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Re: Marten die offs
[Re: rick olson]
 #7099242
 12/21/20 10:00 AM
12/21/20 10:00 AM
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Joined:  Apr 2016
 Labrador, Canada
crosspatch
 
 
trapper
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trapper 
 
Joined:  Apr 2016 
Labrador, Canada
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Sometime between the 1910's and 1930's, depending on where you were in Labrador marten died off over at least half the territory. Excluding the barren areas we are talking over 50,000 sq. miles and probably into some areas of neighbouring Quebec. There were a couple of generations of trappers here who only heard of marten from the old timers. When the marten came back, starting in the 70's, most people around saw their first marten then. Back in the day there were too few trappers and the Innu Indian families trapping to make a difference to the marten. Something went thru them and it took about 50 years for them to come back. By the mid 80's they had completely repopulated their former range here. Since then, depending mostly on pricing, we have taken up to 6,600 marten a year here. Our marten were in every top lot, at either NAFA or FHA, either auction had for decades. We have a lot of big dark marten with better quality fur besides colour and size. 
 
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Re: Marten die offs
[Re: rick olson]
 #7099290
 12/21/20 10:54 AM
12/21/20 10:54 AM
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Joined:  May 2010
 Alaska
drasselt
 
 
trapper
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trapper 
 
Joined:  May 2010 
Alaska
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Up here marten can be prone to move.  Here today, gone tomorrow.  When I see that I assume there are just small pockets of them, not a good high overall  population. When the overall numbers are high they don't just disappear like that.  A crash in the food base drives them down.  Here the food base is voles. 
 
  
 you can vote your way into socialism, but you will have to shoot your way out.
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Re: Marten die offs
[Re: Northof50]
 #7099917
 12/21/20 08:56 PM
12/21/20 08:56 PM
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Joined:  Apr 2016
 Labrador, Canada
crosspatch
 
 
trapper
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trapper 
 
Joined:  Apr 2016 
Labrador, Canada
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Stomach contents Friar Tuck were ?
  Crosspatch you got that right, know of several Labador people that tell of their grandparents leaving the traps in the trees to return when the marten returned. Just to think of all those #1 newhouses just blowing in the breeze and the others wrapped in oil cloth and by the third rock cairn past the big rock.  Exactly the old people used to talk about their marten paths they called them. Lots of traps left on them never be seen again nor the paths ever walked again.  
 
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Re: Marten die offs
[Re: rick olson]
 #7100904
 12/22/20 03:24 PM
12/22/20 03:24 PM
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Joined:  Mar 2007
 McGrath,  AK
white17
 
 
  
"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington"
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"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington" 
 
Joined:  Mar 2007 
McGrath,  AK
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I have no control how our state figure out what they think the season and limits should be,I don’t believe that most are dying of old age mostly a 50/50 on adults and juveniles.I have friends that work out in the big woods all summer and they saw many,many martens,now they have seemed to disappear,most of the local trappers are saying and seeing the same thing????? The  tough thing about  what  you  describe  is  that several people may  have  seen  the  same  marten  or  have seen  the  same  marten  several  times. Pretty  hard  to  get  an accurate  idea  of  what  the  population  is  when  using  that standard.  When  things  are "normal"  on my line  I can  take   around 10  marten  per  mile  of  trapline  between  November and  February.   When  things seemed to  be at their worst for  population  numbers   I timed  the  interval  between  sets  of  tracks  from  a  Cub.   This was probably 2011-12.   I was  seeing a different set  of  tracks   about every  six minutes. So if  you're traveling 60  mph,  that means  about  6 miles  between  sets of  tracks.   This  was  a  straight line  and by no means  scientific.  The  habitat  changed also  of course.  Nevertheless,  I  am convinced  that  that was a  very low  marten  density  at that time.  By the  way,  if your population structure  is  50/50  adult  to juvenile  I  would suspect you  have  problems  already.  
 
  
Mean As Nails
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Re: Marten die offs
[Re: rick olson]
 #7100946
 12/22/20 04:24 PM
12/22/20 04:24 PM
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Joined:  Sep 2015
 Maine
AndrewM
 
 
trapper
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trapper 
 
Joined:  Sep 2015 
Maine
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This summer we had a bumper crop of martens now with snow covering the ground 4-6” they are almost nonexistent,do they get distemper or something like that ? Fisher get canine distemper virus. I would guess that marten can too. I know of one state that had a fisher die-off at least partially attributed to rodenticides. I don't know the details, but post mortem testing showed lethal levels. I would guess that those animals probably ate mice or rats that were killed by poison, and then died themselves. Just a guess though. We had a bumper crop of marten this year too but they seemed to hold up well through the fall. We had a very dry spring.  
 
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Re: Marten die offs
[Re: Rusty Newhouse]
 #7101425
 12/22/20 09:47 PM
12/22/20 09:47 PM
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Joined:  Jan 2014
 AK
bfisch
 
 
trapper
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trapper 
 
Joined:  Jan 2014 
AK
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Years ago I asked an older more experienced trapper why the Marten at times seem to disappear, he answered with a chuckle "The wind blows them away".  It all makes sense now!  
 
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Re: Marten die offs
[Re: rick olson]
 #7101547
 12/22/20 11:33 PM
12/22/20 11:33 PM
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Joined:  Aug 2011
 james bay frontierOnt.
Boco
 
 
trapper
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trapper 
 
Joined:  Aug 2011 
james bay frontierOnt.
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I always see marten chasing rabbits in march when the crust is on.When the snow crusts marten cannot get below the snow to hunt voles,so they chase rabbits. The Cree word for marten is Wabushstan which translates to Rabbit chaser,from their habit of being seen in march chasing down rabbits.Large male marten have no problem chasing down a rabbit.I have watched them a bunch of times.They are relentless,the rabbit will dodge and weave,the marten with his little short legs going full speed goes directly in a straight line always keeping his eyes on the running rabbit.The marten runs down the rabbit on the crust,and grabs it right behind the neck with its teeth,and wraps itself around the rabbit.The rabbit goes stiff in about 30 seconds,Paralysed I suspect from a bite to the spinal column.Then the marten will drag the rabbit to cover. Out of all the times I have seen marten chasing rabbits it has almost always been larger male marten.I dont believe the smaller female marten are as successful at rabbit hunting. In years when the crust is hard I would suspect any female marten would have a hard time sustaining body fat at that important time of year and likely results in a lot of reproductive failure due to low body fat and the blastocyst being re absorbed.
  In the past a lot of late winter beaver trappers in northern Ontario would stockpile beaver carcasses in old growth parts of their line where female marten den to help increase the carrying capacity of their lines at this important time of the year. 
 
  
Forget that fear of gravity-get a little savagery in your life.
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Re: Marten die offs
[Re: rick olson]
 #7101602
 12/23/20 01:02 AM
12/23/20 01:02 AM
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Joined:  Sep 2016
 MB
Jurassic Park
 
 
trapper
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trapper 
 
Joined:  Sep 2016 
MB
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I picked through the stomach on a Fisher ONCE and told myself not to do that again. That smell was bad! Had deer hair inside.  I’ve never picked through a Marten stomach but watched them catch mice or voles while deer hunting and also video taped one eating a rabbit.  I seen one chasing a rabbit one winter too. Not sure if he caught it though. It’s rabbit city here though. 
 
  
Cold as ice!
  Clique non-member
  100% Manly
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