PAT NEAL’S WILDLIFE: Counting marmots for fun and profit

YOU HEARD IT here first:

I’m through writing this column once I get my new job as a marmot surveyor.

I am uniquely qualified for this position. I have spent years studying the Olympic marmot in an attempt to decipher their language.

It’s a series of whistles that are loud enough to make you think the police are coming.

The marmots whistle to warn of predators, defend their burrow complexes against other marmots and make fun of the hordes of granola-crunching backpackers.

The marmots spend the short alpine summer harvesting herbs and grasses, drying them on the scenic front porches of their burrows located high on the mountainside.

Then they spend the long winter, sleeping deep beneath the snow.

Biologists think the number of marmots in Olympic National Park could be depressed by anything from climate change to coyotes.

If the marmots are depressed, they could be endangered. If they aren’t endangered, they should be.

Volunteers have been asked to survey the marmots. That could be difficult since the marmots live underground most of the time.

To get an accurate count of the marmots, we may have to borrow a page from the fish surveyors’ playbook and electroshock them.

Fortunately, we still have the Elwha dams for a supply of cheap and reliable electricity. All we need are a few miles of cable and some zircon encrusted electrodes.

We’ll run some juice down their holes and see if the marmots don’t just scamper out and get counted.

Once we count the marmots, then what?

Methodologies have yet to be developed to ensure we don’t count the same marmot twice.

This would be problematic since increased numbers of the marmot would lessen its chances of being endangered.

Sure the marmots are cute, but they all look pretty much the same.

Paint-balling the marmots with a permanent dye to make them easier to identify has been suggested, but weapons are unpopular in Olympic National Park.

Once again we’ll take a cue from fisheries management. They cut various fins off the fish to identify them.

The marmots don’t have fins, so we’ll shave them. Any marmot with a bad haircut means it’s already been counted.

Then, we’ll attach a radio collar with a webcam to the marmot and see if it can still fit back in its hole.

Any responsible marmot survey would have to include tribal co-management.

Native Americans traditionally hunted marmots for their meat and skins.

Once the survey is completed, harvestable numbers of breeding marmots could be netted and sold to trendy local restaurants and join wild steelhead on the menu.

I know what you’re thinking.

What if aggressive survey techniques and a commercial harvest are not successful at making the Olympic marmots endangered?

Time for another fisheries management time-honored tool:

We’ll increase the number of predators in the ecosystem until the population of prey species tweaks. That’s where the fishers come in.

I can’t say for sure that this large member of the weasel family eats marmots, if they don’t they should.

While there was no mention of monetary compensation for the marmot surveyors, there was no money in bull trout either — until it was endangered. Now it’s worth about a billion dollars a year.

It is my hope that by using a few simple management strategies and study methodologies borrowed from the salmon restoration industry, we could have the marmot declared endangered in my lifetime.

Once something is on the endangered species list, it doesn’t matter how it got there. It forces the floodgate for federal funding for further studies.

Those who ignore history are normal.

_________

Pat Neal is a North Olympic Peninsula fishing guide and humorist whose column appears every Wednesday.

Pat can be reached at 360-683-9867 or patnealwildlife@yahoo.com.

The “Pat Neal WildLife Show” is on radio KSQM 91.5 FM (www.scbradio.com) at 9 a.m. Saturdays, repeated at 6 p.m. Tuesdays.

More in News

A bicyclist out on a Thursday afternoon ride reaches the trailhead along the Larry Scott Trail. The Port of Port Townsend is working to have cleaner water coming from the boatyard with a stormwater improvement project in the area. The project is designed to improve the environmental conditions of the working waterfront, which provides 20 percent of the jobs in Jefferson County. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Stormwater project

A bicyclist out on a Thursday afternoon ride reaches the trailhead along… Continue reading

Michelle Olsen.
Olsen hired for Port Angeles School District’s top job

New superintendent in district for 23 years

PA teen’s body rejecting heart transplant

Landon Smith readmitted to Seattle hospital

Lobbyist: State looking at cuts, revenue to solve shortfall

Impact expected in education, property tax, trust lands

Man investigated for DUI after three-car crash

One person was transported to a hospital after a driver… Continue reading

Penney Sanders.
Sanders to fill hospital position

Unexpired term to be on ballot

One injured in collision that blocks highway

One person was transported to a Seattle hospital following a… Continue reading

Peninsula College Foundation has scholarships available

The Peninsula College Foundation announced it has nearly $200,000… Continue reading

Joseph Prince takes a photo of a hoodie jacket on Wednesday on a small hill overlooking the entrance to John Wayne Marina near Sequim. Prince, a member of the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe, said the weather was ideal for adding items to the catalog of his online vintage clothing business. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Vintage clothes

Joseph Prince takes a photo of a hoodie jacket on Wednesday on… Continue reading

Gateway Visitor Center to be hub for transit options

Link to be created to ferry services

Business association says DNR violated its legal responsibility

Argument could be grounds to file lawsuit against state

The Sequim-Dungeness Valley Chamber of Commerce honored four citizens during a luncheon at Cedars at Dungeness Golf Course. Volunteer events photographer Ron Stecker, left, was named Citizen and the Year and philanthropist George Brown, right, was presented the Bill & Esther Littlejohn Humanitarian Award. Clallam County Fire District 3 volunteer Blaine Zechenelly, second from left, and Sequim Wheelers founder Nicole Lepping, second from right, were among the Citizen of the Year finalists. (Emily Matthiessen/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim chamber names Citizen, Humanitarian of Year

Winners for 2024 announced at annual awards luncheon