by | April 24, 2014
The Mexican gray wolf population
is continuing to stabilize with the recent releases of two pairs in the
Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area in the Gila and Apache National Forests.
The first male-female pair was released on April 2; the second pair, on April 9.
An Interagency Field Team will be monitoring the wolves
and, if necessary, provide supplemental food while they acclimate to the
area and transition to catching native prey in the Mexican Wolf Blue
Range Reintroduction Area.
The Interagency Field Team is responsible for the
day-to-day management of the Mexican wolf population. Team members said
they believe the females are pregnant; the timed releases should allow
the wolves to transition to their new territory prior to giving birth to
pups.
The two female wolves were selected from the captive
breeding population to increase genetic diversity of the wild wolf
population. Both males were captured during the annual wolf population
survey in January.
As of the end of last year, the count was 83 Mexican wolves, up from a count of 75 the year before.
The Mexican Wolf/Livestock Coexistence Council — an
11-member volunteer group of livestock producers, tribes, environmental
groups, and county coalitions — has developed an innovative Strategic
Coexistence Plan, to reduce wolf/livestock conflicts and the need for
management removals of depredating wolves.
The plan has three components: payments to livestock
producers for wolf presence, funding for conflict-avoidance measures and
funding for depredation compensation.
Sherry Barrett, the Mexican Wolf Recovery coordinator for
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said her organization does weekly
"telemetry flights on these animals we have in the wild."
"There's about 50, of those 83, that have telemetry collars on them. Some of the wolves have GPS collars as well."
Still, many ranchers and cattle growers in Socorro and Catron counties are dubious.
Jess Carey, the Catron County Commission's wolf
investigator, said the wolves are a dangerous presence to cattle growers
as well as ranch families in the area.
Carey said that since 2006, when he first took over the
job, he has tallied 211 livestock depredations, as well as 10 pets
killed or injured by wolves.
"There have been 21 since the first of this year," Carey said.
Carey said the official count of cows killed by wolves is grossly inaccurate.
"If you have 10 cows and calves killed in one 24-hour
period the Interagency Field Team counts that as one incident," Carey
said. "And if you had a cow due to give birth within a week or two, they
count that as one depredation."
Fish and Wildlife's payments to livestock producers for
wolf presence will be based on a formula that considers a variety of
factors to determine allocation of the annual funding for each
applicant, including whether the applicant's land or grazing lease
overlaps a wolf territory or core area, and the number of wolf pups
annually surviving to December 31 in the territory.
The formula also considers the number of livestock exposed
to wolves and the applicant's participation in proactive
conflict-avoidance measures.
In addition, direct compensation will continue for
confirmed-livestock deaths or injuries caused by Mexican wolves to
livestock producers who are not otherwise receiving payments for
wolf-presence funding under the Coexistence Plan, unless they require
immediate reimbursement.
In such cases, the reimbursement amount will be subtracted
from the payment for wolf-presence allocation to that livestock
producer.
"Recovering the Mexican wolf must be accomplished on a
working landscape," said Benjamin Tuggle, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service's southwest regional director. "Working collaboratively with
stakeholders, we can achieve a balance of activities that sustain
economically viable ranching operations and a self-sustaining population
of wild wolves. This plan is a significant step in that direction."
To report wolf sightings or suspected livestock depredation, call 888-459-9653 or 928-339-4329.
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