"Wolf" courtesy of [duzzani via Flickr]
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Wolves are one of North America’s
most fascinating indigenous species but they also pose a major threat to
cattle populations. While poaching wolves is illegal, culling of wolves
by government officials and trophy hunting have historically been used
to keep wolf populations in check. However, Guillaume Chapron of the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences and Adrian Treves
of the University of Wisconsin-Madison recently conducted a study on
wolf populations in Wisconsin and Michigan and found that state laws
that opened up legal culling actually slowed population growth–a notable
problem for America’s wolf population.
The logic for legal culling is simple: it was assumed that these outlets for hunting would limit illegal poaching
and would encourage Americans to coexist with the wolf population. The
wolf population would continue to grow without hovering to the point of
extinction, as locals will not feel the need to illegally hunt the
animals. Including legal culling is a cornerstone of “carnivore management,” which
deals with carnivorous populations in the wild that can pose a threat
to human life but can also coexist with humans when handled correctly.
Wolves are not the only predators that conservationists have difficulty handling–African lions, grizzly bears and other large carnivores present a massive challenge. Consider that a set of brown bears released into the wild
in Italy last year had to be hunted down after they attacked several
humans. Whereas conservationists can hope to release animals like pandas
and elephants back into the wild, large carnivores that are held for
some time may never be able to return to the wild because they are so
dependent on a stable ecosystem that consistently supplies them with
their daily meat intake.
Wolves historically could have eaten bison but
now the bison is a protected animal, a population which the United
States has a vested interest in preserving. When
one species in the food chain becomes off limit, it is difficult to
deal with its predators. Farmers across the nation are eager to receive
the “right to kill” wolves who threaten their cattle but a survey conducted by Washington State University found that killing wolves who attack livestock can actually backfire. Researchers hypothesized that:
Killing an adult wolf can disrupt the entire (complicated) social system of the grey wolf pack…killing adult wolves may end up locking their offspring to the place where they were killed: without parents to keep them sexually distinct and roaming, the way they normally would, pups may settle down prematurely, having their own pups earlier than normal, and sticking to the place where they became independent — the place where their parents were killed.
These pups then go on to eat local
livestock, just as their parents did, rather than roaming to different
areas where they might be able to feast on rabbits and other small
mammals that have no financial value for ranchers. Wolves are imperfect
creatures, that simultaneously threaten human livelihood (ranching)
while also desperately dependent on humans for their survival
(conservation), but they are part of the American landscape and we are
responsible for their future. Containing a large carnivorous species is
not an easy task, but with new evidence suggesting that legal culling
and “right to kill” laws are not having the desired effect,
conservationists and government officials may need to rethink how best
to preserve the wolf population.
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