Project Links
Wawona Road Wildlife Crossing Structures for Pacific Fishers
Yosemite National Park » Wawona Road Wildlife Crossing Structures for Pacific Fishers » Document List
Using camera equipment from the 2009-2011 Yosemite Conservancy funded fisher study, the park has been actively monitoring several drainages with existing culverts along Wawona Road since fall 2011. These drainages act as wildlife movement corridors and serve as potential locations for wildlife crossing structures. Current camera work has shown fishers to be actively using three drainages along Wawona Road. Fishers are especially vulnerable to being hit by vehicles while crossing the road during denning season (March 1 - June 30) when females are searching for food and males are traveling large distances to locate potential mates.
This project would mitigate the road-kill threat by (1) modifying three existing culverts along Wawona Road to include a shelf-style wildlife crossing structure that small to medium sized mammals could use to safely cross underneath the road; and (2) include pre- and post-construction monitoring with remote, motion-sensing cameras to determine what wildlife species are using the drainages as movement corridors. This project is a diverse partnership with Defenders of Wildlife, the U.S. Forest Service, U.C. Berkeley Sierra Nevada Adaptive Management Project (SNAMP), Fisher Study, and the National Park Service. The timing of this project is important as the Pacific fisher's status will be reviewed for listing under the ESA in 2014.