October 10, 2013
By:
John Myers, Duluth News Tribune
As Minnesota and Wisconsin get ready to hold their second annual
wolf hunting and trapping seasons — and Michigan enters the fray with
its first — wolf experts from around the world will gather in Duluth
this weekend to talk about the future of wolves and their relationships
with people.
The symposium, “Wolves and Humans at the Crossroads,” is sponsored by the Minnesota-based International Wolf Center.
It’s
the fifth global wolf symposium sponsored by the Wolf Center over the
past 25 years, but the first one since 2005 and, with more than 450
people registered, by far the largest. “Global interest in wolves,
both wolf research and just a general public interest, just seems to be
growing,” said Nancy Gibson, wolf center co-founder and board member.
“A lot has happened over the past eight years.”
Presenters and
keynote speakers represent top wolf experts from 19 nations, including
Jamie Rappaport Clark, former head of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service; Rolf Peterson and Jon Vucetich, lead researchers in the ongoing
Isle Royale moose-wolf survey; L. David Mech, a Minnesota-based wolf
expert with 55 years of field experience across the U.S. and Canada;
Luigi Boitani of the University of Rome, a leading expert on European
wolves; and many more.
Problems facing wolves
Wolves face many issues across their global range.
In
Russia, a depressed rural economy has forced more residents to hunt for
subsistence, reducing game populations and the prey that wolves depend
on. That could be causing a decline in the wolf population, although
little research is available. In France, where wolves have recently
moved back in from nearby nations after years of absence, there’s an increasing
call by farmers for more wolf killing. In Sweden, which has a
population of about 200 wolves that are isolated from other nations,
there’s a problem with inbreeding and now calls for a “genetic rescue”
by introducing wolves from other regions.
That’s the same issue
facing wolves on Isle Royale, the big Lake Superior island off
Minnesota’s North Shore, where only eight wolves were counted in a
survey last winter. That’s a historic low for the animal over more than
50 years of intensive study of the relationship between moose and wolves
in the wilderness national park. “Wolves are no longer performing
their function as predator on the island, there just aren’t enough to
have any real impact on moose,” Peterson told the News Tribune.
So
few moose are being killed by wolves that scavenger populations, such
as foxes and ravens, also have crashed to all-time lows on the island,
Peterson said. Those animals used to clean up the scraps left behind by
wolves.
Researchers say they heard a couple of new pups howling
this summer, leading to some hope the wolves may hang on. But Peterson, a
Michigan Technological University researcher who has been involved in
the study for decades, said wolves may survive on the island only for a
few more years unless new wolves are introduced to help improve the gene
pool. The island’s population faces serious health issues from
inbreeding.
It will be up to the National Park Service to decide
whether to allow new wolves to be introduced; wait for a wild wolf to
wander out to the island on its own from the North Shore; or oversee the
eventual demise of wolves on the island, Peterson said.
With wolf
numbers so low, moose numbers on the island have exploded, more than
doubling in recent years to more than 1,000 animals. That’s the exact
opposite trend from moose in Minnesota, where numbers have plummeted in
recent years to the lowest levels in decades. While moose in Minnesota
also face bears, humans and deer-related diseases as predators, moose on
Isle Royale have only wolves to cope with. “On the island at
least, wolves are the driving factor of the moose population,” Peterson
said, at least until moose numbers get so high that they run out of
food, which will cause that population to crash as well.
Different opinions
Gibson
said the symposium attracts wolf advocates, researchers and wildlife
managers who sometimes represent vastly opposing viewpoints on how
humans should treat wolves. That divergence of opinion will be
represented during a moderated debate on trying to reach consensus on
hunting, trapping and wolf protection that is set for Saturday.
But
Gibson said the International Wolf Center has managed to attract
top-notch talent and continued interest in the symposium and other work
precisely because it hasn’t taken a stand on how wolves are specifically
managed. The center takes no position on issues such as whether wolves
should be trapped or hunted — only that healthy populations are
maintained. “As much as Minnesota has hotly debated this issue in
the past couple of years, we are still in much better shape than some
other countries, even than other states. The most important thing is
that we have a thriving population of wolves,” Gibson said. “Some of our
members were upset we didn’t oppose hunting and trapping. But that’s
not what we’re here for. We’re here to push for good wolf science.”
Minnesota
has about 2,200 wolves, down from nearly 3,000 a decade ago, before any
wolf hunting and trapping was allowed. Wisconsin has about 800 wolves
and Michigan about 500. Wolf hunting season begins in all three states
in the coming weeks.
While the Wolf Center doesn’t advocate for
wolf protection, it does take a strong stand on protection of wolf
habitat. Without wild places where people don’t build houses and raise
livestock and pets, wolves are doomed to a constant state of conflict
with people, Gibson noted. “We are strong advocates for protection
of the wild places wolves need to live,” she said. “With the human
population ever increasing, and more people living where wolves live,
wolves will usually come out on the short among these two species that
historically haven’t gotten along very well.”
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