Todd Wilkinson writes his column for the News & Guide every week. He is author of “Last Stand: Ted Turner’s Quest to Save a Troubled Planet.”
—Barry Lopez in “Of Wolves and Men.”
No state in the Lower 48 hates on gray wolves more rabidly than Idaho.
If
you think vigilantes in Wyoming and Montana have done reprehensible
things — actions ranging from running down exhausted lobos on
snowmobiles to openly promoting the poisoning of wolves and threatening
pro-wolf conservationists with violence — they don’t come close to
matching the odium that’s condoned by law enforcement and elected
officials in the Gem State.
One wolf
advocate was warned that she shouldn’t set foot inside the state capitol
building in Boise to testify for wolf protection because deranged
anti-wolf activists might do her bodily harm. Think for a moment about
the sickening symbolism of that.
Late
last year, community folk from Salmon made international headlines when
they staged an inaugural “predator derby” that offered cash to
participants who bagged the biggest wolf and brought in the most dead
coyotes.
No wolves died in the
controversial competition, but 21 coyotes were felled for no compelling
reason other than they were gunned down “for fun.” Now members of a
group called “Idaho for Wildlife” are seeking a permit from the Bureau
of Land Management to stage the derby for five years on federal public
land.
Derby proponents claim the contest will help protect elk herds and reduce livestock depredation.
There is, however, zero scientific evidence supporting those claims. Ironically very likely the opposite is true.
Boosters
also say the wolf derby is no different from “big buck contests” staged
across the country and which offer prizes to hunters who harvest trophy
deer that weigh the most or have the biggest racks.
In
fact there’s huge difference. Those who partake in big buck contests
are discriminating. They carefully assess their targets. They’re not
pulling the trigger merely to document a tally; they’re killing to put meat in the freezer.
In
contrast, the wolf derby has little to do with discrimination or with
celebrating the mystique of an animal. It is all about feeding mythology
based upon assumptions that often don’t hold up to scrutiny. Read the
Barry Lopez quote on the left. “There
is no excuse for derbies in 21st-century wildlife management,” says
Suzanne Stone, the Idaho director of Defenders of Wildlife. “This derby
would commercialize the harvest of predators and will not achieve any
management objective.”
Stone helped
start the Wood River Wolf Project outside Sun Valley that has achieved
remarkable success using non-lethal management tools to reduce
wolf-livestock conflicts.
One thing state fish and game departments seldom discuss, she says, is the complex social pack structure of wolves and coyotes.
Canid
packs are led by breeding males and females that teach their offspring
how and what to hunt. They maintain pack unity and tend to be the only
animals that breed and raise pups.
In
interviews I’ve done with well-respected canid researchers — I wrote a
book about the natural history of coyotes — they say understanding
social dynamics of predators is essential in knowing how to manage them.
I’m willing to bet that the BLM office reviewing the wolf derby permit request has no grasp of wolf and coyote biology. “I
have been working on wolves for 20 years and predator-prey issues for
30. These predator derbies make little sense in terms of solving any
wildlife issue as they tend to destabilize social structure in wolves
and lead to reproductive responses in coyotes that then have larger
litters and breed when they are younger,” says Bob Ferris, a biologist and executive director of Cascadia Wildlands.
Ferris,
a long-time hunter, suggests that derbies, which almost equate blowing
away animals with playing a video game, turn people off. “As
a hunter, this sort of exercise seems more driven by a ‘red mist’
mentality that does not strike me as consistent with ‘fair chase’
strictures about killing for a purpose or doing so out of respect for
the animal,” he adds. “Events like these only lead to an unfortunate
degradation of the public perception of hunters.”
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