OUR WORK: ECOLOGICAL MONITORING

Centennial Carnivore Connectivity Project

  • Idaho & Montana, USA

  • To determine habitat selection and movement patterns of grizzly bear, black bear, mountain lion, and wolf

  • Grizzly bear, black bear, mountain lion, & wolf scats

  • Wildlife Conservation Society, Humane Society Wildlife Land Trust

Our dogs surprised researchers by locating grizzly bear and wolf scats in places nobody knew they had re-colonized.

The Centennials are a breathtaking, rugged mountain range. Tracking, trapping, and radio-collaring grizzly bears, black bears, mountain lions, and wolves across miles of rough, remote terrain would have been a nearly impossible job, made even harder by the extensive (and expensive) permitting required by the mosaic of public and private entities that own and manage the land.

Instead, WD4C trained dogs to locate the scats of these four wide-ranging carnivores.

Then we quietly and non-invasively collected five years of data, revealing that all four species use the Centennial Mountains as a migratory corridor between the Greater Yellowstone ecosystem and central Idaho wilderness areas. Our dogs surprised researchers by locating grizzly and wolf scats in places nobody knew they had re-colonized.

These data helped contribute greatly to our knowledge of these species and among other things, halt a development that included 1200 homes and an 18-hole golf course, keeping this critical corridor intact.

We protect wildlife and wild places by training rescue dogs into expert conservation canines and deploy them worldwide to make a difference.