Wolves and the Balance of Nature in the Rockies
Wolves are flourishing again in the northern Rockies. Yet even as they're helping restore the balance of nature, they're also killing livestock—and reigniting a fierce controversy
- By Frank Clifford
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
To many naturalists, the thriving wolf population was a hopeful sign that it was possible to restock wild country with long-lost native inhabitants. But as the wolves made themselves at home again, old adversaries in the ranching community sought broader license to kill them.
By the end of 2007, wolves had been implicated in the deaths of about 2,700 livestock in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming in the dozen years since their reintroduction. They were preying on sheep and cattle at a rate higher than government scientists had predicted. Still, the predation represented a small fraction of all livestock losses.
One environmental group, Defenders of Wildlife, which has been a strong advocate of wolf reintroduction, established a fund to compensate ranchers for cows, sheep and other animals killed by wolves. The group reports it has paid ranchers about $1 million. The compensation doesn't make up for all the losses ranchers cite, such as the lower prices fetched for thin, wolf-harried cattle or the cost of extra manpower and material to protect livestock from predators.
By 2003, many Westerners were insisting that wolves be subject to more lethal control, which would require the animals' removal from the endangered species list. They got their way in early 2008, when the Bush administration ceded responsibility for most of the Rocky Mountain wolves to state officials in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. The states quickly adopted rules that sanctioned wolf hunts and generally made it easier to kill the animals. Wolves within Yellowstone's boundaries along with those in northern Montana remained under federal protection.
In the first month of relaxed regulation, at least 37 wolves were killed across the three states. By the end of July, more than 100 were dead. Bumper stickers proclaimed "Wolves—Government Sponsored Terrorists." Politicians stirred the pot. Idaho Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter was widely quoted saying "I'm prepared to bid for the first ticket [hunting license] to shoot a wolf myself." Gov. Dave Freudenthal of Wyoming questioned whether any wolf packs outside Yellowstone in his state "are even necessary."
"I'm kind of a tree hugger myself and I've never killed a wolf," said Jack Turnell, whose family has run the Pitchfork Ranch near Meeteetse, Wyoming, for most of the past century. "But the wolf people lied to me. They asked me would I resist having 100 wolves in Yellowstone. 'No,' I said, if I could stop them at the borders. Now, all of a sudden we have 1,500 wolves. One of 'em can kill 20 of something in a year. You need to say they can't get into farm and ranch areas. You can't turn wolves loose like they were a bunch of balloons."
Wolves have nipped hard at the pocketbooks of people like Martin Davis of Paradise Valley, Montana, who guides elk hunters in the mountains north of Yellowstone National Park. As the wolves have feasted on the herds, there have been fewer elk for hunters to shoot. "Our hunting has really gone lousy," Davis said. "Our repeat clients are saying when they see less wolves and more elk, they'll come back."
But the Yellowstone wolves have attracted a passionate following. Surveys conducted by the National Park Service found that nearly 100,000 people come to the park each year from other states specifically to see wolves. Visitors have formed attachments to individual wolves, and certain ones seem to have had a knack for playing to the crowd. A park favorite was a lame but bold male, nicknamed Limpy. He was shot and killed outside the park last spring.
The shooting of Limpy and other wolves spurred conservationists to challenge the new state management plans. They singled out Wyoming's especially permissive approach to killing wolves. "It's antithetical to good wildlife management. It just allows an animal to be killed for the sake of killing it," said Hank Fischer, of Missoula, Montana, who helped establish the fund to reimburse ranchers who lost livestock to wolves.
Twelve environmental groups sued to return management of the wolves to the federal government, arguing that the Yellowstone wolf population would not be sustainable until members mated with wolves in Idaho or northern Montana. By allowing hundreds of wolves to be killed outside the park, the lawsuit claimed, populations would be cut off from one another, and inbreeding would eventually weaken them, making them more vulnerable to disease, drought and other perils.
The court largely agreed. "The reduction in the wolf population that will occur as a result of public wolf hunts and [predator] control laws in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming is more than likely to eliminate any chance for genetic exchange to occur," U.S. District Court Judge Donald Molloy wrote in a ruling this past summer that effectively overturned the federal move to let the three states regulate wolf hunting. The ruling restored the wolf's status to what it was at reintroduction: only animals that take livestock may be killed.
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Comments (39)
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I hate that they are killing wolves for no reason it is seriously pathetic to do such a thing....just wrong to do it I don't understand why Obama to do such a thing I think he does it because so many wolves but that does not make it okay to kill an entire population of wolves because if it goes on for any longer and if it does ther won't be any more wolves And just to think of it is just terrible
Posted by rebecca on April 25,2013 | 04:20 PM
I've quit eating beef over this . The extreme cruelty of these states who are allowing these wolves to be killed is heart wrenching. Cattle are invasive species that destroy the environment. I have no patience with the ranching community anymore. I have also lost respect for these states.
Posted by Karl Schueman on January 2,2013 | 01:32 PM
I really enjoyed reading the intresting coments written concerning the so called evident wolfe problem in the yellowstone ecosytem. The comments i have is that weather you or i like it the wolves belong there and up here in canada aswell. The athorities do need to learn a little more on just how to manage problem areas with high concentration of these intresting creatures. Up here we call them preditor pits. I am cree which means i am first nations. These creature have a very important roll in any ecosystem without wolves the ungulates such as moose/elk/deer and so on need them to insure a healthy population exists. I really get a bad taste in my mouth when the predominant complaint is ranchers and money to you very obviosly narrow minded people my advise to you is open you eyes your mind and grow up and be a part of the solution rather than a constant part of the problem. Educate yourselves boys. the land is theres always has always will be. After were all done poluting ourselve off this planet guesse who will still be around? yup and were sapose to be the smart mammals.
Posted by melisa on December 5,2012 | 01:00 PM
I really enjoyed reading the intresting coments written concerning the so called evident wolfe problem in the yellowstone ecosytem. The comments i have is that weather you or i like it the wolves belong there and up here in canada aswell. The athorities do need to learn a little more on just how to manage problem areas with high concentration of these intresting creatures. Up here we call them preditor pits. I am cree which means i am first nations. These creature have a very important roll in any ecosystem without wolves the ungulates such as moose/elk/deer and so on need them to insure a healthy population exists. I really get a bad taste in my mouth when the predominant complaint is ranchers and money to you very obviosly narrow minded people my advise to you is open you eyes your mind and grow up and be a part of the solution rather than a constant part of the problem. Educate yourselves boys. the land is theres always has always will be. After were all done poluting ourselve off this planet guesse who will still be around? yup and were sapose to be the smart mammals.
Posted by darryl on June 12,2012 | 10:50 PM
The ranchers can also buy a cd that has another packs wolf howls...you broadcast it at night and that keeps other packs of dogs away from you area..It really does work!
Posted by mmm on May 11,2012 | 11:44 PM
Are wolf's Marathon or short distance runers?
Posted by Elizabeth on April 6,2012 | 03:34 PM
I think the introduction of wolves was a big disgrace to elk herds canadians were probably laughing all the way to the bank becase of wolf lovers that don't fare if they kill all the elk Android deer id rather see one elk than a dozen wolves
Posted by rod walchly on January 23,2012 | 11:45 AM
The balance of nature is a widely discredited ecologic theory and hasn't been taught in university ecology courses for years.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balance_of_nature
So far I've just read the title of this essay and found it lacking, I might comment further after reading.
Posted by Som Sai on December 26,2011 | 11:00 AM
I believe that everyone has to know every bit of the spectrum. I live literally and hour from Yellowstone National Park, I live this issue every day. Wolves are not a bad animal, at all. But their numbers do need to drop down. Wolves are pack animals which means when more wolves mate and create new packs they are pushed out of Yellowstone and on to our property. What people need to understand is they do eat livestock and attack peoples pets. They need to eat and they are extremely protective over their territory. It is not slaughter to protect your lively hood. Cattle around here is the way of life and when wolves come in and kill your livestock its hurting the way a rancher lives. I am all for reintroduction to wolves in Yellowstone. But people need to understand that is where they need to stay and belong. Some people might say, "wolves dont know the boundary." but really, they do. When they realized pack members are being shot when they cross out of Yellowstone they wont go there anymore. Just like if your dog had a shock collar on. If he was to get shocked a certain amount of times he will soon learn not to go near the place that he gets shocked. Wolves are not dumb animals. I love wolves and I study them when I get the chance. So for those people who think they know what is going on with the wolves I live with everyday, you really have no idea.
Posted by Kasey Cape on November 28,2011 | 10:59 AM
Are you smarter than a 7th grader?
Posted by Ken on August 17,2011 | 01:05 PM
I believe wolves have their place in the circle of life and am pleased that they have a haven in Yellowstone. What I deplore is the hunting of the wolves from airplanes and helicopters in Alaska, where the wolves are chased and harrassed until they can no longer run and have no place to hide, and then are shot. That is not sportsmanship; it is slaughter.
Posted by Maida Christner on February 9,2009 | 10:16 AM
Non-native Canadian wolves chase and harrass their prey until they can no longer run and have no place to hide, and kill eating animals while they are still alive.
They even do all this withtout eating animals they kill just for fun! (That Is Not Sportsmanship; It Is Slaughter!)
You see this is not the same wolf that is native to the United States! Non-native Canadian wolves are the worst crime ever committed on our native wildlife ever in this country!
Posted by Ken on August 17,2011 | 01:02 PM
Every man/woman has a right to choose where they want to make a living. Some choose the great cities of society, some choose the Arctic, some choose the swamp lands of Louisiana, or Florida, or the Deserts of the Mojave Desert, and my relatives, choose Nebraska, Iowa and Kansas to raise their Cattle and livestock. All come with consequences of nature, good and bad. In the great Cities, man/woman must be aware of the Human Preditor. In the Arctic, Man/Woman must be aware of the eliments, not to mention Polar Bears.
The Swamps have Alligators and Venomous Snakes. The Desert has oppressive heat, and very little moisture. The midwest deals with Tornado's and twisters. Whatever the challenge that Man/Woman is confronted with, how we make the choices to deal with our environment is as important as the end result we seek. Nature has no known natural boundaries. Humans do! When we choose a path that crosses nature's path, depending on the situation and area we choose to inhabit, nature will win most of the encounters. The equalizer between Humans and Nature is Technology. Wolves or Preditors do not have guns, or traps, or helicopters to be hunted. They do not know they are encroaching upon Mans/Woman's domain. Business, Government, and Science must find a way that all of us can live with each other. Sacrifices on all sides will need to be made. But this is America, we don't manufacture anything to speak of here anymore, but we do manufacture something the rest of the world is lacking, "innovation" We can come up with the right solutions, we must come up with the right solutions, who will come up with the right solutions? Will it be you?
Posted by James B. Albert on June 14,2011 | 10:21 PM
First of all i would like to say that yes, the ranchers are justified in shooting the wolves for eating thier property. However, there wouldnt even be an issue if the wolves land wasnt taken up. they wouldnt need to go on to ranchers land if theirs wasnt taken first. wolves are being driven out of their home and hunting grounds. How would any of you like it if some came up to you and kicked you out of your home and job and took it over. You would have to fend for yourselvesand your family. You would do anything you had to to make sure you and your family would survive. This is how it is with wolves. When they are kicked out of their home thay will do anything to feed their young and make sure that their family lived out the winter. So next time think about that before you go kill another wolf. One calf will only feed two adult wolves, if that that . It's the least you could do.
Posted by Viviane Pendragon on January 22,2010 | 05:27 PM
THERE IS NO BALANCE OF WOLVES WHEN DEFENDERS OF WILDLIFE CANT EVEN PLAY BY THERE OWN GIUDLINES DONT MATTER WHAT STATE THEY HAVE DONE THE SAMETHING.HERE IN MN. THE GOAL WAS 1,600 WOLVES THEN COULD BE DELISTED WHY STILL PROTECTED WHEN POPULATION IS ALMOST 4,OOO AND THEY STILL WANT MORE INSANE.LOOK AT THE DEFENDERS OF ANIMALS TV SHOWS ANIMAL PLANET BACK TO BACK EPISODES OFOVER POPULATED,STARVEING DOGS AND CATS IN THE BIG CITIES THESE ARE THE SAME PEOPLE THAT WANT WOLVES TO BE AT NUMBERS OF A HUNDRED YEARS AGO,HOW IN THE WORLD CAN THEY TAKE CARE OF WILD DOGS WHEN THEY CANT TAKE CARE OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS IN THERE OWN BACK YARD.DO I HAVE SOME REVENGE AND HATRED TO WOLVES YOU BET WHEN THEY KILLED 32 CALVES AND I GET PAID FOR THREE AND YES THIS IS PRIVATE LAND AND MANY THOUSAND DOLLARS THEY ATE.THERE WAS 17 WOLVES IN THIS PACK VERIFIED BY OUR WONDERFUL DNR .
Posted by MN.RANCHER on December 6,2009 | 05:11 PM
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