Marmot monitors nearing end of training in Olympic National Park

PORT ANGELES — Teams of volunteer “citizen scientists” are completing their training as part of a volunteer project to study population size and distribution of the Olympic marmot in Olympic National Park.

More than 100 people from the North Olympic Peninsula, Seattle-Tacoma area and as far away as Los Angeles signed on to become marmot monitors.

A $26,300 grant from Washington’s National Parks Fund has paid for the training and for GPS units the volunteers will use in the field.

“The marmot is an iconic species at Olympic,” said Sue Griffin, who heads the monitoring program for the park.

“More than 90 percent of the species lives within park boundaries, so we have a special responsibility to study and safeguard the animal.”

Olympic marmots are in decline in some areas in the park.

This is believed to be due to the encroachment of trees into the meadows where they live and predation by coyotes, both situations possibly related to global warming.

In 2009, legislation was signed that declared the Olympic marmot to be Washington state’s “official endemic mammal.”

Existing only on the North Olympic Peninsula, the Olympic marmot is one of the rarest species of North American marmots They are a protected species in Washington.

The species has evolved in isolation for thousands of years and differs in coloring, vocalization and genetics from the closely related hoary marmots and Vancouver Island marmots.

More in News

A lab mix waits in the rain for the start of the 90th Rhody Festival Pet Parade in Uptown Port Townsend on Thursday. The festival’s main parade, from Uptown to downtown, is scheduled for 1 p.m. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Pet parade

A lab mix waits in the rain for the start of the… Continue reading

Casandra Bruner.
Neah Bay hires new chief of police

Bruner is first woman for top public safety role

Port Townsend publisher prints sci-fi writer’s work

Winter Texts’ sixth poetry collection of Ursula K. Le Guin

Time bank concept comes to Peninsula

Members can trade hours of skills in two counties

Peninsula Home Fund grants open for applications

Nonprofits can apply online until May 31

Honors symposium set for Monday at Peninsula College

The public is invited to the Peninsula College Honors… Continue reading

Bliss Morris of Chimacum, a float builder and driver of the Rhody float, sits in the driver’s seat on Thursday as he checks out sight lines in the 60-foot float he will be piloting in the streets of Port Townsend during the upcoming 90th Rhody Parade on Saturday. Rhody volunteer Mike Ridgway of Port Townsend looks on. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Final touches

Bliss Morris of Chimacum, a float builder and driver of the Rhody… Continue reading

Fireworks not likely for Port Angeles on Fourth

Development at port bars launch from land

Jefferson County, YMCA partner with volunteers to build skate park

Agencies could break ground this summer in Quilcene

Peninsula Behavioral Health is bracing for Medicaid cuts

CEO: Program funds 85 percent of costs

Port of Port Angeles is seeking grant dollars for airport

Funding would support hangars, taxiway repair