The wandering animal crossed much of Oregon and could reach California
By Tracie Cone
The Associated Press
Published: (Sunday, Dec 25, 2011)
A young gray wolf has become a local
media darling after meandering hundreds of miles into historic new
territory in southwest Oregon, but his presence now within a two-day
jaunt of the California border has even more significance in the Golden
State.
If the juvenile’s wanderlust continues
southward, experts say he could start the repopulation of a vanished
species in California, where threatened and endangered species
historically have relied on the help of man.
“I can’t think of another species that was
completely extirpated in California that has returned,” said Michael
Stopher, who has been monitoring the wolf for the California Department
of Fish and Game. “As a scientist, seeing the possible restoration of
our historic mega fauna thrills me.”
Gray wolves are much bigger than coyotes
and are the ancestors of domestic dogs. They stand three-feet at the
shoulder with massive heads, a bite powerful enough to snap a bone, and
paws up to six-inches wide.
The last gray wolf in California was killed
in 1924 about 50 miles from the Oregon border by a trapper intent on
making the West safe for cattle. Livestock ranchers are watching warily
this lone wolf’s progress too.
“There’s going to be a lot of pressure
elsewhere before it gets here,” said Billy Flournoy, 70, whose family
has been ranching in Modoc County on the state’s northern border since
1871. “We’ll have more problems with coyotes and mountain lions. Wolves
like bigger prey.”
The story of the wolf known as OR-7 — the
seventh affixed with a GPS collar in Oregon — is linked to a decision in
1995 to reintroduce a pack of gray wolves from Canada into Idaho and
areas around Yellowstone National Park.
The wolves were protected from hunters by
the Endangered Species Act and multiplied beyond anyone’s dreams. In
1999 wolves migrated into Oregon, which state officials say now has 24
in the northeastern corner that abuts Idaho and Washington State.
Typically only the alpha male and alpha
females breed, though the others share pup-rearing duties. In September,
OR-7 set out on his big adventure, and a satellite has recorded every
move.
“He went out looking for girls, that’s how I like to put it,” Stopher said.
In three months, he has zigzagged for 730
miles across the Blue Mountains and high desert plains, killing at least
one elk along the way. He ended up outside of Medford on Mt. McLaughlin
in the Cascades, 300 crow-fly miles away from home.
“If he climbed high enough, he would have been able to see Mt. Shasta” in California, said Stopher.
That’s as close as he has come so far,
though Stopher, the department’s environmental program manager, has been
preparing for years for the possible migration of wolves into
California.
No comments:
Post a Comment