Grow Magazine Summer 2018

Page 8

O n Hen r y Ma l l

Eyes on an American Marten Revival With funding from an endowed professorship, CALS researchers are using trail cameras to monitor the evasive creatures in the Apostle Islands

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grow

SUMMER 2018

The American marten, a small, elusive member of the weasel family, was long thought to be extinct in Wisconsin’s Apostle Islands. Now, thanks in part to an endowed gift to CALS, they have been found roaming the area once again. Evidence of the animal’s presence in the national lakeshore resurfaced in 2015 when a research group, led by forest and wildlife ecology professor Tim Van Deelen, identified several martens in photos taken by trail cameras. Some of the images came from a dozen cameras that Van Deelen purchased with funds from his appointment as Beers-Bascom Professor in Conservation. The professorship was established by William Beers, former chairman of the board and CEO of Kraft, Inc. It is awarded to a CALS faculty member for outstanding research, teaching, and service in natural and environmental resources conservation and management. Van Deelen has held the appointment since 2015. He says he purchased the trail cameras because they are an invaluable tool for wildlife researchers. “They can be out there gathering data night and day, in all kinds of weather, with minimal

trapping and loss of habitat led to their complete extinction in the state by the early 20th century. State officials tried in vain to reintroduce them in the 1950s, but later efforts in the ChequamegonNicolet National Forest have proven more successful. According to Van Deelen, there are three prevailing theories that could explain where the Apostle Islands marten population originated. First, it’s possible that a small group survived the

requirements of humans to go service them,” he says. That trail camera technology, which has proven crucial in learning about animal habits and movement, is especially helpful for sighting rare and evasive animals like the marten. Wisconsin was once home to a stable population of martens. However,

original extirpation. A second theory suggests that they migrated from a group released into the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest between 1987 and 1990. Finally, they may be relatives of a handful reintroduced in the 1950s during what was considered a failed effort.


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