ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Minnesota trapper uses CPR to save wayward marten

After unintentionally catching a marten in his bobcat trap, a Minnesota man revived the animal using mouth-to-mouth resuscitation

Marten.jpg
A trapper revived this pine marten after accidentally catching it in a bobcat set in northern Minnesota.
Contributed / Nicholas Prachar

When a northern Minnesota trapper recently checked one of his traps set in hopes of catching a bobcat, he discovered an illegal catch.

An out-of-season pine marten was in the trap and appeared to be dead. As is required by law, the trapper called a DNR conservation officer to report the illegal catch.

“He called me almost in tears saying he had a pine marten in his bobcat set and that he didn't want the animal to die,” said conservation officer Nicholas Prachar.

“And as I was on the phone with him, he said, ‘Oh, hold on, the eyes just moved.’ And next thing I know he hung up on me.”

The man called Prachar back a few minutes later to say he had revived the animal.

ADVERTISEMENT

“He described to me in great detail how he actually put his lips on the nose of the pine marten and blew air into it.”

The trapper put the animal into his enclosed all-terrain vehicle.

Marten 2.jpg
A pine marten in northern Minnesota in 2019.
Contributed / Larry Reis

Prachar drove to the scene in northern Beltrami County and helped release the revived and “very angry” pine marten.

He also viewed a video taken by the trapper’s wife that confirmed the sequence of events. The trapper’s response was so unusual, Prachar included it in his weekly report of notable activity.

The trapper told Prachar he was so unsettled by the incident he decided to collect all ten of the bobcat traps he had set in the area. The DNR did not release the trapper’s name, and said the man did not want to be interviewed.

Prachar believes the pine marten survived the body-grip trap designed to quickly kill an animal because it is much smaller than the bobcat the trap is designed for.

Out-of-season pine marten catches are relatively rare, according to Prachar, who said he fields about one such call a season. But he’s never had one that involved CPR and a revived animal.

“It scampered off into the woods and lived to tell the story to its friends,” he said.

ADVERTISEMENT

______________________________________________________

This story was written by one of our partner news agencies. Forum Communications Company uses content from agencies such as Reuters, Kaiser Health News, Tribune News Service and others to provide a wider range of news to our readers. Learn more about the news services FCC uses here.

What To Read Next
Get Local

ADVERTISEMENT