Wolf Pages

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Set aside the guns and traps and let the gray wolf recover

By Josh Laughlin

Published: (Wednesday, Nov 9, 2011) 

Gray wolf recovery in Oregon has hit a rocky road recently, particularly with regard to the Imnaha Pack, Oregon’s first in more than 60 years. Government killing of wolves, driven by a widely professed hatred for the animals by extreme members in the livestock industry, continues to undermine the pack’s viability.

One can’t help but wonder: Are we heading back to the bad old days of wolf removal, or will Oregon’s leadership, including Gov. John Kitzhaber, show restraint as wolves begin to regain a toehold in our state?
The story of wolves in Oregon was the same across much of the Lower 48: The species was exterminated systematically through a government-­sponsored campaign of trapping, poisoning and shooting. The last wolf in Oregon was handed over to authorities for bounty in 1947.

From the first colonies on the Eastern Seaboard through the Great Plains to the Wild West, America’s great landscapes were sanitized of the wolf, and the backcountry was silenced.

In a remarkable wildlife success story comparable to the bald eagle’s, wolves have begun to make a comeback in the West after being reintroduced into Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho in the mid-1990s. As their population in the Rockies rebounded, wolves began to disperse west into neighboring states.

Just recently, state officials confirmed Oregon’s fourth wolf pack near Hells Canyon, and for the first time since the last wolf bounty was paid, a gray wolf has been confirmed in the Oregon Cascades. While many Oregonians are excited by the news, the fate of two Imnaha Pack members hangs in the balance.

On Oct. 5, Cascadia Wildlands, the Center for Biological Diversity and Oregon Wild filed a legal complaint and were immediately granted an emergency stay that temporarily halted the execution of two more of the pack’s four remaining members — the male pack leader and a yearling. These wolves, whose territory lies east of Joseph, allegedly were involved in the Sept. 22 death of a calf. As winter approaches, reducing the pack to a young pup and its mother likely would render Oregon’s first pack not viable.

The Imnaha Pack has been under fire in the past. Extremists in the ranching industry have been calling for the pack’s elimination, and the state killed two of its members just this May after a series of livestock losses. In 2010, the same conservation coalition halted efforts to kill two other pack members through a legal challenge.

A young Imnaha Pack member also died this spring shortly after it was fitted with a radio collar, further whittling the pack’s numbers. It has been tough going for the Imnaha Pack since it first established itself in Wallowa County in 2008.

Cascadia Wildlands recognizes that lethal control of gray wolves under extreme circumstances may be the price of recovery, but only when wolf numbers have begun to stabilize. With approximately 23 confirmed wolves in Oregon today compared to 1.3 million cattle, we believe the state’s heavy-handed approach with the Imnaha Pack is unwarranted this early in the recovery process.

Moreover, the state Legislature recently passed a compensation package that reimburses livestock producers who lose livestock to wolves. With so few wolves in Oregon, is it fair to get compensated and then kill wolves on top of that?

The state of Oregon has a legal mandate to help wolves recover, not cave in to political pressure from an extreme sector of the livestock industry. That same sector also was responsible for bringing a flurry of bills to the Legislature last session to weaken the compromise Oregon Wolf Plan and make it easier to kill Oregon’s wolves. A flood of public opposition helped defeat the bills.

Our fear is that what is happening to the Mexican gray wolf in the Southwest may happen here in Oregon. After federal reintroduction in 1998, the fledgling population plateaued and, at the end of 2010, the multi-state recovery area registered a scant 50 animals. Heavy-handed management, poaching, an overly restricted recovery area and other threats have contributed to the stagnation. The effort recently was deemed “at risk of failure” by the federal agency overseeing the recovery.

Oregon can do better. Our Oregon wolves deserve better. There is room for a robust wolf population in Oregon, a state that values native wildlife and healthy landscapes. We call on Oregon’s leadership to hang up the guns and traps, refocus on nonlethal and conflict-reduction efforts, and proceed with its critically important job of helping wolves recover in Oregon.

Josh Laughlin is the campaign director of Eugene-based Cascadia Wildlands, online at www.cascwild.org

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