NM agrees to allow a few Mexican wolves into state, but only temporarily.
New Mexico Game Commission says wolves can stop over at Ladder Ranch before release in Old Mexico
February 26, 2016,
Five wolves are coming to New Mexico this spring, though
their stay will be brief.
At a special meeting in Albuquerque this morning, the New
Mexico Game Commission voted unanimously to approve an importation permit application
submitted last month by the nonprofit Turner Endangered Species Fund.
That special permit allows the US Fish and Wildlife Service to
temporarily hold five wolves at the fund’s 156,000-acre Ladder Ranch in
southwestern New Mexico.
Coming from Wolf Haven in Washington state, the wolves will
then head through the Laredo border crossing to a captive facility in Mexico.
Eventually, they’ll be released into the Sierra Madre, about 200 miles south of
the US-Mexico border. As part of a bi-national program, Mexico is hoping to
establish two populations of Mexican gray wolf in the state of Chihuahua.
Calling into the meeting from Bozeman, Mont., the fund’s
Mike Phillips explained the need to hold the animals here before their trip
into Mexico: The female should not be moved during the first 30 days of
gestation.
He laid out two possible scenarios: They could be moved to
New Mexico early next week and be allowed to breed at Ladder Ranch. The federal
agency could then move the animals to Mexico in early April.
Or, Phillips said, the adult pair could breed in Washington,
then spend the first 30 days of the female’s gestation there. In that case, Fish
and Wildlife would move the wolves to Ladder Ranch in early April and then move
them to Mexico in early July, when the puppies are eight to ten weeks old.
Before the vote, Commissioner Ralph Ramos repeatedly asked Phillips
to reassure commissioners the wolves will not stay in New Mexico indefinitely.
Ramos also said that since 90 percent of the Mexican gray
wolf’s historic range is in Mexico, the US recovery program really only covers
the animal’s far northern range. He added that Mexico also has more favorable habitat
and prey.
“This is more their natural state, and Mexico provides
better habitat,” he said. Referring to a recent dip in Mexican wolf population
in the US Southwest,
he added that if the data shows that Mexico is better for wolves, the feds
might not have to expand the US population.
Reached via telephone after the meeting, Phillips said he
was “very pleased” with the vote—and will be submitting additional permit
requests. “I think we’re back to where we were before the 2015 impasse, where
we were at the ready to try to use the Ladder Ranch in a manner that fits the
needs of the US Fish and Wildlife Service,” he says.
He disagrees, however, that Mexico offers better habitat
than the US. Although he supports the bi-national program, he’s concerned about
the lack of natural prey (as opposed to livestock) in Mexico and that country’s
lack of large tracts of public lands.
While historic maps show wolves living in Mexico and wandering
into the border country of southeastern Arizona and southwestern New Mexico, Phillips
says that genetic evidence shows wolves had previously wandered as far north as
Oklahoma.
Personally, he says, he thinks the historic view of the wolf’s
range offers a “somewhat simplistic” view of distribution; he claims it was
“far more dynamic.”
Phillips also says the Game Commission should be commended
for its actions: “They gave us more than adequate opportunity to answer questions
and concerns they had and have now moved to a new position—a much more
enlightened position, with a much better understanding of what’s involved—and
have recognized there is a role for New Mexico in Mexican gray wolf recovery.”
By calling a special meeting, rather than waiting until
their regular meeting in mid-April, when it would have been too late to decide
on the fate of the wolves currently in Washington, he says that commissioners
have shown a willingness to work together.
“They convened in special session and allowed me to
participate over the phone,” he says. “If that’s not evidence of accommodation,
of trying to do good governance on purpose, I don’t know what is.”
Next, New Mexico Department of Game and Fish Director Alexa
Sandoval will decide which of the two scenarios for moving the wolves into New
Mexico will be implemented.
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