Wolves off the endangered list - good news, or bad?
After the Department of Interior took wolves off the Endangered Species List in May, Idaho wildlife officials announced a plan, taking effect this month, that would rely on snare and leg-hold trapping and helicopter-borne sharpshooters to kill as many as 75 wolves in mountainous terrain near the Montana border.
Montana's Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks, meanwhile, has extended its wolf hunting season past a Dec. 31 deadline. Just 105 wolves have been taken so far, the New York Times reported earlier this month, and officials wanted hunters to harvest 220.
And starting Jan. 27, barring another court reversal, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will let farmers, hunters and pet owners in Michigan's Upper Peninsula kill wolves that threaten livestock and dogs, the Detroit Free-Press reports.
Since the late 1980s, more than 5,000 wolves have been killed legally, according to an AP review of state and federal records. Hundreds more have been killed illegally over the past two decades in the Northern Rockies alone.
Biologists are confident that neither legal hunts nor poaching will push wolves back to the brink of extinction, the AP reports. And what hunters and ranchers see as a threat, increasing numbers of tourists are appreciating as a mythic symbol of the wild.
EARLIER: Budget deal may allow wolf hunts in Montana, Idaho
Despite
their elusiveness, wolves have become "a powerful economic generator
for tourism" in communities near Yellowstone National Park, says Kurt
Repanshek of National Parks Traveler. A 2006 study projected that Yellowstone tourists who come to watch wolves spend $35 million a year on those trips.The animals are stars elsewhere, as well: In Ely, Minn., the International Wolf Center offers everything from fuzzy wolf slippers (now on sale) to a "Track the Pack" winter study trip through northern Minnesota, while Oregon Wild launched a recent contest to to suggest names for "OR-7," a two-year-old male wolf roaming the Cascade Mountains near Crater Lake National Park. The group hosted two of its own wolf-themed excursions last summer.
And just east of San Diego in the historic mountain town of Julian, the California Wolf Center invites visitors to view highly-endangered Mexican gray wolves, as well as a pack of Alaskan gray wolves.
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