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Download the
North Rainier Management Plan
[Mar 2002]
PDF Format [742KB]
Download
the Draft N. Rainier Management Plan
[May 2001]
PDF Format [1.35MB]
Acknowledgments:
Several individuals contributed to successful completion of the North
Rainier Elk Herd Plan. George Tsukamoto deserves special recognition for
his tireless editorial efforts to improve this report, in addition to
constantly "tweeking" the format to improve the data and information
presented for public review and comment. Lora Leschner, Regional Wildlife
Program Manager, provided editorial comments and helped free my time to
complete the report. Rolf Johnson, Deer and Elk Program Manager, and Kelly
McAllister, District Wildlife Biologist, provided historical information
on elk releases and editorial comments. Dave Ware, Game Program Manager,
helped keep the focus on the value of the herd plans for future management
of elk in Washington. Several Native American Tribes, particularly the
Muckleshoot Indian Tribe, and Wildlife Biologist David Vales, provided
comments and data collected during elk studies that greatly improved the
document content. Chris Madsen with the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission
provided harvest information and comments to also improve this plan.
Other Elk Herd Plans:
Blue
Mountains
Colockum
Hanford
Mt.
St. Helens
North
Cascade (Nooksack)
North
Rainier
Olympic
Selkirk
South
Rainier
Yakima
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NORTH RAINIER ELK HERD PLAN
(March 2002)
Prepared by: Rocky Spencer, District
Wildlife Biologist
EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY
The North Rainier Elk Herd
is one of ten herds residing in the State. The elk herd range is north
of Mt. Rainier, including Pierce and King counties. The core elk distribution
is on the western slopes of the Cascade Mountain Range. Small satellite
populations occur in the foothills and pockets of habitat near urban and
suburban developments. It is an important resource that provides significant
recreational, subsistence, cultural, aesthetic and economic benefits to
Washington citizens and is a valued cultural, subsistence, and ceremonial
resource to the Native American people of the area.
This plan's purpose is to provide
direction for managing the North Rainier elk resource into the future.
This is a five-year plan subject to amendment. Before the fifth year,
this plan should be updated, reevaluated, amended and implemented for
another 5-year period. It will be a valuable reference document and guideline
for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, Tribes, agency cooperators,
landowners, and the general public. Priority management activities will
be implemented as funding and resources become available.
Three primary goals guide the
North Rainier Elk Herd Plan: (1) to manage the elk herd for a sustained
yield; (2) to manage elk for a variety of recreational, educational, and
aesthetic purposes including hunting, scientific study, cultural and ceremonial
uses by Native Americans, wildlife viewing and photography; and (3) to
manage and enhance elk and their habitats to ensure healthy, productive
populations.
Specific elk herd and habitat
management, objectives, problems, and strategies are identified in this
plan. Priority objectives address specific problems in managing this elk
herd, and a variety of strategies have been developed to solve these problems.
The following objectives have been identified:
- Improve the collection of
accurate scientific data to better manage this elk herd.
- Increase elk population
numbers in the following units:
- Snoqualmie (GMU 460),
from 175 to 500 elk
- Green River (GMU 485),
from 150 to 500 elk
- White River (GMU 653),
from 600 to 900 elk, with fall index flights in Mt. Rainier National
Park approaching 600 to 700 elk.
- Manage the North Rainier
elk herd to ensure harvest does not exceed recruitment.
- Provide hunting opportunities
while managing the herd for minimum post-season bull ratio that are
consistent with statewide management plan objectives, currently 12 bulls
per 100 cows.
- Provide for harvest opportunities
of black bear and cougar consistent with population management objectives.
- Recognize and promote viewing
and photographic opportunities that this elk herd provides.
- Work cooperatively with
the Tribes to implement the North Rainier Elk Herd Plan.
- Develop partnership opportunities
to increase the availability, quantity, and quality of elk habitat on
important sites.
Spending priorities have been
identified for the next five years. Achieving spending levels will be
contingent upon available funds and the creation of partnerships. The
recommended priority expenditures for the North Rainier elk herd are as
follows:
| Prioritized Expenditures |
1st year |
5 years |
| Population
estimation using mark recapture surveys at three to five year
intervals (cost-share with Tribes). |
$17,600.00
|
$52,800.00
|
| Herd
composition surveys (cost-share with Tribes). |
$11,500.00
|
$57,500.00
|
| Monitor
harvest and collect age data. |
$10,000.00
|
$50,000.00
|
| Habitat
enhancement on primary winter and summer ranges. |
$10,000.00
|
$50,000.00
|
| Elk augmentation
to the North Rainier herd area. (cost share with tribes) |
$48,400.00
|
$96,800.00
|
| Elk research
needs. (cost share with tribes) |
$20,000.00
|
$100,000.00
|
| TOTAL |
$117,500.00
|
$407,100.00
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