By Bill Croke on 3.5.02 @ 12:01AM
They were supposed to remain inside Yellowstone -- but rather than settle for life as a tourist attraction they now roam the Pacific Northwest preying on cattle and sheep and enjoying all the protections afforded them by the Endangered Species Act.
Despite local misgivings Gray wolves (Canis Lupus) were
reintroduced to the Northern Rockies in 1995 as an "experimental"
population. That is, individual wolves could be removed if
troublesome, and even shot by a rancher if they were caught preying
on livestock. Thirty Canadian wolves were released in Yellowstone
National Park, and another thirty in wilderness areas of central
Idaho. There is a much reprinted picture of then Interior Secretary
Bruce Babbitt assisting federal wildlife biologists in carrying a
caged wolf from a truck to a Yellowstone holding pen, this photo op
reflecting the Clinton administration's enthusiasm for the
project.
From the Green point of view the reintroduction was a breeding
success story. It is estimated that today 130 wolves roam
Yellowstone and environs, with about an equal number in Idaho. The
Yellowstone bunch are doing so well that packs are leaving the
wolf-crowded Park and expanding their range into adjacent Montana
and Wyoming, where they encounter the temptations of domestic
livestock, particularly cattle and sheep. Stockgrowers have
recorded hundreds of losses. This after they were told that the
wolves would remain in Yellowstone (this was laughable in that
there is no fence around the Park) thanks to the vast elk herds
that would serve as their food source. The Idaho packs have also
expanded into agricultural areas and beyond.
By beyond, I mean Oregon and Washington. In Oregon, there have
lately been more than forty unconfirmed wolf sightings, a quarter
of which are considered credible "good sightings," according to the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service office in Bend. In Washington state
a lone female has wandered the relatively short eighty miles from
far northwestern Montana. These migrations are significant.
The experimental Yellowstone-Idaho reintroductions of 1995 came
with strings attached. As noted, farmers and ranchers catching a
wolf in the act of preying on livestock were permitted to shoot
that wolf. Stockmen -- trying to make the best of a bad situation
-- were reimbursed full market value for their losses by "Defenders
of Wildlife," a national environmental group that had ingratiated
itself into the program with the full support of the Clinton
administration. "Defenders" has so far paid out a total of $206,000
to 180 ranchers in the northern Rockies. The group -- despite an
altruistic public pose -- uses nonstop fundraising to buy off
ranchers with the goal of ending livestock grazing on the public
lands.
Now that wolves are wandering into the Pacific Northwest, they
escape their experimental status and are afforded the full
protection of the 1973 Endangered Species Act (ESA), essentially
becoming bulletproof, yet with "Defenders of Wildlife" maintaining
its role. Suzanne Laverty, Northwest representative for
"Defenders," recently told the Associated Press that the arrival of
wolves is "great news for wolves and wildlife supporters.…We
welcome the day there will be some wolf claims in
Oregon.…That will mean there are wolves in Oregon, and they
belong there."
Northwest ranchers aren't so sanguine.
"Wolves and livestock can't coexist. Period," Sharon Beck, a
rancher and past president of the Oregon Cattlemen's Association,
told the AP. "Their [environmentalists] agenda is to get us off the
public lands".
Brooks Fahy, executive director of the Predator Defense
Institute in green Eugene, doesn't deny it: "Fifty percent of
Oregon is prime wolf habitat…that has essentially been
trampled.…The West is being treated like it was a giant
feedlot.…We don't see any gray areas.…We want livestock
off of public lands".
As for the Washington female, some would say she had a head
start. She is an Alpha female (dominant and the only female in a
pack to breed) that has participated in thirty-five sheep attacks
in Montana's Madison Valley, and she is an alumnus of media mogul
Ted Turner's halfway house for recidivist wolves that habitually
attack livestock.
In the spring of 2000 Turner -- in cooperation with the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service and Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks --
had a large holding pen and related facilities built on his Flying
D Ranch south of Bozeman, Montana. They've kept dozens of captured
wolves there and have tried -- using Pavlovian behavioral methods
-- to get them off the drug of attacking cattle and sheep. Turner
also hired his own wildlife pointyheads to assist in this
project.
A calf or lamb is placed in the pen, and as the wolves --
wearing electro-shock collars -- approach within a few feet, they
receive a rude electric shock (PETA call your office!) that
discourages further curiosity. Many wolves that went through this
program (that plainly doesn't work) have been released back into
the wild, where they have resumed their livestock depredations in
nearby Paradise Valley. The Washington state female was part of a
small pack relocated to the remote Yaak Valley of northwestern
Montana, hard against the Canadian border and hundreds of miles
from Turner's ranch. From there she made her lone eighty-mile
migration to the Colville, Washington area: "To a wolf, that's like
an afternoon walk," Ed Bangs, wolf recovery team leader for the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, told the AP.
As "experimental" wolves expand their ranges in the Northern
Rockies and Pacific Northwest, environmental groups are cynically
using such tools as the Endangered Species Act to limit commercial
activity on and access to public lands, and they have allies in the
federal agencies. We have seen this recently in the infamous lynx
study scandal involving the U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, and in the lately published report by the
National Academy of Sciences on the erring of federal officials in
cutting off irrigation water to protect three species of fish in
last summer's Klamath Falls, Oregon "farmers vs. suckerfish"
struggle.
That Ted Turner, "Defenders of Wildlife" and their ilk have
ingratiated themselves into federally initiated but cash-strapped
local wildlife programs by passing fat checks around does not bode
well for stockgrowers in the West. The region's generation-old
environmental debate is increasingly being influenced by whoever
has the biggest bank accounts and hence the best lawyers. It
behooves the Bush administration to officially end this era of
Clintonian tyrannical malfeasance and corruption in the West, that
allows for outside environmentalists to do their mischief with
their own elitist interests in mind.
"We're not raising beef for wolves," says Sharon Beck. "We're
raising it for profit."
And that, dear Mrs. Beck -- in the eyes of the West's
enlightened elite -- is an unpardonable sin. It makes one wonder
who the predators on the range really are.
topics:
Environment, Law