Last
month, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service shot the last captive-born
Mexican gray wolf in the wild for “escalating nuisance behavior” after
it came too close to Catron County neighborhoods.
It was a fairly routine kill, but the take of Mexican gray
wolf No. 1130 marked a shift in the program to recuperate the endangered
species: Today all 110 wolves roaming the wild of eastern Arizona and
southwestern New Mexico were born in the wild.
On the surface, that sounds like a milestone.
Just crossing the 100 mark for wild wolves sounds
significant, especially for a program that began with just seven known
wolves left in the species. The authors of the original 1982 Mexican
gray wolf recovery plan – which badly needs an update – set 100 as a
goal but could hardly imagine ever reaching such numbers.
Shouldn’t wolf advocates be celebrating, then? Shouldn’t
ranchers, many of whom oppose the reintroduction of a top predator, be
able to say enough is enough?
New Mexico Game Commissioner Ralph Ramos posed a question to
the federal Fish and Wildlife Service at a recent commission meeting in
Farmington. With more than 100 wolves successfully reproducing and
surviving in the wild, he asked, “Why don’t we support their natural
breeding? Why do we want to keep adding more?”
Here’s why: Because the Mexican gray wolf population isn’t nearly as strong as its numbers suggest.
Maggie Dwire, the Fish and Wildlife Service’s assistant wolf
recovery coordinator, said most of the animals in the wild are related
to one another – too closely related to ensure the survival of the
species, the goal of the reintroduction program.
The Fish and Wildlife Service can’t get there without
diversifying the gene pool, and right now many of the most genetically
valuable animals are in captivity. Again, why?
When the Fish and Wildlife Service began releasing wolves
into the wild in 1998 after a decades-long breeding program, it released
wolves from the bottom of the genetic barrel, so to speak. “We weren’t sure that releasing wolves after generations in
captivity would even work,” Dwire told me. “As those wolves started
becoming more and more successful, we started releasing from the middle
of the barrel.”
Those wolves did well, too. So the Fish and Wildlife Service
hedged its bets by releasing one wolf from the top of the genetic
barrel 13 years ago: Female No. 521. She was so successful – a “super
mom,” as Dwire put it, who wouldn’t stop breeding – “that almost every
single wolf in the wild is somehow related to her.”
Today, when a wolf leaves his native pack he has a slim
chance of finding a mate that is not somehow related to him, Dwire said.
Inbreeding hurts the Mexican gray wolf’s chance of long-term survival.
The reproductive success of the super mom wolf is one part of that equation. The other is the lack of releases from captivity.
All told, the Fish and Wildlife Service has released seven
captive-bred wolves over the past decade – all in Arizona. During six of
the past 10 years, no wolves were released at all.
That has less to do with the sensitive politics that plague
the program and more to do with biology and the limits of the previous
rule governing management of the species: Releases of captive-bred
wolves were restricted to one small area of the Apache National Forest
in Arizona, where wolves had already claimed territory.
The new management rule published this year allows the Fish
and Wildlife Service to release captive wolves into the Gila National
Forest in New Mexico. The state’s Game and Fish Department is reviewing
the Fish and Wildlife Service’s request for permits to do so.
The Fish and Wildlife Service believes it has found a way to
improve the gene pool in the wild with wolf releases and simultaneously
temper the risks to ranchers’ herds with a practice called
cross-fostering. It has requested permits to release up to 10 pups into
existing wolf dens in New Mexico.
Adult wolves that are released after living their entire
lives in captivity tend to display more “nuisance behavior,” going after
cattle instead of wild game. With cross-fostering, the Fish and
Wildlife Service places pups born in captivity in a wild den before they
are 2 weeks old. If the wild mother adopts them – and it’s worked with
at least one mother wolf in Arizona – then the wolves are raised as wild
wolves from the start and are less likely to go after domestic animals,
Dwire says.
How large and diverse the wolf population eventually should
be is a question to be answered by a new recovery plan; the Fish and
Wildlife Service says it will begin work again this summer after
disbanding two previous planning teams and pausing the work of a third.
The latest management rule sets a current population objective of 300 to
325 wolves in the wild – not the final recovery goal.
The federal government’s end game is to build up the
population of Mexican gray wolves to the point that management of the
species could be turned over to the states. Then New Mexico could manage
the wolf as hunted game – a goal the New Mexico Wildlife Federation of
sportsmen supports.
It remains to be seen whether New Mexico’s Game and Fish
Department will give the Fish and Wildlife Service a better chance at
reaching that goal and the Mexican gray wolf a better shot at survival.
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