By MARY ELLEN HANNIBAL
Published: September 28, 2012
San Francisco
THIS month, a group of environmental nonprofits said they would challenge the federal government’s removal of Endangered Species Act
protections for wolves in Wyoming. Since there are only about 328
wolves in a state with a historic blood thirst for the hides of these
top predators, the nonprofits are probably right that lacking
protection, Wyoming wolves are toast.
Many Americans, even as they view the extermination of a species as
morally anathema, struggle to grasp the tangible effects of the loss of
wolves. It turns out that, far from being freeloaders on the top of the
food chain, wolves have a powerful effect on the well-being of the
ecosystems around them — from the survival of trees and riverbank
vegetation to, perhaps surprisingly, the health of the populations of
their prey.
An example of this can be found in Wyoming’s Yellowstone National Park, where wolves were virtually wiped out in the 1920s and reintroduced in the ’90s. Since the wolves have come back, scientists have noted an unexpected improvement in many of the park’s degraded stream areas.
Stands of aspen and other native vegetation, once decimated by
overgrazing, are now growing up along the banks. This may have something
to do with changing fire patterns, but it is also probably because elk
and other browsing animals behave differently when wolves are around.
Instead of eating greenery down to the soil, they take a bite or two,
look up to check for threats, and keep moving. The greenery can grow
tall enough to reproduce.
Beavers, despite being on the wolf’s menu, also benefit when their
predators are around. The healthy vegetation encouraged by the presence
of wolves provides food and shelter to beavers. Beavers in turn go on to
create dams that help keep rivers clean and lessen the effects of
drought. Beaver activity also spreads a welcome mat for thronging
biodiversity. Bugs, amphibians, fish, birds and small mammals find the
water around dams to be an ideal habitat.
So the beavers keep the rivers from drying up while, at the same time,
healthy vegetation keeps the rivers from flooding, and all this
biological interaction helps maintain rich soil that better sequesters
carbon — that stuff we want to get out of the atmosphere and back into
the ground. In other words, by helping to maintain a healthy ecosystem,
wolves are connected to climate change: without them, these landscapes
would be more vulnerable to the effects of those big weather events we
will increasingly experience as the planet warms.
Scientists call this sequence of impacts down the food chain a “trophic cascade.”
The wolf is connected to the elk is connected to the aspen is connected
to the beaver. Keeping these connections going ensures healthy,
functioning ecosystems, which in turn support human life.
Another example is the effect of sea otters on kelp, which provides food
and shelter for a host of species. Like the aspen for the elk, kelp is a
favorite food of sea urchins. By hunting sea urchins, otters protect the vitality of the kelp
and actually boost overall biodiversity. Without them, the ecosystem
tends to collapse; the coastal reefs become barren, and soon not much
lives there.
Unfortunately, sea otters are in the cross hairs of a conflict
equivalent to the “wolf wars.” Some communities in southeast Alaska want
to allow the hunting of sea otters in order to decrease their numbers
and protect fisheries. But the rationale that eliminating the predator
increases the prey is shortsighted and ignores larger food-web dynamics.
A degraded ecosystem will be far less productive over all.
Having fewer fish wouldn’t just hurt fishermen: it would also endanger
the other end of the trophic scale — the phytoplankton that turn
sunshine into plant material, and as every student of photosynthesis
knows, create oxygen and sequester carbon. In lakes, predator fish keep
the smaller fish from eating all the phytoplankton, thus sustaining the
lake’s rate of carbon uptake.
Around the planet, large predators are becoming extinct at faster rates
than other species. And losing top predators has an outsize effect on
the rate of loss of many other species below them on the food chain as
well as on the plant life that is so important to the balance of our
ecosystems.
So what can be done? For one thing, we have begun to realize that parks
like Yellowstone are not the most effective means of conservation.
Putting a boundary around an expanse of wilderness is an intuitive idea
not borne out by the science. Many top predators must travel enormous
distances to find mates and keep populations from becoming inbred. No
national park is big enough for wolves, for example. Instead,
conservation must be done on a continental scale. We can still erect our
human boundaries — around cities and towns, mines and oil fields — but
in order to sustain a healthy ecosystem, we need to build in connections
so that top predators can move from one wild place to another.
Many biologists have warned that we are approaching another mass
extinction. The wolf is still endangered and should be protected in its
own right. But we should also recognize that bringing all the planet’s
threatened and endangered species back to healthy numbers — as well as
mitigating the effects of climate change — means keeping top predators
around.
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