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Increasing Number of Gray Wolves

blake

Life Member
NEWS!

Growing wolf numbers renew tension over animal<O:p</O:p

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</st1:City>Ely, <st1:State w:st="on">Minn.</st1:State> (AP) - The growing number of gray wolves in <ST1:p<st1:State w:st="on">Minnesota </st1:State>and other north central states is fueling a backlash against the predator, which is still protected under federal law.

In <st1:State w:st="on">Minnesota</st1:State>, <st1:State w:st="on">Wisconsin</st1:State>, and <st1:State w:st="on"><ST1:pMichigan</st1:State>, thriving wolf packs are blamed for killing cattle and household pets. A large number of wolves were shot illegally during the last deer hunting season. Now there are efforts under way to make it easier to legally shoot problem wolves.

For many people, seeing a wolf in the wild is a rare opportunity. To Phil Miller, it's another day's work.

Miller is a Wisconsin DNR pilot who helps track wolves here in his Piper Aircraft. On a recent sun-washed morning, Miller was flying along the northern Minnesota-Wisconsin border listening to a radio for the faint pings transmitted by a wolf's radio collar. These days, it's getting easier to find wolves.

"I think when we first started you know we were tracking maybe five or six, seven animals, something like that,'' he said. "This year we were up close to 30, 32 just out of our station.''

The radio starts beeping. That means Miller is getting close.

"Right down there, see those tall pines? They're right there.''<O:p></O:p>
A string of dark dog-like shapes are following a path in fresh snow.

"Have you got a count on them there yet? There's kind of a pile of them,'' Miller says.

This pack has 11 wolves - the largest pack Miller has seen in 18 years.

These days Miller is also finding more dead wolves. Federal wildlife officials say 16 were known killed illegally in <st1:State w:st="on">Minnesota</st1:State>, <st1:State w:st="on">Wisconsin</st1:State> and <st1:State w:st="on"><ST1:pMichigan</st1:State> during the deer hunting season late last fall. That number is probably a fraction of the total number killed.

As impressive as wolves look from hundreds of feet in the air, they can be terrifying a few feet away - and deadly.

Just east of <st1:City w:st="on">Ely</st1:City>, <st1:State w:st="on">Minn.</st1:State>, Cheryl Anderson has seen them on her property, and last week <st1:City w:st="on"><ST1:pAnderson</st1:City>'s 5-year-old St. Bernard, Missy, didn't come home after an outing.

"Just went, take the dogs for a run on Sunday afternoon about 12:30 (p.m.), and my St. Bernard kind of got off the trail where we were,'' Anderson said. "And I could see her head was down, and she was sniffing something, and kind of excited and just zooming around.''

The dog didn't respond to <st1:City w:st="on">Anderson</st1:City>'s calls and they were soon separated. After two days, <st1:City w:st="on"><ST1:pAnderson</st1:City> found the dog's gleaming white ribs on a bed of pink stained snow with thick fur tufts strewn about. Missy's head looked untouched. Wildlife officials determined wolves killed and ate the dog.

<st1:City w:st="on"><ST1:pAnderson</st1:City> looks exhausted as she struggles to control her emotions.

"Anyway, found my dog, what was left of her,'' she said. "Ain't much left of her. Ripped up by the wolves.''

Approximately 3,000 wolves roam <st1:State w:st="on">Minnesota</st1:State>, with another 600-plus each in <st1:State w:st="on">Wisconsin</st1:State> and <st1:State w:st="on"><ST1:pMichigan</st1:State>.

It was a different story in 1974 when <st1:State w:st="on"><ST1:pMinnesota</st1:State> was home to the last 1,000 wolves in the lower 48 states, and they came under federal protection.

<st1:State w:st="on"><ST1:pMinnesota</st1:State>'s current recovery plan calls for a population of at least 1,251 wolves; a number exceeded many years ago.

Three times the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service tried to remove federal protections from <ST1:pGreat Lakes region wolves and three times they failed, thwarted in federal court by conservation groups arguing the wolves still need protection.

Now, opponents of federal protection are heading to court.

Ely resident Gerald Tyler said wolves have lost their fear of people and present a danger to people, livestock and pets.

"This wolf is standing 12 feet from the vehicle I was in,'' <ST1:p<st1:City w:st="on">Tyler</st1:City> said, holding a photograph. "My son took this out the window of the vehicle. Not even looking at you.''

In mid-January, <st1:City w:st="on"><ST1:pTyler </st1:City>and cattle farmer Dale Lueck of Aitkin filed notice of intent to sue to get a court to end federal protection of wolves. <st1:City w:st="on"><ST1:pTyler</st1:City> says the wolf has rebounded well past the point that it needs protection.

"The Fish and Wildlife Service has not followed the law. The law requires determining when recovery has taken place then to act accordingly,'' he said. "They have not done so.''

<st1:City w:st="on"><ST1:pTyler</st1:City> is part of a trend that shows attitudes toward wolves, which had been improving, are changing for the worse, Wisconsin state wolf biologist Adrian Wydeven said.

Among the three states, northern <st1:State w:st="on"><ST1:pWisconsin</st1:State> accounts for half the wolves taken illegally. Wydeven said he thinks keeping the wolves on the list of protected animals could be backfiring.

"Social tolerance is continuing to erode on wolves, and it's been one of our big concerns over not being able to get wolves de-listed is (that) this erosion of social tolerance in places where wolves are living right now,'' he said.

Removing the wolf from federal protection has wide support among state wildlife managers in <st1:State w:st="on">Minnesota</st1:State>, <st1:State w:st="on">Wisconsin</st1:State>, and <st1:State w:st="on"><ST1:pMichigan</st1:State>, but not much from conservation groups. The wolves were de-listed for a matter of months in 2007, while the Humane Society of the <st1:country-region w:st="on"><ST1:pUnited States</st1:country-region> blocked the last move to de-list the gray wolf.

Howard Goldman, the <st1:State w:st="on"><ST1:pMinnesota </st1:State>state director for the Humane Society, said the government can't de-list in only three states.

"We don't believe you can simply designate a certain area and argue that the population has been restored in that area; consequently this species has recovered,'' Goldman said. "Because the framework has to be recovery nationally.''

De-listing would mean increased opportunities for state game managers to kill problem wolves, and the potential for some people to shoot wolves to protect their own pets or livestock. It could also mean a public wolf hunt at some point in the future.

Monica Engebretson, senior program associate with Born Free USA, said de-listing could mean open season on wolves: "The act has worked, and so we just want to make sure the species has completely recovered, and there's no rush to de-list any of these populations before we are sure that they have recovered.''

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officials said the agency's goal is to de-list the region's wolves in a biologically sound and legally defensible manner. Federal biologists are now reviewing gray wolf recovery and will issue recommendations at some point in the coming months.

Wydeven wants to see the debate settled.

"It's been very frustrating, very difficult. As a delisted species we had a more flexible management system in place. We could more routinely deal with depredation problems, with wolves that die,'' he said. "With wolves again on the Endangered Species List it becomes more of a crisis management situation, and it just becomes more difficult to deal with all these. We have limited options to just what we can do.''

Gerald Tyler will be able to formally file suit in mid-March after his 60-day notice has expired.

This post is for informational purposes only.
 
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