- Article by: MAUREEN HACKETT
- Updated: November 7, 2014
Look to humans, other causes in both species’ struggle to survive.
Photo: Brian Peterson, DML - Star Tribune
Are
wolves to blame for fewer Minnesota moose?” (Nov. 2) suggested that
wolves play a large role in the decline of the moose population.
Although wolves are indeed a predator of moose, there is no evidence
that wolves are the reason our Minnesota moose population is facing such
hard times.
Moose
populations are down throughout their usual range, including areas with
no wolf population. For example, in New Hampshire, the moose population
has declined by over 41 percent since the 1990s. There is no wolf
presence in New Hampshire.
Wolves are
the real wildlife managers of our forests, and wolves and moose have
coexisted for tens of thousands of years. Moose need wolves to keep them
and the whitetail deer population moving while they eat, to allow
enough trees to grow above browsing height, which keeps their food
sources (trees) available to them. Wolves do this by choosing the
sickest and oldest as prey. Wolves control their own numbers through
their complex social bonds and their limited reproduction. (A wolf pack
usually has only one litter per year.)
We humans
likely have caused the problems for moose by habitat encroachment and
climate change, leading to infestations of ticks and decreasing plants
for their food.
The
Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is rightly troubled about moose
dying in higher numbers; in fact, DNR officials are concerned about the
toll that climate change, parasites and disease have been taking. The
parasite b. tenuous is a serious issue; it targets the brains of the
infected animals. Michelle Carstensen of the DNR said the number of
moose that have been killed by wolves in the DNR’s moose mortality study
is not what is concerning, but it is the level of moose mortality from
all causes.
What the
DNR has previously reported is large tick infestations on moose causing
severe anemia (not enough red blood cells). When animals do not have
enough red blood cells, they cannot gain weight because they cannot
carry enough oxygen and nutrition throughout their bodies. This makes
them vulnerable to infections and unable to tolerate normal and expected
environmental stressors. Weak animals give birth to weak calves.
A
significant number of moose did not survive after being given GPS
collars, and were found to be very weak and thin with little fat.
Something other than wolves is the culprit, and wolves may be one of the
few positive natural forces to offset whatever it may be, which is
likely related to the overall ecosystem health.
Wolves
still struggle to survive, just like the moose. Our Minnesota wolf
population had been stable since 1998 after coming back from near
extinction in the 1970s. Now, after one hunting season, the population
is 25 percent below 2008 levels. The DNR calls this stable. But one
disease outbreak can wipe out 80 percent of the wolves.
Continuing
annual recreational wolf hunting and trapping is keeping the wolf
population on the edge of collapsing. We are killing random wolves and
disrupting their pack system that they rely on for survival. Wolves that
lose pack mates experience social and physical struggles that can cause
unpredictable problems for them and for the environment.
It is clear
that the moose population is struggling to survive. However, the wolf
is not the cause of this struggle. Both animals have, can, and should
coexist in Minnesota.
Maureen Hackett is president and founder of Howling for Wolves.
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