Effort to prevent 'coywolf' hybrid wiping out critically endangered red wolves is working
By
Hannah Osborne
The red wolf went extinct in the wild in the 1980s but is now slowly recovering thanks to conservation effortsUSFWS
Conservation
efforts to stop coyotes wiping out the critically endangered red wolf
through the creation of "coywolf" hybrids appear to be working. Coyotes
pose a threat to the genetic integrity of red wolves (Canis rufus) by
mating with them, producing these fertile coywolf hybrids.
Red wolf numbers are extremely low, with the IUCN Red List
stating there are less than 150 in the wild. Of these, however, no more
than 50 are mature individuals. The species went extinct in the wild in
1980, but was reintroduced by the US Fish and Wildlife Service in 1987
to eastern North Carolina. The current population occupies the peninsula
between the Albemarle and Pamlico Sounds.
A study published in the journal Biological Conservation has
now examined how effective the conservation efforts have been, looking
specifically at the "placeholder" concept. This involves coyotes and
coywolves being captured, sterilised and re-released as placeholders,
which hold territories until they are either displaced or killed by a
wolf. It also includes the removal of the placeholder by wildlife
managers before a wolf is released.
The team from Utah State
University examined the 15-year sterilisation programme and found that
between 1999 and 2013, red wolves displaced or killed just under a third
of the sterile placeholders. "We evaluated the placeholder concept by
examining the number of animals sterilised and released, likelihood of
displacement by a wolf, factors influencing displacements, territory
fidelity of placeholders, and survival rates and causes of mortality of
placeholders and wolves," the team wrote.
Coywolf: The new species of wolf and coyote spreading across AmericaForestWander/CC"Of
the 182 placeholders, 125 were coyotes and 57 were hybrids. From 1999
to 2013, 51 placeholders were displaced or killed by wolves, and 16 were
removed by management personnel. Thus, 37% of the placeholders were
displaced leading to occupancy by a wolf. Most displacements occurred in
winter (43%) and were always by the same sex. Males were more likely to
be displaced than females."
Sterilisations were not meant to
control the coyote population size, rather they were to stop their DNA
being passed to red wolf offspring, lead author Eric Gese told Science magazine.
As a result of the efforts, red wolf litters outnumbered hybrid coywolf
litters every year. He said purebred red wolves would probably have
disappeared without the intervention.
The study comes as US
officials consider phasing out the conservation effort because of
concerns about its long-term effectiveness, as well as cost. An
independent evaluation of the programme also said the conservation
effort may not succeed. A decision on it is expected in 2016.
"The
future is problematic," said Douglas Smith, who served on the Wildlife
Management Institute review. "Problematic doesn't mean there is not a
road to success, but they have been stalled at around 100 wolves."
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