(image courtesy of Yellowstone National Park)
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A lone gray wolf known as OR-7 has made
California home for only two months, but environmental groups on Monday
sought to make it easier for the predator's species to reestablish a
foothold in the state after an absence of more than 80 years.
The Center for Biological Diversity and three other
conservation groups sent a petition to the California Fish and Game
Commission to protect gray wolves as an endangered species under state
law and to develop a plan to protect them.
Wolf populations for several
decades have grown in parts of the United States under government
protection, and environmentalists believe a similar rebound could occur
in California. But, as in other states, ranchers and hunters have
complained about livestock and big game animals coming under attack from
wolves.
The federal government in recent years has
found wolf populations in some areas had recovered enough to no longer
require protections under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. Wolves were
delisted in states such as Idaho and Montana, where officials last year
opened regulated hunting of them.
Before OR-7
arrived in California from Oregon in late December, no gray wolf had
been known to roam in the state since the last, an old and emaciated
animal, was killed in 1924, said Noah Greenwald, endangered species
director for the Center for Biological Diversity.
But conservationists were optimistic that more wolves could quickly join OR-7 in California.
"With growing wolf populations in Oregon and Washington,
it's inevitable wolves will be moving back into California in the near
future," Greenwald said.
Under the petition from
the environmental groups, if state officials determine that the species
merits endangered species listing they will have two years to develop a
protection plan, Greenwald said.
A spokeswoman for
the California Fish and Game Commission said the agency had not
officially received the petition and could not comment on it.
Greenwald said the petition was mailed on Monday, which marks the start of the application process.
WARY CATTLE RANCHERS
The gray wolf is already protected in California under the
federal government's Endangered Species Act, which prohibits hunting of
the animal.
But the federal government has not
developed a plan specifically for gray wolves in California, which is
what the environmental groups are seeking from state officials.
Among other things, a plan would set recovery targets and
create guidelines to protect gray wolves even when they pose a threat to
livestock, Greenwald said.
The state has over
500,000 heads of cattle in open range, said Stevie Ipsen, spokeswoman
for the California Cattlemen's Association. The organization is aware of
environmental groups' efforts to gain greater protections for wolves in
California.
"It's something we would be watching very closely, and potentially something we would be opposed to," Ipsen said.
California Department of Fish and Game officials have been
keeping a close watch over OR-7 since the roughly 3-year-old animal
arrived in the northern part of the state.
The
animal left a wolf pack in Oregon last fall, crossed several highways
and set foot in California on December 28, according to the Department
of Fish and Game.
The animal has a radio collar
that has allowed biologists to track its movements, which so far have
been in the northern part of the state. In recent days, it has headed
closer to the border with Oregon. Members of the public have also kept
tabs on OR-7 through Internet updates, and it has developed a following
of sorts.
There are about 6,000 to 7,000 wolves in
the United States, compared to a population of less than 1,300 when the
federal Endangered Species Act was passed in 1973, Greenwald said.
Before that, wolves were hunted to the edge of extinction.
The environmental groups that joined the petition sent to
California officials were Big Wildlife, Environmental Protection
Information Center and Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center.
(Additional reporting By Laura Zuckerman; Editing by Peter Bohan)
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