In
the nearly two decades I've worked to recover gray wolves across the
West, I've learned never to under-estimate the power of rumors,
exaggerations and complete untruths tossed out by those opposed to
sharing even our wildest landscapes with wolves.
First, wolves pose virtually no threat to humans, with only two
instances of wolves killing humans in North America in 100 years — one
in Alaska, one in Canada. By comparison, according to the Centers for
Disease Control, in the U.S. about a dozen people are killed by
livestock each year; 200 by car collisions with deer; 20 by dogs and
countless others from venomous insect stings or snake bites.
Attacks on livestock by wolves, or any predators, account for a
tiny fraction of livestock deaths. Instead, as self-reported by ranchers
to the National Agricultural Statistics Service, more than 60 percent
of sheep losses and 90 percent of cattle losses are caused by weather
events, respiratory and digestive problems, birthing complications or
ingestion of poisonous weeds.
And, as California works toward finalizing a state wolf
conservation plan in the coming weeks, it's important to note that there
are many time-proven methods of avoiding interaction between wolves and
livestock. Those include range riders, livestock-guarding dogs and
shepherds, and disposing of the carcasses of livestock to avoid
attracting wolves and other predators.
Details on meeting locations and submitting written comments can be
found at the address linked here online: https://cdfgnews.wordpress.com/2015/12/02/cdfw-releases-draft-gray-wolf-conservation-plan/
Clear evidence of the effectiveness of nonlethal methods comes
from just across the border in Oregon, where, after a court order
prevented lethal means of managing wolves, the number of wolf attacks on
livestock decreased even as the wolf population increased.
If ranchers are allowed to simply ignore wolves and then kill them
when they're suspected of killing livestock, wolves don't stand a
chance of recovering to sustainable levels in a state that's home to
more than 5 million cattle and sheep.
For all Californians to
benefit from the power of wolves to restore the health of ecosystems,
ranchers will have to alter how they do business. But evolving to meet
the challenges of an ever-changing business landscape is part of any
successful business.
Recovering wolves will require that ranchers spend more time checking herds, upgrading fencing, getting rid of attractants, staking flags and flashing lights on fencelines and perhaps using alarms that sound when radio-collared wolves are nearby.
And it will require that Californians rely on the facts when assessing the many benefits and challenges associated with recovering wolves.
The facts did not appear to be the foundation of the draft state wolf conservation and management plan released in recent weeks that calls for possibly eliminating state protections for wolves once the population reaches as few as 50, and the option to seek authority to kill wolves for livestock conflicts even before delisting.
These are strategies based on politics, not science. The truth is, we can recover wolves to sustainable levels without harming the livestock industry or wolves. But that requires that we rely on facts, not myths.
Recovering wolves will require that ranchers spend more time checking herds, upgrading fencing, getting rid of attractants, staking flags and flashing lights on fencelines and perhaps using alarms that sound when radio-collared wolves are nearby.
And it will require that Californians rely on the facts when assessing the many benefits and challenges associated with recovering wolves.
The facts did not appear to be the foundation of the draft state wolf conservation and management plan released in recent weeks that calls for possibly eliminating state protections for wolves once the population reaches as few as 50, and the option to seek authority to kill wolves for livestock conflicts even before delisting.
These are strategies based on politics, not science. The truth is, we can recover wolves to sustainable levels without harming the livestock industry or wolves. But that requires that we rely on facts, not myths.
Amaroq
Weiss is a California-based biologist and former attorney with the
Center for Biological Diversity. She wrote this for this newspaper.
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