Bellevue student helping investigate urban marmots

A Bellevue resident at Gonzaga University is spending the summer researching why the local population of yellow-bellied marmots – those gregarious, burrowing rodents ubiquitous near the Spokane River – are not only surviving but thriving in the urban areas of Spokane.

A Bellevue resident at Gonzaga University is spending the summer researching why the local population of yellow-bellied marmots – those gregarious, burrowing rodents ubiquitous near the Spokane River – are not only surviving but thriving in the urban areas of Spokane.

Kristen Price, a biology major, is assisting Elizabeth Addis, assistant professor of biology at Gonzaga University, and two other senior biology majors, Erin Pazaski from Sammamish and Katie Carr from California.

Most research exploring patterns of species survival has focused on birds; little is known about the physiological mechanisms that allow animals to survive in urban environments. The marmots, whose scientific name is Marmota flaviventris, are thriving in their increasingly urbanized environment.

“Eastern Washington is unusual in having these marmots thrive among the cars, the bikes, the dogs and the people,” Addis says, adding that the beaver-like creatures are typically found in more remote, mountainous areas. “My work focuses on the physiological processes, particularly those associated with stress, that facilitate the yellow-bellied marmots’ existence with us.”

The team has traveled to Palouse Falls, Riverside State Park and along the Centennial Trail near Gonzaga’s campus to trap and tag the marmots and collect feces and fur for hormonal samples and dietary information. So far, the team has collected data on more than 50 marmots.

“We are using glucocorticoid metabolites found in fur and feces to determine if yellow-bellied marmots interpret rural or urban environments as more stressful,” Addis said. “Additionally, we are examining behavioral variation and dietary differences among marmots along an urban-rural continuum.”

The research project will continue for the next several years and its preliminary findings are expected this calendar year.