Reintroduction of the Pine Marten into the Nicolet National Forest, Forest County, Wisconsin

One hundred twenty-four pine marten (Martes americana) (97 males: 27 females) were live-trapped in Canada and reintroduced into the 216 sq. mi. (560 sq. km) Fisher Management Unit (FMU) in the Nicolet National Forest between January 29, 1975 and April 3, 1976. Eight males and 18 females were release...

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Main Author: Davis, Mark H.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, College of Natural Resources 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/79489
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivwiscon:oai:minds.wisconsin.edu:1793/79489 2023-05-15T17:10:25+02:00 Reintroduction of the Pine Marten into the Nicolet National Forest, Forest County, Wisconsin Davis, Mark H. 2019-12-18T20:40:18Z application/pdf http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/79489 en_US eng University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, College of Natural Resources http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/79489 Thesis 2019 ftunivwiscon 2022-04-13T19:14:41Z One hundred twenty-four pine marten (Martes americana) (97 males: 27 females) were live-trapped in Canada and reintroduced into the 216 sq. mi. (560 sq. km) Fisher Management Unit (FMU) in the Nicolet National Forest between January 29, 1975 and April 3, 1976. Eight males and 18 females were released from holding pens a minimum of 1 week after arrival (gentle-release). The remaining pine marten were released within 1 day of arrival (quick-release). Twenty-one pine marten (9 males:12 females were radio-tagged to facilitate evaluation of the reintroduction program.- There was a significant difference between post-release movement measurements of radio-tagged gentle-release pine marten and radio-tagged quick-release pine marten. Gentle-release pens reduced post-release movements. Five radio-tagged pine marten (2 males:3 females) moved out of the FMU and into the upper peninsula of Michigan; maximum straight-line movement in a 30-hr. period was 14.48 mi. (23.30 km). Two females were radio-tracked during April 1975 and 6 females were radio-tracked during April 1976; no evidence of reproduction was found. Extrapolation of the radio telemetry data to the entire reintroduced population indicates that 12 females remained on the FMU in April 1976. Ten percent of the radiotagged pine marten were victims of predation. Five dead pine marten were recovered: 1 male was trapped, 1 male was shot, 1 male and one female were killed by predators, and 1 female died from injury inflicted by the radio-tag. Radio-tagged pine marten did not utilize any specific habitat type; the amount and types of habitat selected were directly proportional to the amount and types available. The FMU is closed to dry-set trapping to protect the reintroduced population. The success of the reintroduction program is still uncertain because of significant survival data and the relatively few females released, emigration, and there being no documentation of reproduction. Thesis Martes americana University of Wisconsin: Digital Collections Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Wisconsin: Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftunivwiscon
language English
description One hundred twenty-four pine marten (Martes americana) (97 males: 27 females) were live-trapped in Canada and reintroduced into the 216 sq. mi. (560 sq. km) Fisher Management Unit (FMU) in the Nicolet National Forest between January 29, 1975 and April 3, 1976. Eight males and 18 females were released from holding pens a minimum of 1 week after arrival (gentle-release). The remaining pine marten were released within 1 day of arrival (quick-release). Twenty-one pine marten (9 males:12 females were radio-tagged to facilitate evaluation of the reintroduction program.- There was a significant difference between post-release movement measurements of radio-tagged gentle-release pine marten and radio-tagged quick-release pine marten. Gentle-release pens reduced post-release movements. Five radio-tagged pine marten (2 males:3 females) moved out of the FMU and into the upper peninsula of Michigan; maximum straight-line movement in a 30-hr. period was 14.48 mi. (23.30 km). Two females were radio-tracked during April 1975 and 6 females were radio-tracked during April 1976; no evidence of reproduction was found. Extrapolation of the radio telemetry data to the entire reintroduced population indicates that 12 females remained on the FMU in April 1976. Ten percent of the radiotagged pine marten were victims of predation. Five dead pine marten were recovered: 1 male was trapped, 1 male was shot, 1 male and one female were killed by predators, and 1 female died from injury inflicted by the radio-tag. Radio-tagged pine marten did not utilize any specific habitat type; the amount and types of habitat selected were directly proportional to the amount and types available. The FMU is closed to dry-set trapping to protect the reintroduced population. The success of the reintroduction program is still uncertain because of significant survival data and the relatively few females released, emigration, and there being no documentation of reproduction.
format Thesis
author Davis, Mark H.
spellingShingle Davis, Mark H.
Reintroduction of the Pine Marten into the Nicolet National Forest, Forest County, Wisconsin
author_facet Davis, Mark H.
author_sort Davis, Mark H.
title Reintroduction of the Pine Marten into the Nicolet National Forest, Forest County, Wisconsin
title_short Reintroduction of the Pine Marten into the Nicolet National Forest, Forest County, Wisconsin
title_full Reintroduction of the Pine Marten into the Nicolet National Forest, Forest County, Wisconsin
title_fullStr Reintroduction of the Pine Marten into the Nicolet National Forest, Forest County, Wisconsin
title_full_unstemmed Reintroduction of the Pine Marten into the Nicolet National Forest, Forest County, Wisconsin
title_sort reintroduction of the pine marten into the nicolet national forest, forest county, wisconsin
publisher University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, College of Natural Resources
publishDate 2019
url http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/79489
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Martes americana
genre_facet Martes americana
op_relation http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/79489
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