A predator’s tale
What’s next in the series?
Today: The road to reintroducing the wolf has been a long and often bumpy one.
Wednesday: How a meeting in 1843 that was prompted by
wolf depredation on livestock helped lead to the formation of Oregon as a
state 16 years later.
Friday: The return of wolves to Oregon, starting with a
lone female in 1999, spurred the creation of Oregon’s wolf management
plan.
By Katy Nesbitt
The Observer
The years following World War II spawned
industrialization, increased access to education, advances in technology
and the free time to consider societal issues such as peace, civil
rights and environmentalism.
America’s farming became mechanized and more people
were living in suburbia when issues of clean water, air, protecting the
environment and wildlife species went from being a fringe movement to
the forefront of concern with the passage of new protection laws.
The Endangered Species Act was one of the laws that
came out of the early 1970s concern for the environment and an awareness
that certain species were in peril while others had almost disappeared.
Wolves in the West, for instance.
In 1987 the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service completed a
study to determine how, when and where to bring wolves back to the
West’s wildest places.
In 1995 and 1996, under President Bill Clinton and
Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt, 66 wolves were captured in Canada and
transported into the U.S. The wolves were brought to Yellowstone
National Park and central Idaho where three wilderness areas come
together; the largest roadless areas in the Lower 48.
The protests began long before the wolves were brought into the country, and almost two decades later, the debate continues.
Carter Niemeyer, a retired U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service official who
helped capture some of those wolves released in the U.S., thinks the
controversy may be even more widespread today than it was 20 years ago.
Niemeyer grew up on a farm in Iowa. As a kid, the wild animals he
didn’t make into pets he trapped for their pelts. Later he earned
undergraduate and graduate degrees in wildlife biology and made his way
to Montana to work as a government trapper.
More than halfway through a career of trapping
everything from eagles to grizzly bears, he became involved in a project
designed not to remove problem animals from farms and ranches, but to
capture and transport wild animals — including those Canadian wolves —
from one country to another.
When asked what changed his philosophy on animal control, Niemeyer had two answers. The first was, “I matured.”
The other: “It’s one thing to control animals, it’s another to eliminate a species.”
In most states wolves had disappeared because they
posed a threat, mainly to livestock, but in some respects, it was
because they were despised. Wolves were shot, trapped, and eventually
poisoned off the landscape. A few remained in Minnesota, and rare
sightings were reported in other northern states such as Michigan,
Montana and Idaho.
The Fish and Wildlife Service study determined that as
far as the open spaces of the western states were concerned, viable
packs had re-established themselves only in northwest Montana by the
mid-1990s.
Along with that burgeoning population it was determined
two other experimental groups were needed to create a viable population
in the region.
Initially, the goal was 30 packs and 300 individual wolves.
As the years wore on, wolf supporters pushed for increases in those numbers.
When wolves were finally taken off the endangered
species list in 2011 their documented numbers neared 2,000 in Montana,
Wyoming and Idaho.
But wolves are dispersing animals by nature and it was
inevitable they would not only leave the wilderness areas where they
were transplanted, but also the states themselves.
Idaho and Oregon share a unique border: Hells Canyon
and the Snake River that carved it. The Seven Devils Range can be seen
from most high points in Oregon’s Wallowa Valley, bordered by its own
mountain range, the Wallowas, and the largest wilderness in the state,
the 364,000-acre Eagle Cap.
So much wild country for wildlife — yet rivers,
mountain ranges, and grazing pastures don’t mean the same thing to a
wolf who can travel up to 100 miles a day looking for food or new
territory.
When the federal government announced its decision to
insert wolves into central Idaho, that state’s Legislature passed a law
prohibiting the reintroduction.
Jim Holyan, wildlife biologist for the Nez Perce Tribe,
based in Lapwai, Idaho, near the Seven Devils, said, “Idaho didn’t want
anything to do with wolves.”
But the tribe had expertise and interest in wolves and
offered to do the work the state refused to do. Their management plan
was approved by the Fish and Wildlife Service and for the past 17 years,
Curt Mack, Holyan, and others have trapped and monitored almost 600
wolves.
By 2016, the federal government will eliminate the
tribe’s funding for wolf monitoring and reporting and wolves will be
deemed “recovered.”
Once the wolf’s federal protected status was downgraded
in 2011, the state of Idaho was willing to step in and manage a
compensation fund that reimburses ranchers for wolf-caused losses,
allows lethal removal of problem wolves, and manages controlled hunts.
Unlike Oregon, Idaho does not have a state endangered
species act; protection for species listed as such are under the
management of the federal government.
However, protected plant and animal species
significantly affect Idaho producers, so the governor created the Office
for Species Conservation, headed by Dustin Miller.
“Our most important job is to work with landowners and
public land users so they stay profitable while conserving the
resources,” said Miller. “We use scientifically based solutions with
benefits to listed species while keeping people in business.”
Miller said the state refused to work during the reintroduction because, “It felt the feds crammed wolves down our throat.”
Miller said under Idaho code, livestock owners and
their employees can kill wolves that have exhibited behavior suggesting
they might attack livestock. A confirmed livestock kill allows a wolf to
be shot on site where livestock is present.
“The burden of proof is on the producer,” said Miller.
At the end of 2011, 746 wolves and 101 packs were
documented from the Canadian border, south to the Snake River Plain, and
from the Washington and Oregon borders east to the Montana and Wyoming
borders.
Only the southern part of the state is uninhabited by wolves. Holyan said that is probably due to the lack of game.
Of the 296 wolves killed in 2011, 200 were legally
hunted or trapped, 63 were lethally controlled, 11 were killed or
suspected to have been killed illegally, and seven died from other human
causes (vehicles or non-target).
Wolf dispersal from central Idaho into Oregon was
predicted well before the reintroduction; it’s the animal’s nature to
find new territory.
“Wolves are fabulous dispersers and can be wherever they want, they don’t know to stop at the border,” Holyan said.
Within four years of the wolves’ reintroduction in
Idaho, a female collared wolf made her way to Baker County, which
borders Idaho. Within a year, two more wolves were found dead in Oregon,
and residents, both for and against wolves, came together to craft a
plan to both conserve and manage them.
In 2006, the Wenaha pack was documented in northwest Wallowa County, and
by 2009, the alpha male and female of the Imnaha pack were collared and
their movements closely monitored.
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