January 29, 2012 by John McCoy
A Mexican gray wolf at Sevilleta National Wildlife Refuge (AP Photo)
Researchers in New Mexico are trying to teach captive Mexican gray
wolves to dislike beef. The idea is to prevent the wolves from killing
cattle once they’re reintroduced into the wild.
It’s an interesting premise, and it might just work on the wolves
awaiting relocation. One wonders, though, if the offspring of those
wolves would retain their parents’ distaste for beef. The researchers
seem to think they would; frankly I have doubts.
Interesting reading, though, from the Associated Press’ Susan Montoya Bryan:
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Wildlife
managers are running out of options when it comes to helping Mexican
gray wolves overcome hurdles that have thwarted reintroduction into
their historic range in the Southwest.
Harassment and rubber bullets haven’t
worked, so they’re trying something new — a food therapy that has the
potential to make the wolves queasy enough to never want anything to do
with cattle again.
As in people, the memories associated
with eating a bad meal are rooted in the brain stem, triggered any time
associated sights and smells pulse their way through the nervous
system.
Wildlife managers are trying to tap
into that physiological response in the wolves, hoping that feeding
them beef laced with an odorless and tasteless medication will make
them ill enough to kill their appetite for livestock.
Cattle depredations throughout
southwestern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona have served as an
Achilles’ heel for the federal government’s efforts to return the
wolves.
Conditioned taste aversion — the
technical term for what amounts to a simple reaction — is not a silver
bullet for boosting the recovery of the Mexican wolf, but some
biologists see it as one of few options remaining for getting the
program back on track after nearly 14 years of stumbling.
“Just the very fact that the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service is trying something new ought to send the message
that they really are seriously concerned about the ranchers’ concerns,”
said Dan Moriarty, a professor and chair of the psychological sciences
department at the University of San Diego.
“We have to find a way to sort of
peacefully co-exist,” said Moriarty, who has worked with captive wolves
in California. “That’s my hope, that the taste aversion will be one
more tool.”
Gray wolves have rebounded from
widespread extermination throughout the Northern Rockies and the Great
Lakes region. Since being declared endangered in 1974, the wolf
population has grown fivefold — to about 6,200 animals wandering parts
of 10 states outside Alaska.
After four decades and tens of millions
of dollars, the federal government was recently able to remove the
animals from the endangered species list in several states.
The case is much different in the
Southwest, where the population of the Mexican wolf — a subspecies of
the gray wolf — continues to be about 50 despite more than a decade of
work. Biologists had hoped to have more than 100 wolves in the wild by
2006.
About 90 wolves and some dependent
pups have been removed — in some cases lethally — from the wild since
the program began due to livestock problems. For about four years, the
Fish and Wildlife Service operated under a policy that called for
trapping or shooting wolves if they had been involved in at least three
cattle depredations.
The agency has since scrapped the policy, and ranchers have all but given up on keeping track of their dead cows and calves.
In the last year, monthly reports from
the wolf program show wildlife managers investigated four dozen
depredations in Arizona and New Mexico. They determined that wolves
were involved in half of the cases.
Caren Cowan, executive director of the New Mexico Cattle Grower’s Association, said ranchers are frustrated.
“You really have no idea how bad it is
when a dad calls you and says ‘There’s a wolf in my yard and my kids
and my wife are stuck in the house. What can you do to help me?’
That’s the issue, Cowan said. “These
animals are habituated to humans and until we can figure that out, I
don’t know what you do.”
Cowan acknowledged, however, that getting wolves to stop preying on livestock would be a huge first step.
Biologists working at a captive
breeding center at the Sevilleta National Wildlife Refuge in
south-central New Mexico treated six wolves last April and another two
in October. The animals were fed baits made up of beef, cow hide and an
odorless, tasteless deworming medication that makes the wolves queasy.
Fish and Wildlife Service biologist
Susan Dicks said the initial tests appear to be successful, with the
wolves not wanting anything to do with the beef baits after their first
serving.
The idea is that when wolves smell
cattle in the wild, their nervous system and brain stem will kick into
gear and override any desire they have to get near the cattle.
“We’re learning as we go, but so far
we have seen some good aversions produced,” Dicks said. “Again, it’s
impossible to say yet whether this translates to a livestock animal
running around on the hoof.”
Wolf releases have been put off for
the past year, and it’s unclear whether the agency will have the
opportunity to release the treated wolves this year so the taste
aversion treatments can be fully tested.
The work done with the Mexican wolves
is based on decades of research conducted by Lowell Nicolaus, a retired
biology professor from Northern Illinois University. He has seen it
work with captive wolves and free-ranging raccoons and crows.
“It just takes one good illness,” said
Nicolaus of Butte Falls, Ore. “Their avoidance is going to be
expressed wherever they see the food or smell it. It doesn’t depend on
when and where they first ate it or when and where they got sick.”
Nicolaus said taste aversion works
because it’s an unconscious response, not a threat that wolves can
overcome such as being hazed or shot at with rubber bullets.
The other benefit is biologists say
wolves that have an aversion to cattle are likely to pass that on to
their pups by teaching them hunting habitats that avoid cattle and
focus on deer, elk and other native prey. They call that a feeding
tradition.
Bill Given, a wildlife biologist who
helped the Fish and Wildlife Service with the first batch of wolf
treatments at Sevilleta, describes taste aversion as a natural solution
that taps into an evolutionary defense mechanism that is common among
all animals.
“You can build a great fence or you
can have a dog as a shepherd, but none of those things can change the
desire to consume the livestock,” he said. “They just make it
challenging and then the predator has to work around that barrier.”
To ranchers, the wolves are “killing machines,” Cowan said.
The biologists don’t necessarily disagree.
“There’s no stopping the feeding and
the sex drive. All life is about those two things,” Given said, noting
that wildlife managers have an opportunity to gain some control through
taste aversion.
The next challenge will be proving its value on the range by monitoring wolves that have been treated.
“I think it does have a lot of
promise,” Dicks said. “And part of it is we’re willing to try anything
to get these animals successfully on the ground without impacting
livestock growers.”
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