Benefits of The Wolf Recovery Project
Lori Helms
Introduction
Wolves have inhabited the
Wolves are now a protected species in
the
Biological Basis for The
Wolf Recovery Project
Biodiversity and conservation biology are the major scientific purposes for supporting The Wolf Recovery Project (Hamann, 1997). Biodiversity is really a catch-all phrase that greatly effects ecosystem health. There are three major types of biodiversity: habitat diversity, genetic diversity, and species diversity (Harte, 1996). All of these three terms are interrelated; one depends on how successful the other two are. In the case of the Gray Wolf, one could argue the destruction of any of the three forms of biodiversity caused the near extinction of the species. Certainly wolves suffered habitat destruction by the conversion of wilderness to agriculture and residential lands. Genetic biodiversity of the wolf has also been tainted due to cross breeding with domestic dogs and coyotes, and blatant species biodiversity destruction has been enforced by the once popular goal to eradicate every wolf from this country. Through the help of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA), we have been successful in bringing wolves back to the wild. For their populations to be sustainable, all three components of biodiversity must be monitored. Under the ESA it is a crime to kill a wolf (US Fish and Wildlife Service, 1973). The U.S. Department of Fish and Wildlife Services is the department in charge of the wolf project and they alone are authorized to kill wolves.
The
other two pieces of the biodiversity puzzle are a little more difficult to
control. As far as conserving habitat
biodiversity, there are protected, federally owned lands where wolves
roam. However, 90% of federally owned
lands in the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and 69% of the lands owned by the
Forest Service are used by private citizens for agriculture purposes, mainly
livestock grazing (Wuerthner,
2001). The laws are set up to maintain
these lands essentially as a protected area, but they also allow grazing. Ranchers do not want wolves on their land for
fear of predation on their livestock. However
if the land they are using for their livestock is government, i.e. publicly
owned, there is little room for complaints against the presence of wolves,
since they have as much of a right to the land as the ranchers do. Since ranchers and livestock occupy a much
larger percentage of federally owned lands than wolves do, their desire for a
total removal of wolves is unreasonable.
It has been said by many conservationists that virtually every piece of
federally owned land that can sustain a cow, has a cow on it (Wuerthner, 2001). Assuming this is true, it is not surprising
that the public statement of one representative of the Minnesota Cattlemen’s Association
said it is their belief that wolves should be restricted only to the truly wild
areas of the state (Hyde, 2002). Translated,
this means wolves should only be allowed in the areas where it is impossible to
sustain livestock and unsuitable for residential development; wolves should be
given the leftover land that humans are unable to exploit. The main theme of this train of thought is
that biodiversity and conservation techniques should only be applied to areas
that humans can not utilize. This is not
a reasonable or beneficial plan. The
amount of wilderness in the
Maintaining genetic biodiversity is the component of the equation over which we have the least control. Laws can be made and enforced to keep wolves from being hunted and large tracts of land can be mandated to be used only as a wilderness refuge, but restricting the breeding in the wild of wolves and other canid species is much more difficult. Fortunately, this is not a huge problem if the other two conservation issues are properly handled. Given the proper habitat free of human influence, with a sufficient amount of food and other wolves to mate with, wolves will naturally maintain the genetic purity of their species (Nowak, 2002). There has been a surge of popularity over the last two decades in wolf-dog hybrids. The hybridization and domestication of these wolves does nothing to strengthen the pure wolf breed. The vast majority of all “wolf attacks” are not from genetically pure wolves, but from ones who have bred with a domesticated dog and released into the wild. This release of wolf hybrids into the wild happens for many reasons. First, they may simply escape from their owners and become feral and lose their fear of people. A second reason is the intentional release of wolf hybrids by owners who find out the hard way their “dog” is much more wolf than domestic pooch. Possibly feeling some sort of guilt for having what is obviously a wild creature in captivity, they free the animal to the wilderness with well-meaning intentions of having the dog join a wolf pack, or if nothing else, roam free in a more natural environment. This is very dangerous and contributes to “bad press” for the wolf. Having been raised with human interaction, along with the combination of having part of their genes come from a domesticated dog, these hybrids have very little fear of people and are notorious for attacking humans (Hope, 1994). There has never been a documented case of a healthy, wild, genetically pure wolf killing a human, which is in stark contrast to the estimated two million wolves that humans have killed in the last one hundred years. (Hamann, 1997) This being said, it is also necessary to note that the domestic dog and Canus lupus have mitochondrial DNA sequences that differ by only 0.2%. The closest wild relative of the wolf is the coyote whose mtDNA differs by 4% (Hope, 1994).
The
importance of biodiversity is often pondered by the non-scientific community. First, biodiversity refers to all of the
different varieties of life on Earth.
More specifically, it refers to the varieties of species that compose a
community and includes both species richness and species evenness as evaluation
methods (
Biodiversity
should be important to humans for several reasons. First, the rate of extinction of life forms
on earth is believed to be at its highest level in 100,000 years (
Wolves as Predators
In
the case of the wolf, populations of animals that they feed on have experienced
a huge surge of growth since the removal of natural predators. This overpopulation of animals like deer and
elk have resulted in a number of negative impacts on humans. According to Farm Bureau Insurance Company,
there are 1.5 million vehicle collisions with deer annually resulting in $1
billion in damages, over 200 human deaths, and over 29,000 human injuries (Farm
Bureau, 2002). Additionally,
overpopulated deer provide a potentially devastating health threat to people in
the form of Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD).
CWD is a form of Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy (TSE); other
notable TSE’s include Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) or Mad Cow
Disease, Scrapie, the disease that affects sheep, and Creutzfeldt-Jakobs
Disease in humans (Jackson, et al, 2000). At this time it is believed that CWD is
specific to ungulates and only affects
It is believed that BSE originated by cows
feeding on meat and bone meal made from sheep infected with Scrapie (Cheeke,
1999). The prion for TSE is present in
the brain of infected animals; when bone and meat meal are produced, brain
matter is incorporated. There is now a
ban on feeding meat meal of ruminants to other ruminants, but it is allowed to
be fed to monogastrics like chickens and pigs (Cheeke, 1999). It is believed that CWD spreads throughout
the herd of elk or deer by animal to animal transmission, perhaps even
maternally (USDA, 2002). If BSE
originated as theorized through cows being exposed to another ruminant species
carrying the prion, it is not unreasonable to expect CWD to evolve to infect
cattle and sheep as well. In large range
grazing operations in the western
In natural selection, only the strongest
survive. Wolves and other natural predators
could reduce the spread of CWD by eliminating weak animals from the herd. When humans are the only predator of a
species, reverse natural selection occurs.
Humans shoot animals for trophies and food; we want to kill the biggest,
strongest deer we can find. By removing
the “best” genes from the gene pool by hunting, we are weakening the species
and encouraging the spread of diseases.
Monetary losses from wolf predation of livestock is very low; not only
do wolves compromise a tiny fraction of livestock deaths every year, but when
they do occur, the ranchers are almost always compensated for their loss by the
Government and private conservation organizations. With all of this in mind, it is not a stretch
to claim that wolves could be a great friend to the rancher.
It was reported that in the Rocky Mountain
region between 1997-1999, sheep deaths due to wolves made up .01 percent
(1 in 10,000) of total sheep losses, and cattle deaths attributed to wolves
accounted for .03 percent (3 in 10,000) of all cattle losses (Meier, 2001). Every state that has wolves has compensation
to ranchers who loose livestock due to depredations by wolves (Meier, 2001). Several states, like
The following table shows depredations statistics for Gray Wolves in 2000:
|
Gray Wolf Depredation Statistics, year 2000 |
|||
|
|
MN, WI, MI |
MT, ID, WY |
AZ, NM |
|
Wolf Population, winter 2000-01 |
3100 |
432 |
30 |
|
Verified Cattle Losses in 2000 |
103 |
32 |
1 |
|
Verified Sheep Losses in 2000 |
20 |
80 |
1 |
|
Compensation paid in 2000 |
$102,375 |
$47,045 |
$3,400 |
|
Yearly cost of control program |
$350,570 |
$238,634 |
$100,000 |
|
Wolves killed in control actions |
148 |
20 |
0 |
|
Wolves translocated |
2 |
16 |
2 |
|
Wolves captured, released on site |
5 |
7 |
0 |
|
Wolves removed from the wild |
0 |
0 |
8 |
(Table from Meier, 2001)
Ranchers
often feel helpless when wolves are in their area. They feel like their livestock are sitting
ducks and that the question is not if depredations will occur, but when (Hyde,
2002). This fear is much like the fear
of flying. Sure, some airplanes crash
and people die, but many more people die annually from car crashes. Sometimes livestock are killed by wolves, but
the chances of them dying from disease and weather exposure are much greater (Hamann,
1997). In fact, in 1995 the USDA
reported that 4.2 million head of cattle died due to weather, disease, theft,
or poison (USDA, 1996). The same report
listed 117,400 as dying from the result of predator attacks; the vast majority
of which were coyotes (USDA, 1996).
Wolves do not naturally recognize livestock as a food source, but when
one begins to prey on livestock it is quickly removed from the situation to
prevent the action from being “taught” to the others in the pack (Harper,
2001). However, just as there are
certain safeties procedures that airlines follow to prevent disasters, ranchers
can also take preventive measures to provide additional protection from depredations. Several popular, and effective, methods
include improved husbandry methods, specialized electric fences, strobe lights,
and guard dogs (Harper, 2001). Among
these, guard dogs seem to offer the greatest degree of protection. These special working dogs are born and bred
to have one goal in life; to protect the herd (McNally, 2002). One of the popular breeds used for herd
protection are Great Pyrenees (McNally, 2002).
It is not uncommon in
Recovery Plans
The
US Fish and Wildlife Service have devised three distinct recovery plans for
wolves according to region. The regions
are known as Distinct Population Segments (DPS) and include the
The
This
plan includes
The
The
The Southwest
Plan (
The Next Step
As of March 2003, the US Fish and Wildlife Service reclassified the Gray
Wolf from endangered to threatened in the Eastern and
The US Fish and
Wildlife Service have found that tolerance and acceptance of the wolf is
directly related to education. In order
for the above recommendations to work, a widespread educational campaign must
be implicated to gain support from the communities influenced by the presence
of wolves.
Conclusion
The major arguments against the Wolf Recovery Project are the threats to human safety and damage to the livestock ranchers who graze in wolf populated areas. History is the best proof that the threat to human safety from wolves is merely a fable. Genetically pure, wild, healthy wolves (like those used in the program) have never been responsible for a human death. Wolf attacks on humans have not produced any fatalities and have occurred from wolves that had become acclimated to people due to campers feeding them (UDWR, 2001). Because wolves account for such a tiny fraction of annual livestock deaths, and because there is compensation paid to those who do suffer losses, the traditional rancher’s argument has little validity as well.
We
have the ability through legislation and funds to renew an integral part of the
natural ecosystem that was once essential rather than controversial. We can not truly restore a wild habitat
without restoring the predators that keep it healthy and balanced. Besides the scientific advantages The Wolf
Recovery Project, there have been other unexpected benefits. The eco-tourism market has experienced a boom
in business in the areas wolves have been reintroduced (Sinay, 2003). These
industries serve as a means of education for thousands of people each
year. Not only do eco-tourism companies
provide an insight on the inner workings of an ecosystem, they also educate
people on the value of wildlife for purposes other than hunting. Coincidently, wildlife viewing businesses
earned $100 million more than hunting businesses in
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