SANTA FE -- Enchanting New Mexico is the land of inconsistency.
Tens of thousands of its inhabitants love the Lobos, even swear by them.
Many of these same people despise lobos and swear at them.
The University of New Mexico named its sports teams
Lobos because no other mascot was so fitting as a fierce, proud symbol
of the Southwest.
Another part of government, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, in the 1950s tried to trap, shoot and poison the real New
Mexico lobos out of existence. It nearly succeeded.
The federal government even sent poisons and canine
killers into Mexico, figuring that nobody would object to reviled wolves
being wiped out before they could cross into New Mexico or Arizona.
If history has taught us anything, it is that the
imagery of lobos is easy to embrace. The spine-tingling howl of a wolf
stirs us. But it's not enough for us to focus on how few Mexican gray
wolves exist.
Only about 75 roam free in New Mexico and Arizona. That is the entire U.S. population in the wilds.
The number of Mexican wolves is up a bit, but their
strength is not. With only three breeding pairs, wild Mexican wolves are
producing small litters and pups with low survival rates, said Michael
Robinson of the Center for Biological Diversity.
Along with the 75 Mexican wolves that are fending for
themselves, another 248 were in zoos as of last month. More rove
northern Mexico, though nobody can say for sure how many packs exist.
Even with a population that is tiny and weak, these lobos are under siege.
U.S. Rep. Steve Pearce, R-Hobbs, sent out a
celebratory statement this month after the Fish and Wildlife Service
cleared a New Mexico rancher who killed a Mexican wolf in defense of his
livestock.
"However, we must not forget that the wolf program remains a major problem for New Mexicans," Pearce said.
One of Pearce's favorite themes is that federal
protection for species with dwindling populations puts humans at a
disadvantage for jobs and business development. He has made political
hay by fighting protections for the dunes sagebrush lizard, the lesser
prairie chicken and the Mexican wolf.
Pearce said the case of a rancher who killed to
protect his own animals "only reiterates the terror that wolves cause
for New Mexicans, and calls attention to the need to rethink this costly
and dangerous program."
Robinson, whose organization regularly battles Pearce,
says Mexican wolves do not have the numbers to be a societal danger.
More than 6 million acres are in the territory designated for a wild
population of 75 lobos.
Even so, he says government regulations are
constricting Mexican wolves. Robinson wants wolves from zoos to be
released into Gila National Forest in New Mexico. Current regulations
mandate that captive Mexican wolves can only be freed in the Blue Range
Recovery Area in Arizona.
Carlos Carroll, a California biologist who is part of
the national wolf recovery team, says funneling wolves into one spot
jeopardizes the newcomers. Established packs control the territory and
turn on imported wolves.
Carroll said wild Mexican wolves need to number 750 to ensure that the subspecies survives.
From a scientific standpoint, he said, Mexican wolves
would have a better chance if government broadened their territory to
include Utah and southern Colorado. Currently, I-40 is a government
boundary that Mexican wolves are not supposed to cross.
Opposition to allowing Mexican wolves in the southern
Rockies and Grand Canyon area would be ferocious, as Pearce's stand
demonstrates.
The alternative is not having any lobos in New Mexico,
except the ones on postcards, coffee cups and UNM sweatshirts -- all
beautiful images of what the Southwest is supposed to be.
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