WILD BILL
Why It’s Hard to Hail Wolf Delisting
By Bill Schneider, 2-01-07
It’s party time, right? Time to celebrate the amazing comeback of Canis lupus irremotus, the Northern Rocky Mountain Wolf.
A mere twelve years ago, a handful of wolves hung out in the far north of Glacier Park, a tenuous extension of a Canadian population, plus perhaps a lone disperser or two lurking in the depths of our deepest wilderness looking for a mate. But essentially, the master predator was extinct in the New West.
Now on Monday, January 29, 2007, we hear the brass in the Department of the Interior brag that the wolf is back, recovered, and ready to be removed from the protection of the Endangered Species Act, a historic victory in wildlife conservation, the end of the game.
But why am I not celebrating? And why does it feel like we’re in the fifth inning instead of the ninth inning?
First off, there should be agreement, but I see very little. When we delisted other high profile species like the brown pelican, American alligator, peregrine falcon and bald eagle, we agreed the time was right and nobody stood up to protest the delisting. But no such agreement on wolves. Biologically, in the official recovery zone (Idaho, Montana and Wyoming), we probably agree the wolf has successfully re-established itself in this part of its historic range, but this is probably only five percent of its total historic range. Other high profile endangered species re-occupied almost all of their historic range before delisting.
But peregrine falcons eat pigeons, not domestic livestock or elk, so nobody cares. No Pigeon Unlimited to protest premature delisting. Outside my office here on Last Chance Gulch in Helena, a peregrine has moved into downtown Helena and started decimating our pigeon overpopulation, but do we care? No, we cheer. Kill them all, Perry.
Okay, I guess there is some agreement. We can agree falcons are different that wolves and that the delisting process has a double standard.
And wolf lovers and haters have agreed, mostly at least, that we won’t seek recovery in Colorado or Utah or Kansas. Less than historic range, less than total recovery, is acceptable for such a controversial species. In this three-state area, though, we must restore a viable population and guarantee its future, and the backers of wolf reintroduction seriously disagree that we’ve done this.
Before the official announcement conference call finished, green groups were emailing press releases opposing delisting. “Idaho and Wyoming have state management plans that are geared toward wolf eradication, not wolf conservation,” announced Defenders President Rodger Schlickeisen.
“The nation’s progress toward wolf recovery will grind to a halt under this plan,” said Rob Edward, Director of Carnivore Restoration for Sinapu. Edwards says his group and others will sue if the current plan is (when?) approved.
But here’s the real reason why I’m not celebrating. We had a chance to do this right, but failed.
I confess to being from Montana, so this may smack of bias, but why couldn’t Idaho and Wyoming do it like Montana? The Big Sky State does a lot of things wrong, but in this case, they have done the wolf thing a hundred times better than their neighbors. Montana wrote a reasonable management plan and our governor is not out on the statehouse steps whipping up the eradicate-them-again crowd by saying kill 85 percent the wolves or lobbying for an aerial gunning funding in the legislature. Instead, Montana is preparing for delisting by setting up a wolf depredation compensation board.
I’m not in a party mood because I want the wolf controversy to be over. I’d like to write about the great triumph over the forces of extinction, but instead, I’m going to write many articles about protests and lawsuits and continuing conflicts among our citizens. And Idaho and Wyoming made it this way with their hard-line, inflammatory style that only prolongs the debate. Compared to what’s going on in Idaho and Wyoming, the wolf isn’t even controversial in Montana, and those two states are going to string out delisting litigation and bitter controversy for years when it could be over in months. As I’ve already stated several times, it’s so self-defeating. All we end up with is more bitterness and more wolves.
But you have to admire dedication. Idaho and Wyoming have tried so hard to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
And now, we face the misnamed public involvement phase. I know the FWS has to do it, but I can tell you with scientific accuracy what will happen. Somewhere around 90 percent of public comments will oppose delisting or at least favor delaying it, but it won’t matter. The public input will have zero impact on the final decision, which is firmly dialed in. The FWS will approve delisting after the mandatory public involvement phase, even if the agency gets 10 million comments and 99.99 percent of the people oppose it.
As soon as the courts allow delisting, which I predict will not happen during the tenure of Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne, we immediately face another bitter battle over the ethics of hunting wolves. All three states plan wolf hunting seasons, and the very idea of it will launch another controversy. And I am not looking forward to it.
I’ve hunted all my life, which is a long time, but I can’t imagine going out to shoot a wolf. I can see people doing it to reinvigorate their hatred of wolves, feds and enviros, but for sport? Seems a little like shooting the neighbor’s German shepherd. Really, can this be fun? Right now, state wildlife agencies are convinced that people will be lined up around the block to get wolf permits, and they might be right, but I wonder what would happen if people didn’t want to shoot a big dog?
Another thing that bums me out is that wolf reintroduction and recovery could’ve have been about science instead of politics. Right now, Idaho and Wyoming have swollen chests and believe they have the winning political hand. Hence the hard-line attitude. After all, they have their man, Secretary Kempthorne, in charge.
Well, Idaho and Wyoming, here’s a political gut check. Because you have made it so easy for them, green groups will file a series of lawsuits and probably win a few of them and definitely drag out the final approval for delisting for at least 696 days, which is when the next President moves into the White House and starts making appointments. And he or she might not be a Republican, and he or she might appoint somebody like Carl Pope or Rodger Schlickeisen as Secretary of the Interior. If that happens, you might wish you had not played political hardball when you could’ve ended the wolf controversy in 2007 and gotten a decent deal.
One thing that does tickle me is that--again thanks to Idaho and Wyoming--we’ll have wolves in other states outside the recovery zone, in Colorado, Oregon, Washington, Utah, and perhaps other states. While we fight over delisting for the next two or three years, the wolf population could easily double! Wolves aren’t like bears; they’re breeding machines. I feel safe in saying that some of those new wolves will pioneer new territory in other states.
At the end of the day, I know I should be celebrating, but it’s so hard.
Note: Refer to the companion article, How Many Wolves Is Enough?
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Comments
Ironically, Wyoming was offered as liberal a trophy-hunting "take" on wolves as you could possibly imagine (hundreds of wolves), but the ag interests rejected that offer out of hand, shooting for the pure solution of labeling wolves shoot-on-sight predators, with the not-so-secret goal of killing so many wolves that it would overshoot killing all the "predator"-labeled wolves, but also put a considerable dent in the "trophy"-status wolves.
Trophy wolves and wolves with home territories in the parks often follow elk herds into predator country, where they would be vulnerable to an all-out predator control effort. Notification of Game and Fish, that wolves have been taken, is so delayed that the USFWS-minimum number of 15 breeding pairs and 100-150 wolves could easily be knocked down before G&F;could announce that all wolf killing should stop -- predator or trophy.
I don't think that would wipe out all Wyoming wolves -- there'd still be a core population in Yellowstone -- but one hunting/predator control season could knock Wyoming wolf numbers back to dozens, rather than the hundreds of today.
Yet with no Wyoming delisting, wolf numbers and territory will continue to grow, triggering more conflict and possibly allowing Wyoming wolves to expand and set up homes in Utah and Colorado. Ag groups are winning at one level (continuing the fight against the feds), but losing at another (up to their keisters in wolves).
Every single one of those 99.9 who want more wolves and live out of state are voting to tax the residents of the three states to provide them entertainment. No amount of money is too great as long as you can force someone else to pay it.
I have never heard anyone address the minimum 7 packs required in Yellowstone, and what happens if they leave, and it is almost a certainty that they will eventually. There is no historic evidence of anything even remotely approaching 7 packs of wolves being able to survive in that limited area. In fact there is no evidence of any permanent resident wolves there.
When they have finished the elk down to where they can no longer survive in Yellowstone they will leave for greener pastures.
Where will that leave Wyoming if we are responsible for maintaining 7 packs?
By the way have either of you delved into why FWS stated on their June 30, 2006 report that they did not do a March population count, but on their January 19, 2007 report they state they counted 6588 in March 2006?
I would think environmental reporters would be very interested in that discrepancy.
Incidentally the ranchers who were given the questionnaire were the only ones who actually predicted the problems and even they underestimated them. The two environmental groups of course expected paradise.
This is an honest question and maybe I missed the poll, but who exactly did the poll in Idaho with 70 percent favoring introduction? And when was it done? No one I know has ever been asked including myself. Was it an open house that anyone could attend?
Thank you for looking. I understand it would be hard to poll everyone, but what kind of statistical method did they use or do use? And inferences is taking clues and making your best guess. It is just like seeing the approval rating on president, has anyone that you know been asked? I sure have not nor do I know anyone that has. Just because the news says a certain presidents approval rating is down or up does not make it so, because if we are taking information from 1000 people and then making an inference about something that effects thousand or millions, it can not be trusted. If you tell people long enough that 95 percent of America agrees on something, you'll get the rest because those are just too great of numbers to overcome. If you tell them it is 50-50, now it is not so easy to swing things one direction. It would be interesting to see how the states affected by wolves would actually vote if everyone in those states were given the opportunity to do so. I really have no idea how it would turn out. Thank you.
I found it interesting that this study claims all of the wolves were eliminated by westerners. No mention what happened to the eastern wolves before the west was settled. And of course like all good environmentalists she has to throw in the snotty "Little Red Riding Hood" theory.
Anyhow here the link:
http://www.colorado.edu/conflict/full_text_search/AllCRCDocs/94-65.htm
http://easternwolf.org/linkedfiles/QuantStudyAttitudestowardWolves.pdf
JR, what's your source for your assertion that "cows don't react like wolf prey"? What does that even mean? Some wild prey animals stand and fight, some break and run, and some appear to just ignore wolves, presumably because the wolves aren't actively on the hunt just then.
I suspect if you talk to anyone who has seen wolves around cattle, you'd find pretty much that same range of behaviors. And the result is the same: sometimes wolves make a meal of cattle, sometimes they fail, and sometimes they weren't trying anyway.
A key difference between cattle and elk is that normal fences (under five feet high) will contain cattle, but not elk (nor bison). Thus, elk can respond to wolf predation by leaving an area, making themselves less predictable. Cattle aren't supposed to do this -- people want cattle in predictable areas for a lot of obvious reasons.
Thus, cattle can be quite predictably located by wolves, which makes hunting them far less costly energetically.
Sure, wolves may take a little while to figure out that those blocky black critters ARE prey, but they do figure it out. Heck, they even figure out that llamas are edible, and they're about as dissimilar to native prey as you can get (maybe excepting emus & ostriches).
The predictability of locating them, along with a higher meat:mass ratio, can even make them preferred prey. The immediate logic is pretty understandable, Barry Lopez and the "conversation of death" nothwithstanding.
"Idaho should have wolves in the wilderness and roadless areas in the central part of the state. Agree or disagree?
This question was asked again since the state’s wolf plan was debated last legislative session. 42% of Idaho residents said we should have wolves in the wilderness and roadless areas in the central part of the state, while 39% disagreed. 18% neither agreed nor disagreed.
• When this question was asked in 1995, 47% of Idahoan’s agreed with the statement, 38%
disagreed, and only 15% of respondents could neither agree nor disagree."
So in both 1995 and 2003 there was a plurality of support, but not a majority, and the support level dropped from 47 to 42 percent over those eight years. In my opinion there has been growing ambivilance as the wolf population grows and causes more depredations on livestock and the perceived negative impacts on big game. Not only that, but the question asked both times was targeted at wolves in the wilderness and roadless areas in central Idaho and now the wolves are in areas with roads and in more than just central Idaho. No doubt Idahoans tolerance of wolves is higher in Wilderness, and I for one am not surprised that there remains a core of opposition to wolves (not that I count myself in that group by the way).
All of the studies kind of give lie to the theory that 70% of residents wanted wolves.
The residents of the states in the 3 states that have not been affected, namely those in towns far from wolves are not going to be very happy either when they find out how much it is going to cost the residents to manage the things, and they get a bill.
There will always be more support for more wolves among those who suffer no ill effects, have no responsibility, and are getting what they want at someone else's expense.
I do have Bath's study on my computer. He did some interesting things with number, but the question was always about wolves in Yellowstone. Only ranchers correctly predicted what has actually happened.
Here is Bath's study.
http://www.cnr.uidaho.edu/wlf520/pdf/BathandBuchanan.pdf
,
The real problem is to get the wolves to prey on wildlife and only wildlife. If they do, the system is self regulating and we won't have to manage the predators, we'll only have to manage the prey items so that both preadators and hunters are happy.
If starving wolves couldn't get to domestic animals then we can start focusing on real issues like education, water rights, and civil liberties. How many people's lifestyle is actually threatened by wolves? Their is a handful, and they should have every right to shoot wolves on site and be reimbursed for lost livestock. But truthfully, a calf lost to a wolf is the same as one lost to disease one lost to weather or one lost to injury. Not that ranchers need any more reasons to lose cattle, but I don't think it is putting anyone out of business. And those are the only people that have a right to complain about wolves. 95% of those that are yelling and screaming about wolves aren't even indirectly effected by wolves. It is just something that irritates them. Like gay rights or abortion. Even though their life and family is not directly effected by these things, it absolutely just burns their chaps to know its happening.
Wolves are a welcome site in Idaho. They should be managed as any other lion or bear. They should be lethally removed at the first sign of dining on domestics, landowners and ranchers should be reimbursed for takings involving wolves. Everybody else should clean up their neighborhoods and have a meaningful conversation with their kids.
"Wolves are very destructive of our culture and our ranching and hunting economy. Our culture and heritage of hunting game animals are so important here that they are enshrined in our Montana Constitution. And raising livestock is not a hobby here — it is not done only to provide a movie set for tourists, but it is a way of life for many of us.
For a century, hunters in Montana have fostered huntable populations of deer, elk, moose, wild sheep and goats. It is only hunters who have paid millions of dollars and volunteered millions of hours to cultivate our game herds. We think of these herds as a savings account for our children and grandchildren, that we may pass on the traditions of our culture and our heritage to them.
Without so much as an apology, much less an invitation, outsiders have brought wolves to Montana with the clear intent of feeding them with our carefully nurtured game herds — our savings account for our grandchildren.
Wolves are decimating our game herds. A 30-year game warden with a career invested in the area just north of Yellowstone Park told a legislative committee in Montana that wolves are pouring out of the park "like locusts" and turning the country they invade into a "biological desert." When wolves have consumed the game, they won't feed on grass and bark, they will disperse and turn on the livestock that supports Montana's ranching families and communities."
This article demonstrates the problems that folks have to deal with when the wolves become unafraid of humans, and they have no reason to fear people at all.
http://www.azcentral.com:80/news/articles/0131endangeredwolf31-ON.html
I don't know if a lot of those who feel what they want should take priority over the right of someone else to use their property are property owners themselves or what.
Some years ago when they disposed fo the beaver in DC who started chewing down cherry trees, I wrote to all of the enviro groups that I belonged to because they had not uttered a single protest over destroying nature that way. Only the editor of the Sierra magazine wrote me back and she said that they could not put up with wildlife in the city, but someone had to sacrifice to make a home for them. When I asked how they chose who had to do the sacrificing, she said "that's why we have elections" . Needless to say that was during the Clinton years. I have never renewed a single membership in those groups since.
I think the same attitude still exists.
A former Montana game warden seems to think that wolves don't belong on private lands. http://www.casperstartribune.net/articles/2007/02/09/news/regional/54989f55c5c9f17b8725727b007e5fb8.txt
>>>
Wolves and related canids such as coyotes and dogs contract the disease by eating animals that carry granulosus in larval form. After the granulosus matures inside the host, its eggs are spread through the animal's feces. Grazing animals then pick up the disease by coming into contact with the feces.
The diseased elk near Yellowstone had cysts "from the size of marbles to the size of baseballs" on its lungs and liver, said retired state game warden Hank Fabich, who shot the elk in Paradise Valley.
"I'd killed elk there for 30 years but I'd never seen anything like that," Fabich said, adding that he blamed the incident on the introduction of wolves to Yellowstone a decade ago. "I don't have any problems with wolves in limited numbers. But there's no place for wolves on private property or on ranch lands.
<<<
Now the Native Americans are getting ready to do something since the wolf delisting is so sad for their cultural heritage song and dance again.
None of this makes any sense.
Idaho & Wyoming can stick with, well, their "highly profitable" ranching industry, disease infested elk, and industrialized landscape. We welcome the outta state tourists here in Montana (just so long as they don't build some obnoxious trophy home right on the banks of the river)
"Without so much as an apology, much less an invitation, outsiders have brought wolves to Montana with the clear intent of feeding them with our carefully nurtured game herds"
Since the PI quote was the extent of your post there, I would assume you agree with the tone.
and in another post:
"We who have grown up in the rural environment over the past 50-70 years know people who are passionate, like you, over defending what you have established. On the other side there are animal advocates that see us as the problem to be eliminated to re-establish Nature's perceived balance. We don't do a very good job working together."
So I guess, no, you never directly referred to "out-of-state wolf-luvers"; but I agree that I may have overstated your tone.
=========================
And I also confess that you imply that much of the rancor over wolves is the result of the hard stances taken by extremists at both ends of the spectrum. And that the name calling (which I think I just participated in...) get us nowhere towards helathy wildlife management.
So in that vein, I will say a couple of things: For an effective wolf population ot be managed, 1) ranchers will need to be compensated for livestock losses due to predation, and 2) Some wolves, which predate on livestock, will have to be killed.
And that SSS as a, shal we callit "wildlife management tool" will have to be genuinely regarded as illeagl poaching by law-abiding citizens.
Without all sides (forgetting the extremists for a moment) agreeing on principles like these, I see only a string of court cases lining the future.
"And I also confess that you imply that much of the rancor over wolves is the result of the hard stances taken by extremists at both ends of the spectrum. And that the name calling (which I think I just participated in...) get us nowhere towards helathy wildlife management.
So in that vein, I will say a couple of things: For an effective wolf population ot be managed, 1) ranchers will need to be compensated for livestock losses due to predation, and 2) Some wolves, which predate on livestock, will have to be killed.
And that SSS as a, shal we callit "wildlife management tool" will have to be genuinely regarded as illeagl poaching by law-abiding citizens.
Without all sides (forgetting the extremists for a moment) agreeing on principles like these, I see only a string of court cases lining the future."
-------
I quoted the Seattle Times article without expressing any opinion of agrement. I brought it to the community's attention as it represented a point of view and tried to tie it to 'my opinion':
"We who have grown up in the rural environment over the past 50-70 years know people who are passionate, like you (Marion), over defending what you have established. On the other side there are animal advocates that see us as the problem to be eliminated to re-establish Nature's perceived balance. We don't do a very good job working together."
У меня такой вопрос,кто что интересное подскажет буду признателен.
Мы с друзьями собираемся поехать в круиз по просторам России и ближнего зарубежья месяца на два на своих машинах,но не как не можем согласовать маршрут,если у кого уже был опыт такого путешествия,может,что посоветуете.Девчонок с собой не берем,думаем,что во все городах России с этим не будет проблем,если у кого будут рекомендации и в вопросе отдыха с девушками тоже буду признателен.
С уважением Сеньчик
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С уважением,
Александра.
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