November 08, 2012,
By:
Emily Kram, Superior Telegram
Margie Bouchard was 5 years old when she ran across what she thought
was a friendly dog outside her home in Brule in 1959. She’d been playing
with her pet dog Peanuts, a Brittany spaniel, when the animal came out
of the woods.
By:
Emily Kram, Superior Telegram
Margie Bouchard was 5 years old when she ran across what she
thought was a friendly dog outside her home in Brule in 1959. She’d been
playing with her pet dog Peanuts, a Brittany spaniel, when the animal
came out of the woods.
Unbeknownst to her, the “friendly dog” was actually a wolf.
“We
could always hear wolves,” Bouchard said. She remembers her father
telling her to listen to the nighttime howls as a child, but she’d never
come face-to-face with a wolf before.
So when Bouchard spotted the animal outside her home, she walked over to engage the new playmate.
“I had a blanket that I carried around everywhere,” Bouchard said. “The wolf and I were playing tug-of-war with it.
“I didn’t know that it was a wolf I was playing with.”
A
guest who had been staying at the Bouchard’s cabins spotted the wolf
and alerted Bouchard’s mother. When 5-year-old Margie was called inside,
she found her mother wringing her hands. Bouchard was puzzled when her
father was called home from his job in Superior to deal with the wolf,
which still lingered near the home.
“I didn’t really understand why they shot it,” Bouchard said. “I couldn’t understand what all the chaos was about.”
Adrian Wydeven, a DNR mammalian ecologist, said the behavior of the wolf that approach Bouchard was highly irregular.
He
guessed the animal was sick or had been fed by humans before. It’s also
possible, Wydeven said, that the wolf was a domesticated animal that
escaped into the wild.
“By 1959, wolves were considered pretty rare in Wisconsin,” Wydeven said.
From
1865 until 1957, Wisconsin put a bounty on gray wolves that drove the
population to near extinction. Less than 50 wolves were estimated to
remain in the state in the 1950s, and by 1960 the species was considered
extirpated.
The gray wolf was placed on the federal endangered
species list in 1974, but the population remained low until the 1990s,
when the Wisconsin DNR’s wolf recovery plan went into effect. The wolf
population surpassed 200 in Wisconsin by the end of the decade, and in
2004 it exceeded the management goal of 350 wolves set by the DNR.
The DNR’s most recent winter count put the population at between 815 and 880 wolves.
The
federal government delisted the gray wolf from the endangered species
list in the Western Great Lakes Region earlier this year, and
Wisconsin’s inaugural wolf hunting season began Oct. 15.
In the
first 11 days of Wisconsin’s wolf season, hunters and trappers harvested
29 wolves. Ten of those wolves came from Zone 1, which covers
northwestern Wisconsin. None came from Douglas County.
In the 13
days since, Douglas County has closed the gap and now leads all counties
in wolves harvested with seven. Six of the eight wolves taken in Zone 1
since Oct. 29 have come from Douglas County.
Wydeven said hunters
and trappers in Douglas County may not have felt the urgency to get
into the woods for the first days of the hunt. The wolf population
Douglas County is “traditionally high density,” Wydeven said.
DNR
data from 2011 showed 26 packs claiming at least part of Douglas County
in their territory. Douglas County also leads the state in the number of
verified wolf depredations for 2012.
Another theory for the slow
start is that trappers held off in the early days of the hunt to wait
for wolves’ pelts to become thicker.
“That is the typical way trappers would operate,” Wydeven said. “They wait until the pelts are prime.”
Pelts
usually reach top quality by mid- to late-November, Wydeven said. But
looking at hunt data so far, the number of wolves taken in the first
week — five in Zone 1 and 18 statewide — may have spurred trappers into
the woods sooner.
Statewide, hunters killed 10 wolves in the
opening week while trappers took eight. The ratio had shifted in favor
of the trappers by week two, 14-6, and the gap grew in week three, 16-5.
All seven wolves harvested in Douglas County so far have been taken by trappers.
As of Wednesday, 64 wolves had been harvested statewide. The DNR has sold licenses to 825 resident and 6 non-residents.
Zone
1 is more than halfway to its quota of 32 wolves with 20 harvested.
Zone 2, in the northeast, and Zone 5, in central Wisconsin, are also
nearing their quotas of 20 and 23 wolves, respectively. Zone 2 hunters
have taken 15 wolves, and Zone 5 hunters have taken 17.
Zone 4 has
one wolf remaining before it reaches its quota of five, and Zones 3 and
6 — both with quotas of 18 wolves — have harvest totals in single
digits.
Currently, all six zones remain open, but the DNR may
close zones ahead of the Feb. 28 season end date if they reach quotas
earlier.
“It’s going to be a very closely regulated harvest,”
Wydeven said. “We certainly have no intention of pushing the wolf back
to extirpation.”
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