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In the spring of 2019, researchers achieved all of their collaring targets for ungulates and cougars in both areas of the study. This video illustrates how results of the Predator-Prey Project will be used to help inform wildlife management decisions. Information gathered through this process will provide a greater understanding of predator-prey dynamics in communities with wolves, including the impacts of predation on ungulate populations. Researchers are also deploying motion-sensing cameras and audio recorders to collect information on the behavior, interactions, and activity of predators and prey across space and time, and to test the utility of these non-invasive techniques to survey predator and prey populations, Within these study areas, researchers are outfitting deer, elk, wolves, cougars, coyotes, and bobcats with GPS radio collars to obtain information on the survival, sources of mortality, productivity, movements, distribution, and resource use of both predators and prey. Those areas are in Stevens, Pend Oreille, and Okanogan counties. WDFW scientists are collaborating with professors and graduate students from the University of Washington (UW) on this project, focusing their efforts in two study areas with varying levels of wolf presence. The project is studying the impact to ungulates (mule deer, white-tailed deer, and elk) from wolves that have colonized areas where they live, as well as other large and small carnivores such as cougars, bobcats, and coyotes. The Washington Predator-Prey Project is a five-year research effort that began in the winter of 2016-17 to investigate the effects of wolves and their competitors on ungulate populations in managed landscapes.
