E-mail Story   Print Story
  Comments (9) Total Sunday May. 19, 2013
 
Wolf Management Not Based on Science
Letter
Despite my 20 years of research and experience with wolves, I remain appalled at humanity’s intolerance toward these animals. This mindset is supported and perpetuated by those responsible for wolf management. Where I live, this is Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks (FWP). The agency claims that management and public wolf hunts are based in science. However, my published review of their information demonstrated that FWP did not use scientific protocol to collect its data. Instead, it depended heavily upon the subjective opinions and observations of the general public. Consequently, it does not know the minimum number of wolves in Montana, a major reference point used by wolf managers. The quotas proposed for public wolf hunts are arbitrary, and management decisions in general have not been based on facts. The claim that hunts are necessary because of increased livestock depredation and the wolves’ threat to prey populations, especially elk, are without merit. Statistics from the Department of Agriculture, scientific research, and even FWP’s own data show that none of this is true. A recent study by a graduate student in Wyoming demonstrated that declining elk populations had little to do with wolves. Instead, drought and grizzly bear predation were the main factors.

In general, management agencies blatantly ignore what science knows about wolves. Wolves are managed without regard to their top-down influence throughout ecosystems, despite published scientific studies that have documented their role in maintaining healthy ecosystems. My research has shown that wolves can suffer from emotional disorders as a result of trauma inflicted from wolf management practices. One can only imagine the terrifying emotional and physical anguish of dying slowly in a leg trap or snare. The Fishtrap wolves I studied for 10 years demonstrated that wolf packs are in a process in which all members participate. Other studies have shown that these processes are linked in geographic regions to form networks. Such widespread social systems cannot be managed, at least in the traditional sense. During his 43 years of research in Alaska, the late Dr. Gordon Haber documented the destruction of wolf family groups and traditions because of management and hunting.

So far, there has been no accountability for the repercussions of management decisions, such as killing wolves without proper scientific assessment. When the state of Montana created revenue by killing its own wolves, hunting them became a self-serving process. Therefore, money and convenience are some of the reasons to hunt wolves, which implies conflict of interest. The actions of FWP bring up the moral issue of how a government agency can use flawed data to make management decisions, kill hundreds of wolves, and be allowed to do so. The solution is for people to educate themselves about these issues and to demand answers from management officials as to why wolf management lacks science. Simply ask, “Where are the data that justify your decisions?” Despite all the numbers, agendas, and arguing, there is still one certain truth: the pain we inflict upon all wildlife in the name of management is horrific and real.

Jay Mallonee
Kalispell
 
On 08-05-12, montanaeasy56 commented....
More money flushed down the toilet. Now the feds are going to declare 7 or 8 states “drought disaster areas” and spend MORE of our tax dollars. Back in the old days, farmers and ranchers bucked up when things went bad. Now days they can just…
 
Kellyn Brown
Kellyn Brown18 May
@kellynbrown
No, I don't want to read mini-biographies of contributors to your magazine in the front of the book.
Dillon Tabish
Dillon Tabish2h
@djtabish
Hellgate lacrosse wins state championship 15-4 over flathead
Molly Priddy
Molly Priddy17 May
@mollypriddy
@djtabish You may have $10, but I have the fleeting hope that I'll be a millionaire without having to do any work for it. #lazy
Myers Reece
Myers Reece17 May
@myersreece
Early glimpse at National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest includes shot from National Bison Range in MT. http://t.co/bMSX4hCEhf
Flathead Beacon
FB Headlines11h
@flatheadbeacon
Food Stamp Cuts Emerge as Lawmakers Craft New Farm Bill http://t.co/rtyJIvTImO