On the Edge

Wolverines, long admired for their ferocity and canniness, are so elusive that few people have even seen one. Now biologists are racing to find them before trappers do.

Springtime high in the Rockies, where the calendar reads May 9, but it鈥檚 snowing in rattling bursts of graupel. After snow-shoeing for hours up a tilted, twisted drainage in Montana鈥檚 Gallatin Mountains, south of Bozeman, I emerge into the headwaters cirque and stagger to where a cluster of researchers, led by Wildlife Conservation Society biologist Bob Inman, are gathered around three holes bored into the snow.

Nobody seems to think the climb has been exhausting except me. Wolverine researchers are freakish in their ability to cover punishing vertical terrain鈥攁nd yet their subject routinely eludes them. 鈥淎 wolverine will climb up an avalanche chute, climb up over a cornice, belly-slide down the other side, and keep running,鈥 says Tony McCue, then a field biologist on the crew. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e so fast in covering their habitat, we just can鈥檛 catch up with them unless they鈥檝e decided to stop.鈥

Inman, McCue, and the rest of the team fervently hope a wolverine has stopped somewhere under our feet. Even after the grueling ascent, the biologists seem energized by the knowledge that we鈥檙e standing around the entrances to one of only a few wolverine natal dens ever discovered in the United States.

It鈥檚 as close as I鈥檝e ever been to wolverines, closer than all but a handful of people will ever come to one. Wolverines, the largest terrestrial member of the weasel family鈥攁 male weighs 30 to 35 pounds, an average female about 20鈥攊nhabit such austere territory in such meager numbers that even people who spend their entire lives exploring high-mountain backcountry may never see one.

Human encroachment of another sort could render the embattled mammal all but invisible: Trappers and outdoor recreationists, such as snowmobilers, might provide the one-two punch that limits current wolverine population growth. After spiraling to near extinction by the 1920s, wolverines in the Lower 48 managed a dramatic recovery in some states from the 1960s to the 1980s, aided by bans on wolverine trapping in most places. Today small, genetically isolated populations hang on in Montana and northwest Wyoming, central Idaho, and the Cascade Mountains in Washington. Still, the animal remains highly sought by trappers.

In 2003 conservation groups petitioned the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to review studies and consider the wolverine for protection under the Endangered Species Act. Under the influence of now-disgraced Interior Undersecretary Julie MacDonald, the agency found that there was not enough information about the animal to act on the request. (A federal judge ruled in 2006 that the agency鈥檚 finding was 鈥渋n error,鈥 and a formal review is now under way by court order.)

Although the agency鈥檚 reasoning seems circular, it鈥檚 true that until recently wolverines were North America鈥檚 least-studied large carnivore. Before the 1990s, mythology for the most part substituted for science. In an early account, wolverines were such gluttons鈥攖heir Latin appellation, Gulo gulo, means glutton鈥攖hat they gorged themselves on prey, then forced their bodies into tight gaps between trees and squeezed the flatulence from their bowels so they could eat more. In Native American lore, the wolverine was a conduit to the spirit world and often served in the role of trickster-hero. Fur trappers called the wolverine the 鈥渄evil bear.鈥

Mention a wolverine to anybody who knows just a little bit about wildlife, and you will almost certainly hear about ferocity, and maybe a story about how these animals win battles against grizzly bears 10 times their size. This, too, is largely myth. Inman knows two of his collared wolverines have been killed by black bears, and another researcher described seeing a coyote snatching a wolverine by the tail and flipping it into the air repeatedly, as if toying with the animal.

Although there is evidence of wolverines killing moose trapped in deep snow, their bone-crunching jaws and powerful shoulders and neck鈥攊deal for digging鈥攁re built to scavenge. A foraging wolverine can smell carrion, like a bighorn sheep or a mountain goat that starved or perished in an avalanche, buried under six feet of snow from a considerable distance. Because a female wolverine must forage for scarce carcasses, kits learn about high-country travel early in life. About nine weeks after giving birth in a natal den鈥攁n average of two or three kits is common鈥攁 female wolverine begins to move her kits to a series of temporary dens she digs closer to sources of food.

Inman and McCue suspect the den we鈥檝e reached in the Gallatins is a natal one. McCue happened on it a few days earlier when, during a routine survey, he cut tracks made by the female and one kit and followed them to the entrances. For Inman, a lean man with a sturdy chin cupped in a reddish brown beard, this is a big moment. Partway through a scheduled decade-long study, Inman is trying to capture a kit to monitor for the project. This year none of the eight radio-collared females in his study group denned. The den we鈥檝e hiked to is his only shot at digging out a kit until next winter. But a fresh blanket of snow combined with the absence of telemetry beeps makes knowing where鈥攐r even if鈥攁 female wolverine and her kit are huddled beneath our feet pure guesswork.

The plan is to excavate until a crew member can belly-crawl in and snatch a squalling six- to eight-pound kit, then surgically implant it with a radio tracking device about the size of a AA battery. It鈥檚 an intrusive procedure, Inman admits, but other studies have demonstrated its relative safety for the young wolverine. So little is known about the wolverine in the United States that successfully implanting a kit today could advance the state of the science significantly.

Two hours of digging in 10-foot-deep snow reveals a multi-layered maze of tunnels extending across a 90-by-150-foot stack of avalanche debris. An exasperated Inman calls off the dig. 鈥淓ven if she鈥檚 in there, we鈥檇 never find her today,鈥 he says, a soft Tennessee accent tracing his disappointment.

His crisp blue eyes lift to the band of cliffs rimming the cirque, lipped in 20-foot blue cornices. 鈥淚f an adult wolverine was standing here and wanted to go up and over that ridge,鈥 Inman asks McCue, rhetorically, 鈥渨hat would it take her, 10 minutes? Fifteen?鈥

It would take us until tomorrow, and by then she鈥檇 be somewhere else.

 

Jim Halfpenny, a noted tracker and naturalist, once told me he knew a trapper who has, over his lifetime, killed 30 wolverines in southwestern Montana. That would be a remarkably destructive feat鈥攐ne man wiping out a significant number of the wolverines born in that area in his lifetime. In the northern Rockies, fewer than 10 wolverines鈥攁 dominant male, two or three breeding females, a couple of the year鈥檚 young, and the occasional interloping male鈥攎ight occupy 300 to 500 square miles or more. Trapping could take a heavy toll on such a meager population.

Jeff Copeland, a biologist with the U.S. Forest Service鈥檚 Rocky Mountain Research Station in Missoula, Montana, has been studying wolverines in the contiguous United States longer than anybody. He currently oversees monitoring projects in Glacier and Yellowstone national parks, which, together with work done by Keith Aubry, a biologist for the Forest Service, and Inman, are the only ongoing wolverine studies in the country. Another research project, in Montana鈥檚 Big Hole Valley, fizzled鈥攁t least partly because recreational trappers killed 40 percent of the animals in the study.

Copeland says both he and Inman have demonstrated that recreational trapping can have a 鈥渉uge impact鈥 on wolverine populations. 鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty clear that areas that are trapped experience higher mortality,鈥 says Copeland. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not like the population can compensate for it.鈥

But when Montana officials publicly discuss regulations or limitations on recreational trapping of any sort, a cadre of trappers show up to shout about their heritage. At an August 2007 meeting of the state鈥檚 Fish, Wildlife, and Parks Commission, for instance, Inman testified that wolverine quotas should be cut almost in half from the current 12 to no more than seven animals taken statewide. He also offered the commissioners the opportunity to review data with him and learn why, in the case of wolverines, these small numbers matter. Swayed by the trapping lobby, the commissioners seemed concerned, then reduced the quota to 10, just two fewer than the original allowance.

 

Another wolverine search, another day, this time in the high mountains around Yellowstone National Park. (All of the biologists involved in this story asked me not to identify drainages we visited, for fear trappers may come looking for wolverine pelts.) This time I鈥檓 with Jason Wilmot, a tall, steely-blue-eyed man with cornsilk blond hair who works for Copeland on a study in the Yellowstone park environs. Nobody is sure how many wolverines use the park as their home range, but Wilmot knows of at least two.

He and I are checking a 鈥渓id down鈥 signal being sent by one of the live traps鈥攍og houses six feet long by three feet wide and four feet deep, built with a trapdoor roof that slams shut once a scavenger is lured in by the frozen beaver carcasses used as bait鈥攈e鈥檚 built just outside the park. When we tilt up the lid and peer in with a flashlight, a red fox squints back at us鈥攏o wolverines for me on this day either. Which, Wilmot tells me, I should accept as par for the course.

鈥淲olverines are such a mystery. They exist on the edge of human understanding, even comprehension. They鈥檙e so tough and live in such extreme terrain. People have spent their whole lives in Montana outdoors and never seen a wolverine,鈥 marvels Wilmot, who has spent a good chunk of his life studying wolverines and seen only seven when he wasn鈥檛 conducting research. 鈥淲e鈥檙e still trying to find out foundational information, basic ecology. What鈥檚 their reproduction rate, what do they eat? It鈥檚 amazing to me that there鈥檚 a critter in this day and age that we know so little about.鈥

Above us on the steep mountain slopes, snowmobile tracks loop in parabolas, the remnants of an activity called 鈥渉igh marking,鈥 in which riders drive their snowmobiles as high as they can up a steep pitch. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e getting in touch with nature,鈥 Wilmot says with a twinge of sarcasm. Today鈥檚 snowmobiles are faster and more powerful than ever before, carrying riders deeper and deeper into wolverine country.

If you drew a line on a map around areas where deep snow persists late into May, you would fairly accurately describe the wolverine鈥檚 known historical range: the circumpolar tundra and boreal forests; Alaska and western Canada; the island refugia in the northern Rockies; the Cascades range in Washington and Oregon; the upper Great Lakes; and California鈥檚 Sierra Nevada range, where a long-isolated population genetically more similar to Mongolian and Scandinavian animals than their North American cousins has probably鈥攏obody knows for sure鈥攂een extirpated. That line would also encompass some prime winter recreation areas.

Wolverines require enormous chunks of territory and travel amazing distances looking for food and mates. Using a GPS collar, Inman documented a dispersing male wolverine, M304, traveling 256 miles in 19 days. Then, after a few days鈥 pause, M304 rambled 140 miles in seven days鈥攕traight-line measurements that do not account for the jagged terrain he actually traversed. In the 34 months he was monitored before being killed by a trapper, M304 appeared in eight distinct mountain ranges, in three states, two national parks, and three national forests.

But Inman suspects incursions into the high country by snowmobilers, heli-ski operations鈥攚here skiers access remote areas via helicopter鈥攁nd back-country cross-country skiers may have impacts on wolverine populations. Wolverine territory is remarkably short on food鈥攁n avalanche-killed mountain goat here, a starved-to-death bighorn there鈥攚hich probably influences the animal鈥檚 slow reproductive rate.

鈥淭hey exist at the margins of what鈥檚 possible,鈥 Inman says. 鈥淎nything that could change that energetic balance would have serious repercussions for an animal that reproduces so slowly.鈥

One of Inman鈥檚 radio-collared females lives in an isolated area of the Madison Range that鈥檚 nearly overrun with snow-mobiles in winter. She happens to be one of the smallest animals in Inman鈥檚 study, at one time weighing only 14 pounds when she was captured. While Inman acknowledges that he has not yet compiled the statistical power to de-

finitively prove that winter recreation is harming wolverines, he says the case of the 14-pound female is 鈥渋ntriguing.鈥

鈥淚f there鈥檚 a problem with people snowmobiling and recreating, if wolverines are staying away from areas where these people are because they don鈥檛 want to encounter human activity, is that enough to tip the energy balance?鈥 Inman asks.

It鈥檚 just one of the questions he and his crew of dedicated, sore-legged associates are trying to answer. Like many scarce animals in this country, wolverines adapted to fit a niche defined by inhospitable terrain and food scarcity.

We, meanwhile, don鈥檛 know whether we blithely knock loose their claw holds on survival in the name of fun. The desires of a relatively few people鈥攕nowmobilers, heli-skiers, recreational trappers鈥攖o romp around in a way they see fit may push the wolverine over its last brink before we even know enough about the species to imagine what could have saved it.