The
Swedish Environmental Protection Agency is launching a program to
analyze the DNA of wolves in Finland and Russia, in hopes of maintaining
the genetic diversity of Sweden’s wolf population.
The
number of wolves in Sweden, around 400, is so low that there is a
definite danger of inbreeding. Earlier this month the Environmental
Protection Agency released a report that said the country needs at least 300 wolves to maintain a healthy population.
But
besides that, it said at least one wolf needs to enter the country from
the east every wolf generation, or five years, to extend the genetic
diversity, Maria Hörnell Willebrand, head of the wildlife assistance
department at the agency, tells Radio Sweden.
The
agency now wants to study the DNA of wolves in Russia, in order to
determine how important any particular wolf might be to maintain the
Swedish population. They plan to study wolf droppings and fur to extract
the DNA.
“We need to look at the baseline, and
look at the difference, both in the existing Russian population, and the
historic data”, Maria Hörnell Willebrand says.
There are also plans to gather similar information about lynx, bears, and wolverines.
This story is posted on Alaska Dispatch News as part of Eye on the Arctic, a collaborative partnership between public and private circumpolar media organizations.
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