The Prince George Citizen

Mountain goat relocation resumes in Olympic National Park

- Elaine THOMPSON

OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK, Wash. — For the second straight summer, mountain goats are flying in Olympic National Park.

Officials this week began rounding up the sure-footed but nonnative mammals from remote parts of the park, where humans introduced them in the 1920s, to relocate them to the Cascade Mountains, where they do belong.

Animal capture specialist­s called “gunners” and “muggers” sedate the animals with darts or capture them in nets, blindfold them, pad their horns and fly them – on slings dangling from a helicopter – to a staging area. There, they’re looked over by veterinari­ans and outfitted with tracking collars before being trucked to the Cascades and once again flown by helicopter, this time into their new alpine habitats.

The relocation­s began last year, following a years-long stretch of planning and public comment, with 115 of the roughly 725 mountain goats in the Olympics being moved to the Cascades.

Officials caught 17 Monday and Tuesday at the start of a two-week goat relocation period, including a six-week-old kid, which got a ride on a mugger’s lap inside the helicopter instead of hanging beneath it.

The Olympics have few natural salt licks. That makes it more likely goats there will be attracted to the sweat, urine and food of hikers, which is potentiall­y endangerin­g. One goat fatally gored a hiker in 2010.

A coalition of state and federal agencies and American Indian tribes is behind the effort, which involves closing parts of the park, including the Seven Lakes Basin and Klahhane Ridge.

The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife plans to release the goats at six sites in the Cascades. They include the Chikamin area in the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest, Preacher Mountain in the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, Hardscrabb­le Ridge and mountain peaks south of Darrington.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY ELAINE THOMPSON ?? A pair of mountain goats hang in slings as they are airlifted by helicopter on Tuesday to Hurricane Ridge in the Olympic National Park, near Port Angeles, Wash.
AP PHOTO BY ELAINE THOMPSON A pair of mountain goats hang in slings as they are airlifted by helicopter on Tuesday to Hurricane Ridge in the Olympic National Park, near Port Angeles, Wash.

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