BAXTER,
Minn. -- A limping timber wolf recently spotted in Baxter does not
appear to be a threat to the public, officials with state and federal
wildlife divisions said Friday. "At the moment, from
what we've seen, is that it is afraid of people," said Christine Reisz,
area wildlife supervisor for the Baxter office of the Minnesota
Department of Natural Resources.
The Baxter Police
Department received calls this week and last from people who spotted the
wolf. A Forestview Middle School sixth-grader photographed the wolf
while walking to school Monday morning just east of the school building.
Police warned the public to stay away from the wolf and report if they
see it.
Baxter Police Chief Jim Exsted said two
additional wolf sightings were reported Thursday and Friday. One was in
the area of Highway 371 and County Highway 48 and the other was near
North Central Speedway.
Reisz said although the wolf's
presence was recently noted, reports about the wolf were ongoing for
months previously. A conservation officer reported seeing it a few
months ago, she said, with the same limp. Reisz believes the wolf's
injury is an old one that has since healed.
"What we
would want is people to let us know if the animal starts to act
different from what we suspect it's doing now," Reisz said. "At this
point, it doesn't appear to be a public safety threat."
Reisz
said should the wolf begin to act aggressively toward people or
otherwise pose a threat, the responsibility for the federally protected
creature falls to the U.S. Department of Agriculture-Wildlife Services.
John
Hart is the district supervisor of the Wildlife Services division based
in Grand Rapids. Hart saw photographs of the wolf and agreed with Reisz
that the wolf's injury was likely healed. "It looks
like, to me, like it's missing its right rear foot from some kind of old
injury," Hart said. "It's in pretty decent body condition."
Hart
said he is in "wait and see" mode following discussions with the DNR,
the Baxter Police Department, the Brainerd School District and the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service. "It's not an uncommon
occurrence for a wolf to be on the perimeter of a pretty good-sized
town," Hart said. "I think a lot of times what's going on is there is a
lot higher deer densities."
Both Reisz and Hart said it
is not unusual for the wolf to be alone instead of with a pack. Reisz
said it's possible the wolf's injured foot made it difficult for it to
keep up with a pack. It's also possible it just enjoys living in the
city, she added, with access to roadkill as part of its diet. Hart said
the lone wolf could be in search of vacant territory with enough prey
for it to eat, a common behavior among 1- to 2-year-old wolves. "Generally speaking, Minnesota DNR figures about 15 percent of the wolf population is comprised of single wolves," Hart said.
Hart
said dealing with an aggressive wolf or one habituated to people is a
rare occurrence and is handled on a case-by-case basis. If a wolf is
aggressive toward people, Hart said it would be lethally shot. If it was
habituated to people, a nonlethal method of deterring the wolf would
likely be tried first, he said. "We might try rubber buckshot to discourage the wolf from hanging around," Hart said.
If that did not work, however, Hart said the wolf would have to be killed to avoid potentially dangerous situations.
Trapping
and relocating wolves is not a good option in these situations, Hart
said, because it's likely the wolf will continue to exhibit the same
behaviors wherever it is relocated. "The other problem
with relocation is finding a suitable place to relocate a wolf," Hart
said. "Almost all of those areas already have wolves in them. If you
drop a wolf in a strange wolf pack's territory, they are likely to get
killed by the resident wolf pack that lives there."
If a
person were to feel threatened by a wolf, "the message would be, 'Don't
run,'" Hart said. "Yell, raise your arms, wave your arms, make yourself
appear bigger than you are. Remind the wolf that you are human. ...
Just slowly back away."
To avoid habituating the wolf to
people, Hart said the public should not intentionally or
unintentionally feed wolves and should just admire it from afar and
leave it alone. "Wolves are like dogs and they learn to
associate very quickly," Hart said. "You don't want to be throwing food
out your car door to it, you don't want it to be eating from a deer
carcass on your back-40 (acres)."
Hart said a more
realistic concern with wolves in cities is the threat to domestic pets.
He urged residents to keep a close eye on their pets, especially dogs. "Keep them in at night, keep them kenneled," Hart said. "Don't let them run loose in that area."
Hart
pointed to the recent killing of a dog by a wolf in Duluth and said
these types of killings are documented quite frequently.
If
a wolf is an immediate threat to a human life, Hart said it is legal
for the general public to kill it. It is not legal, however, to kill a
wolf attacking a pet or one that is on someone's property. "At that point, it's just, try to scare the wolf away," Hart said.
No comments:
Post a Comment