or so was all I'd get annually. Same with the guys trapping around me. I'm convinced that if we'd have backed off for a couple of years, the long-term productivity of marten from the area would have increased several-fold. The common thought amongst all the area trappers was "if I don't take the marten, somebody else will." Thus, we all put out a few sets and kept the marten whittled down to bare bones.
The scientific literature does indeed generally say that marten home ranges are small. This is usually based on telemetry studies, and is pretty indisputable. However (on the other hand), what would happen if you (or a researcher) trapped an area (often in summer) for a few days or weeks. First animal you catch is an adult. That's the one that gets the transmitter. Well, it's an established adult. Of course it stays put. If they do happen to get a juvenile, it's quite likely to be a transient, and the reports indicate that it's a "transmitter malfunction" or a "lost contact". Well, the thing zipped out of the study area on his way to who-knows-where, and doesn't get into the official reports. I know for a fact that a significant proportion of marten are movers; not established on a definitive home range.
On the other hand...
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Re: Marten thread
[Re: Pittu]
#1629913
12/02/09 04:28 PM
12/02/09 04:28 PM
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Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 2,927 Idaho, Lemhi County
Gulo
"On The Other Hand"
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"On The Other Hand"
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 2,927
Idaho, Lemhi County
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white17... I don't remember the details, but it was certainly out of the 1.5-2.0 mile home range (by a factor of 50 or so). Same thing with a few of the tagged critters on NE Chichagof that were officially reported as "status unknown" (although it's a pretty small island). Would be extremely interesting to see the age structure of "wave" participants. Any guesses?
Pittu... I'm runnin' outta hands here....
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Re: Marten thread
[Re: white17]
#1630135
12/02/09 06:12 PM
12/02/09 06:12 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 2,317 Montana
mtbadger
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 2,317
Montana
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That sounds like the right kind of thinking....^^^^
Ordinary men can do extrodinary things....
Always looking for Bridger #3OS and 1.65OS
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Re: Marten thread
[Re: yukon254]
#1630157
12/02/09 06:18 PM
12/02/09 06:18 PM
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Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 2,927 Idaho, Lemhi County
Gulo
"On The Other Hand"
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"On The Other Hand"
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 2,927
Idaho, Lemhi County
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yukon254. One of the few things in my life that I am proud of is the fact that I was able to avoid being a supervisor in ADF&G and being able to stay in the field.
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Re: Marten thread
[Re: yukon254]
#1631993
12/03/09 02:09 PM
12/03/09 02:09 PM
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Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 5,543 Oregon
alaska viking
OP
"Made it two years not being censored"
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OP
"Made it two years not being censored"
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 5,543
Oregon
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Some here may recall the white-footed marten I caught last year that had an ADFG tag in it's ear. It was repeatedly getting caught in a bio's gulo sets, (box-type trap), and so was "manually re-located". I ended up catching him about 10-12 miles from the release site days after his re-location. Hard to say if he was going to take up residence or passing through, but was caught in a set that usually produces annually.
Just doing what I want now.
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Re: Marten thread
[Re: Gulo]
#1632304
12/03/09 05:09 PM
12/03/09 05:09 PM
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Hupurest
Unregistered
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Hupurest
Unregistered
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