- Article by: DENNIS ANDERSON , Star Tribune
- Updated: November 15, 2014
A wolf expert discussed why he thinks wolves are partly responsible for declining moose numbers in northeast Minnesota. Dave
Mech is a senior research scientist with the U.S. Geological Survey and
a University of Minnesota adjunct professor. He’s widely recognized as
one of the world’s pre-eminent wolf experts.
Early
in his career, Mech researched wolves on Isle Royale, initiating what
has become a 60-year study of wolves and moose on the Lake Superior
island. In 1968, he began studying wolves in an area northeast of Ely.
That study continues. Mech holds a bachelor’s degree from Cornell and a doctorate from Purdue.
In
the interview below, Mech expands on a recent study he co-published
with John Fieberg of the University of Minnesota that challenges an
earlier DNR study that said climate change is contributing to the
decline of northeast Minnesota moose.
Mech and Fieberg instead believe wolves were a contributor to the decline.
Q Describe findings of the study you and professor Fieberg published recently in the Journal of Wildlife Management.
A Two
major findings. The first is that studies by the Minnesota DNR in
2009-2010 suggesting that the decline of northeast Minnesota moose was
related to some kind of climate change minimized indications that wolves
were involved.
The
study said wolves likely were not involved in the moose decline to a
significant degree, because statewide surveys of wolves seemed to
indicate a stable population.
But
our studies of wolves for more than 40 years differ from the state’s
five-year statewide population estimate, because ours have been done
annually in a single area, which overlaps in part the DNR’s moose study
area.
Our
data indicate that the wolf population in and near the moose study area
had grown significantly. I also suspected that statistics from the DNR
study were flawed, regarding the effect of climate change on wolves.
I’m
not a statistician. So I teamed up with University of Minnesota
statistician John Fieberg, and he demonstrated that statistics in the
original DNR study did not support a climate effect.
There’s
simply no evidence that climate change has contributed to the moose
decline in the northeast. Instead, wolves likely were involved in some
way.
Q Can your findings be extrapolated to other areas of the Minnesota wolf or moose ranges?
A They
wouldn’t necessarily apply to the decline of moose in northwest
Minnesota, which took place earlier. These systems are quite individual,
with two separate moose populations, one in the northeast, one in the
northwest, and the habitat in each being unique, as are the complement
of predators, including bears and wolves.
Q Would
the effect of wolves in your study area perhaps be more of an
accelerant to the moose decline there, than the sole reason for it?
A Perhaps.
And to the degree that wolves contributed to the moose decline in our
study area, it probably relates more to the predation of moose calves,
rather than adults, though they take both.
A
stable moose population requires the survival of adults, as well as the
recruitment of calves. So a moose decline could be the result of an
accelerated decline of adults, an accelerated decline of calves or both.
What
I think might be going on is this: As wolves increased, they took a
higher percentage of the population of calves, which are a primary prey
for them in summer, along with beavers.
Q Does climate change have any effect on the moose decline in Minnesota?
A Our
study didn’t say anything about that. Only that the supposed effect of
climate change on moose in the northeast is invalid. It doesn’t mean
it’s not true. Just that there is no evidence of it.
Q Is
it possible that various subtle effects of climate change, such as an
increase in the number of ticks that attach themselves to moose, and
perhaps weaken them, could contribute to their population falloff?
A It’s
possible. But we don’t have evidence of it. I will say that four or
five years ago, Isle Royale scientists were implicating climate change
in the moose decline there. Now they’re not. Now they’re saying that
because wolves have subsequently declined there, the moose population is
in fact increasing.
Q Is there research confirming, or indicating, what might have happened to moose in the northwest?
A The data seem to indicate that most of what was going on there was parasites and disease.
Q Wolves have had documented detrimental effects on Yellowstone area elk and moose, and on Alaska moose, isn’t that correct?
A It
is possible for wolves to have a strong effect on their prey, depending
on circumstances. But remember: All of these ungulates (moose, elk,
deer) are affected by things other than wolves, primarily winter
weather, although out West it might also be drought. So you can have
interplay between wolves and other conditions.
Deer
in parts of the BWCA provide an example. In our study area in the late
’60s, there were deer all over those lakes in winter. Then we had a
series of severe winters, and now, due to the combination of those
winters and wolves in the area, you just don’t find any deer. They’re
gone.
Q Could a similar situation occur across a broader area of northern Minnesota?
A It could.
Q In
that situation, if a series of tough winters significantly depressed
the deer population, would wolves also decline, as might be expected? Or
would wolves simply expand their range, switch prey species or
otherwise adapt?
A Typically,
they decline. And as they do, deer come back. But it’s also very much
related to the total proportion of years in which winters are bad. If
tough winters just alternated, one good, one bad, that’s one thing. Deer
populations can handle that. But if you get a series of severe winters,
it will knock them down hard and take them longer to recover.
Simultaneously,
of course, habitat is changing, and this also has an effect on the
various species. Many factors constantly interact. It’s hard to predict
outcomes. But for wolves, if the net food supply is reduced, whether
it’s moose calves or deer, unless there is a significant supply of
substitute prey, wolves likely will decline as well.
Q Given
the mix of factors, including wolves, affecting northeast Minnesota
moose, do these animals have a chance to sustain themselves in
relatively constant numbers? Or are they doomed to disappear, as in the
northwest?
A My
guess — and it’s always hazardous to predict — is that the northeastern
Minnesota moose will persist, although generally at a lower density
than before the wolves increased. Already there is evidence that
northeast wolves are starting to decrease, probably because of the moose
decline.
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