FILE- This July 16, 2004 file photo shows a gray wolf at the Wildlife Science Center in Forest Lake, Minn. An Obama administration decision last month to drop gray wolves in the western Great Lakes region from the endangered species list is scheduled to take effect Friday, Jan. 27, 2012. That means in some parts, it could be open season for wolf hunting. (AP Photo/Dawn Villella, File) |
By
John Flesher and Steve Karnowski
Associated Press
/
January 26, 2012
TRAVERSE CITY, Mich.—John
Koski is itching to pick up his rifle after losing dozens of cows to
hungry wolves on his farm in Michigan's Upper Peninsula -- and it
appears he'll soon get his chance.
A
legal shield that has protected gray wolves in the western Great Lakes
region for nearly four decades will disappear Friday when the animal
leaves the federal endangered species list. With that milestone, a
primal struggle that was waged in this rugged backcountry for more than a
century will resume, although in a more restrained fashion.
"It's
about time," said Koski, 67, one of many ranchers eager to begin
shooting wolves that prey on livestock. Likewise, hunters are pushing
for the chance to stalk a foe legendary for its cunning that has long
been off-limits.
"There has
to be a hunt. We're just saturated with wolves here," said Al Clemens,
who already pursues coyotes in the Upper Peninsula backwoods. But
opponents of killing wolves for sport promise a stiff fight before state
agencies.
The removal of
federal protections in Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin, which follows
the same action last year in the Northern Rockies, opens a new chapter
in a long, violent battle between stockmen and wolves -- a colorful part
of the heartland's history.
Unlike
native Indians who revered wolves as spiritual beings, white settlers
despised them as bloodthirsty vermin and shot, poisoned and trapped them
to near extinction by the 1930s. In 1974, the species was declared
endangered and killing wolves became a crime.
Now,
as the federal government bows out, states face the challenge of
protecting enough of the approximately 4,400 wolves that have been
painstakingly brought back here while accommodating enthusiastic hunters
and the ranchers who are tired of collecting bloody carcasses left by
marauding wolf packs.
"We
want to show that we're capable of managing a healthy wolf population,"
said biologist Brian Roell of the Michigan Department of Natural
Resources.
Striking the balance won't be easy. But the wolves could make the ranchers' best efforts difficult anyway.
Miles
Kuschel seldom sees the wolves that prey on cattle at his family's
3,000-acre Rocking K Ranch near Sebeka in northern Minnesota. But he
knows they're out there, lurking in nearby forests by day and prowling
his pastures by night.
On a
recent tour, a thin layer of snow had preserved two sets of wolf tracks
running not quite single-file across a field. Kuschel hears the howling
at night. He believes he lost six calves to wolves in 2011, but doubts
he'll get many chances to take a shot.
"They've survived for centuries because they're an elusive and intelligent animal," he said.
Dale
Lueck, who lives about 65 miles east near Aitkin, Minn., said most
ranchers are too busy to spend nights on wolf patrol. "Who can afford
night vision equipment?" he added with a laugh.After federal protections are lifted, Michigan and Wisconsin will allow people to kill wolves preying on livestock or pets. Farmers with a history of attacks can obtain permits to shoot wolves anywhere on their property. Minnesota will have similar policies, depending on where the ranchers live.
Cheri
Klussendorf, who raises cattle in north-central Wisconsin, said
electric fencing around her 246 acres was no match for the wolf pack
that devoured a 1,400-pound cow in November and a number of calves last
spring. She says she doesn't want to erase wolves from the landscape.
"If I could just keep them away from my cows, they're no problem," Klussendorf said.
In
Michigan's eastern Upper Peninsula, Don Clark said he'll apply for
shoot-on-sight permits but has no illusions he'll be able to keep his
2,700 acres wolf-free. He's begun surrounding his land with 6-foot-high,
woven-wire fencing, which will take up to five years. In the meantime,
he hopes the state will authorize hunting and trapping that would reduce
the U.P. wolf population, estimated at 687. None of the Great Lakes
states have taken that step, although Minnesota -- which has nearly
3,000 wolves, more than any state except Alaska -- is considering a hunt
this fall in which 400 wolves could be killed.
Hunters
have shot or trapped nearly as many in Idaho and Montana since Northern
Rockies wolves were dropped from the endangered list last year.
Clemens,
of Ironwood in the western U.P., has obtained 1,200 signatures on a
pro-hunting petition. The veteran coyote hunter has a white camouflage
outfit perfect for stalking wolves through the snow. He's upgraded from
bullets suitable for coyotes to heavier types that would bring down 80-
to 90-pound wolves. "I'm ready to go," he said.
Wolf
advocates who accept the idea of farmers protecting livestock recoil at
talk of hunting and trapping, which they fear will slash wolf numbers
drastically.
"It's very sad
for me to know that so many wolves will be killed under state
management," said Collette Adkins Giese, a Minnesota-based attorney with
the Center for Biological Diversity.
Nancy
Warren, an activist who lives in the western U.P., said Great Lakes
wolves remain vulnerable to disease and starvation. Mortality rates are
high, especially for pups. -
"If
wolves are living in the forests, raising their pups and not causing
any problems, I see no reason why they can't be left alone," Warren
said.
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