PORTLAND, Ore. —
Eradicated in Oregon over half a century ago, wolves are
re-establishing a foothold in the state — but their fragile comeback is
deepening a cultural divide over how much protection they need.
With
81 adult gray wolves now calling Oregon home, wildlife officials last
week recommended taking them off the state's list of protected animals.
They'll vote on the recommendation on Monday.
Oregon
has been considered a model for wolf management, due to its emphasis on
non-lethal methods to deter the animals from killing livestock. But the
prospect of relaxed protections is pitting ranchers who want more
leeway to kill wolves against environmentalists who say their low
population does not come even close to recovery.
There
will be no immediate impact on wolves if they are delisted because a
state management plan determines who can shoot a wolf and under what
circumstances. But wolf advocates worry that delisting the animals will
send the wrong message to people aching to kill wolves — and will also
weaken grounds for filing lawsuits over their protection.
"We
are fearful that political pressure from the livestock and hunting
industry could tip the scales in Oregon and result in ... more lethal
control of wolves," said Amaroq Weiss with the Center for Biological
Diversity.
The
fight over wolves is playing out in the context of a social and
political conflict over wolf recovery in other western states, where the
animals were successfully reintroduced, but are now killed by the
thousands after being stripped of protections.
Long
more feared than admired, gray wolves once numbered in the millions in
North America but were hunted to near extinction. They became federally
protected and sheltered from unregulated killing in 1973 in the lower
48, when Congress passed the Endangered Species Act. Over the years,
they were also granted state protections.
But
it was wolves' reintroduction two decades ago to Idaho and Yellowstone
National Park and their migration further west that ignited the ire of
ranchers and hunters. Wolves' protected status was heavily litigated,
with the federal government repeatedly moving to delist wolves,
environmental groups suing and the courts restoring safeguards.
Four
years ago, Congress sidestepped the law and used a budget rider
attached to a spending bill to take wolves off the endangered species
list in the northern Rockies, as well as in eastern Oregon, eastern
Washington and parts of Utah.
As
soon as states took over wolf management, they launched wolf hunts and
instituted increasingly aggressive hunting seasons and quotas. From 2011
to 2014, hunters and trappers in Idaho and Montana killed nearly 2,000
wolves, data show. Wildlife officials and farmers killed an additional
600 wolves to protect livestock.
In Wyoming, where wolves could be shot on sight in most of the state, the animals later regained protections.
Wolf numbers in the Rockies have declined — from a peak of about 1,750 in 2011 to 1,650 today.
Oregon's
first wolf pups in nearly 60 years were born in 2008. Five years later,
after a legal challenge, the state stopped shooting problem wolves and
adopted nonlethal methods to help livestock producers minimize wolf
predation, including hiring range riders to patrol pastures, installing
fencing and investing in alarms or scare devices.
But
ranchers, who are compensated for confirmed wolf kills if they use the
measures, want to shoot wolves that menace livestock — though wolf
attacks aren't common and more cows and sheep die due to disease or
weather.
"We
continue to see damage from wolves, and nonlethal techniques have
largely been ineffective," said Todd Nash, a rancher and wolf committee
chairman for the Oregon Cattlemen's Association.
The
Oregon Wolf Plan, the state's management guide for the animals, called
for four breeding pairs for three consecutive years in eastern Oregon.
The goal was reached this year, triggering the process to reconsider
wolves' endangered listing.
State
wildlife officials argue there's little chance wolves in Oregon will go
extinct under the current plan. But independent scientists say Oregon's
wolf population is too small to begin removing protections for them.
Eighty-one
wolves "is not a viable population, and yes, they absolutely could
disappear," said Dr. Paul Paquet, an international wolf expert and
biologist who has studied wolves for 40 years.
Research shows Oregon could support approximately 1,450 wolves.
Conservationists
also worry an upcoming wolf plan review could change the state's model
approach. Already, wolf safeguards were relaxed this winter, and more
lethal measures may be allowed in Oregon as soon as next year.
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