Latest scale aims to weigh if chubby endangered B.C. marmots have more babies
Vancouver Island marmots can be a little shy when it comes to revealing their weight.
After two years of work, technicians and researchers with Vancouver Island University and the Wilder Institute are ready to deploy their latest version of an outdoor scale this summer to assess the health of the critically endangered species and determine if larger marmots have more babies.
“Body condition is a good indicator for survival, but also, perhaps more importantly, it can increase the fecundity of the females, so they can have maybe more pups in a litter,” said Mike Lester, a technician in the faculty of science and technology at the university.
“And if there’s just a very small increase in the average litter size, that might be the difference between the marmots on a decline or rescuing the species from extinction.”


