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Elusive fishers will return to North Cascades

Predator is listed as endangered in Washington

By Courtney Flatt, OPB
Published: December 3, 2018, 4:44pm

PORTLAND — Washington’s North Cascades will soon see the return of a small, weasel-like predator called the fisher. The carnivores have been missing from the area since the 1930s. Biologists hope the reintroduction next week will follow in the footsteps of other successful efforts in Washington.

Fishers are elusive predators that eat small wildlife like squirrels, snowshoe hare and mountain beavers. They’re about the size of a pet cat.

“They serve both as predators and as prey. Other carnivores actually eat them as well. We hope they don’t anytime soon,” said Jason Ransom, the lead wildlife biologist at North Cascades National Park.

The park will be the third area biologists will release fishers in the state. They’ve already successfully released 90 fishers on the Olympic Peninsula and about 50 in the South Cascades. Fishers in the South Cascades have been particularly successful, with about 80 percent still surviving, Ransom said.

Biologists released the fishers at a couple sites in the South Cascades. Since then they’ve seen a couple dens with babies.

“Whether it’s decisions we made or decisions the fishers made, or some combination, they seem to have set up shop where we put them. They liked where we put them. They seem to be surviving, and they definitely are breeding,” Ransom said.

Biologists have found fishers in the South Cascades really like the habitat in old growth and “on the edge,” Ransom said, near old fires and the blow-down of Mount St. Helens, “where they’ve got great cavities to hide in.”

The terrain in the North Cascades will be slightly more challenging.

“These nice little winding valleys with all the forest down low are great, but then there’s big mountains in the North Cascades,” Ransom said.

Fishers are listed as endangered in Washington. They’re under review for federal protection under the Endangered Species Act.

In Oregon, fishers are listed as sensitive. A native population still exists in the Siskiyou Mountains. The state reintroduced fishers from Montana and British Columbia in the 1960s and 1980s — those populations can still be found in the southern Cascades.

The fishers that will be reintroduced in Washington’s North Cascades National Park will come from Alberta. Biologists had previously brought in fishers from British Columbia, but fires last summer destroyed important habitat there.

Turns out, Alberta had plenty of fishers to spare.

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