Outside Online
advertisement
  • Home
  • Travel
  • Gear
  • Bodywork
  • Culture
  • Blog
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • Photos
  • Archives
  • Subscribe
Subscribe to Outside Magazine


You Are Here:   Home  >>   Back in the Crosshairs

Outside Blog
  • Kelly Slater on His One Track Mind<...
  • The Spoke Word: New Winter Cycling ...
  • iPhone Fitness Apps
  • The 405 is still more dangerous
  • Sports in Space
Podcasts
  • Q&A: Climbing El Capitan with Conrad Anker, Jimmy Chin, and Ivo Ninov listen
  • Q&A: Maggie Anthony On Son Eric Volz listen
  • Q&A: Photographer Danny Clinch listen
  • Q&A: "Coca Is It!" Author Joshua Hammer listen
  • Q&A: "Strange Bird" Author Carl Hoffman listen
  • Out of Bounds: That '70s Guy listen
Videos
  • Jack Johnson Cover Shoot
  • Grand Canyon: 3D IMAX
  • Climbing El Capitan
  • Castaway:
  • Episode 1: The Arrival
  • Episode 2: The Quest for Fire
  • Episode 3: Mmm...Slime Nuggets
  • Episode 4: "Last Night, a Crab Tried to Eat Me."
Ask Dave
  • What kind of dog will make me look manlier? answer
  • Is there a sport that safely combines my twin passions for guns and kayaks? answer
  • How come most of the world's cultures enjoy eating goat, but Americans don't? answer
The Wild File
  • Why do mosquito bites itch? answer
  • Are elite athletes just lucky genetic mutants? answer
  • Can women really tolerate cold water better than men? answer

Online Favorites

  • "Into Thin Air"
  • Best Adventure Books
  • The O Files: Unsolved Mysteries
  • Dream Towns
  • Dream Jobs

Special Issues

  • Family Road Trips
  • Interactive Colorado
  • Literary All-Stars
  • Adventure Lodges
  • Oceanic Endeavors
  • Adventure Goddesses

Photo Galleries

  • Malia Jones
  • Amanda Beard
  • Julia Mancuso
  • Women Who Rock
  • Kelly Slater
  • Olympic Cities
  • Exposure: Sara Carlson
  • See All Galleries
share this article del.icio.us DIGG Facebook StumbleUpon

Outside Magazine 2003

Back in the Crosshairs
The gray wolf may lose federal protection. Will killing it become the law of the land?

By Bruce Barcott

Hungry Eyes: Captive Gray Wolves at the International Wolf Center, in Ely, Minnesota (photograph by Joel Sartore)

HANCE CLAYTON has his wolf traps ready. "Snares work best, but you can use spring traps, too," says Clayton, a 60-year-old fur trapper who has taken wolves in Alaska and catches bobcats, coyotes, and foxes in the sagebrush hills outside Idaho Falls, Idaho. "I don't want to wipe out the species," Clayton insists, "but we need to be able to keep the wolves in check."

Clayton is one of hundreds of trappers, ranchers, and hunters anticipating the pending removal of the gray wolf from the endangered species list maintained by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Last April, thanks to recovering wolf populations in the upper Midwest (where there are about 3,500 wolves) and the northern Rocky Mountains (where there are some 700), the agency downlisted the species' status in these regions from endangered to threatened, allowing the public to kill wolves under certain circumstances. Later this year, regional coordinators are expected to propose delisting Canis lupus entirely.


"We don't want gray wolves taken off the list just so people can exterminate them."

If delisting happens—the process should take at least a year, and it will likely be slowed further by lawsuits from environmentalists—management of the wolves would shift to the states, a prospect that has wolf advocates growling. The problem? A number of states are drafting plans that would permit wolf hunting and trapping, while one, Wyoming, is flatly calling for open season on the animals.

It's not surprising that Wyoming would lead a backlash against the wolf. Ranchers there fought tenaciously against programs that returned wolves to Yellowstone National Park in 1995, claiming the animals would expand their range beyond park boundaries and decimate livestock. Wolves have killed Wyoming farm animals—including 89 sheep and 54 cattle between 1999 and 2002—but environmentalists argue that these casualties are minuscule compared with the more than 14,000 sheep lost yearly to dogs, eagles, and weather. They also note that Defenders of Wildlife, a Washington, D.C.–based conservation group, pays market value to ranchers for livestock taken by wolves.

Strength in Numbers
Should gray wolves be removed from the U.S. endangered species list, or do they need continued federal protection? Share your opinions on this controversial issue in our online forum. PLUS: an exclusive online interview with Gary Ferguson, a naturalist with the 1995 Yellowstone reintroduction effort and author of The Yellowstone Wolves.
Wyoming's draft management plan permits wolf culling to a degree not allowed even in Alaska, where a healthy population of some 9,000 wolves is subjected to hunting and trapping with few restrictions. Wyoming wants to classify wolves as predators on all lands outside of national parks and specified wilderness areas, which means that they could be shot on sight—anytime, anywhere. This has conservationists like 44-year-old Renée Askins, the Wilson, Wyoming–based wildlife biologist who led the Yellowstone reintroduction effort, on edge: "I'm worried that this entire state could become a free-fire zone." Other state plans are more hospitable, but almost all will put the wolf at increased risk. Idaho and Montana would treat wolves like bears and mountain lions, permitting some hunting as populations grow. Minnesota, home to 2,500 wolves, would ban hunting for five years after delisting but has set a minimum population goal of only 1,600. One of the only models that conservationists like is Wisconsin's, which is funding programs that keep wolves from killing livestock, to avoid shooting them after the fact. The developments are typical of the gray wolf's drastically changing fortunes in North America. In pre-Columbian times, as many as 400,000 gray and red wolves roamed every part of the lower 48. By the early 1970s, gray wolves had almost been driven to extinction, with only a handful of animals remaining. With a population now up to nearly 4,000 across six states, the gray wolf is clearly an endangered species success story. But is its next chapter being written too soon?

"This job isn't finished," says Nina Fascione, 41, vice-president for species conservation at Defenders of Wildlife. Her group has filed a notice of intent to sue Fish and Wildlife over the April downlisting, claiming that it absurdly declared the wolf recovered even though the species inhabits just five percent of its historic range, with nary a wolf in the far West or Northeast. Delisting opponents argue that wolves should be removed from the list only after they return to all the habitats that can sustain them and state management plans ensure their continued survival.

"The Endangered Species Act clearly gives the government a mandate to recover the species, not just patch them up and send them into battle again," says Brock Evans, 66, director of the D.C.-based Endangered Species Coalition. "The numbers aren't there yet. We don't want wolves taken off the list just so people can exterminate them."

Ed Bangs, 52, northwest region wolf recovery coordinator for Fish and Wildlife, disagrees. "Only the species in really bad shape get into federal hands," he says. "It is emergency-room care. You do everything you can to get them stabilized and then you move them back out into routine management." Bangs points out that the wolf clearly met its recovery targets for the spring downlisting, and that if delisting happens, the states will be required to maintain a minimum of ten breeding pairs. "The numbers might decline a little bit," he says, "but there's no way the wolves are going extinct."

Chances are, the delisting process will get under way soon, and the Defenders lawsuit will only buy the wolves more time under federal protection and cause adjustments in state policies. Meanwhile, in Wyoming, ranchers have no doubt that the wolf will survive. "Once we start shooting at them, they'll adapt and turn elusive," argues Budd Betts, a horseman in Wyoming's Du Noir Valley, southeast of Yellowstone, who says he's lost three dogs to wolves since 1995. "It took five decades of trapping, bounties, and posse hunts to exterminate the wolf here. These are clever animals. I don't think they'll be in jeopardy."





Contributing editor BRUCE BARCOTT wrote about the Chalillo Dam in May 2003.

BlogVideosPodcastsPhotos
TODAY'S NEWS UPDATE!
Kelly Slater on His One Track Mind<...
In One Track Mind, a film by Chris Malloy, surfing greats sit down to talk about what has ...

The Spoke Word: New Winter Cycling ...
RAPHA Classic Softshell Jacket, $375 Rapha is quickly establishing itself as the Savile Row ...

More Blogs:
  • iPhone Fitness Apps
  • The 405 is still more dangerous
  • Sports in Space
  • Featured Blog: Green Issues
  • Blog Home
The Peacemaker
Greg Mortenson works to build schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Greg Mortenson video Watch

winter gear video
Winter Gear
winter filming video
Winter Film
ROM video
The ROM

More Videos:
  • Russell Coutts
  • Gym Jones
  • Dean Potter
  • Photo Guide
  • See all Videos
Gone Missing
The crew of the Travel Channel's newest show talks about filming in Papua.
Gone Missing podcast Listen

Mike Rowe Speaks
Mike Rowe talks about his long strange trip to TV's dirtiest dream job.
Mike Rowe podcast Listen

More Podcasts:
  • Q&A: Climbing El Capitan
  • Q&A: Maggie Anthony On Son Eric Volz
  • Q&A: Photographer Danny Clinch
  • Q&A: "Coca Is It!" Author Joshua Hammer
  • See all Podcasts
Malia Jones photo gallery
Malia Jones
pirate photo gallery
Pirates
Rwanda photo gallery
Rwanda

readers  photo gallery
Readers
Julia Mancuso photo gallery
Julia Mancuso
Amanda Beard photo gallery
A. Beard

More Photos:
  • Cousteaus
  • Cuba
  • Rally Car
  • Submit Your Own Photo
  • See all Photos

advertisement




Subscribe to Outside Magazine!

special featrues

Gear Spotlight: Adventure Electronics
Our esteemed Gear Guy hones in the FAQs of the digital world in this exclusive archive.
The Green Issue
Earth Day may fall in April, but global awareness should be a 365-day concern. Let us help you stay focused.




Vacation Packages

More Travel Deals
  • Save 50% on packages to thousands of destinations
  • Thanksgiving flights from $166
  • Last Minute Deals for travel this weekend or next
  • Ski destinations packages from $181
Sign up for our Travel Deals Newsletter


More From Outside Online

Outside August 2008

  • Best Towns
  • Jeff Lowe
  • Burma Cyclone
  • Triathlon Training

Special Issues

  • 2008 Summer Buyer's Guide
  • 2008 Winter Buyer's Guide
  • Outside Blog
  • Unsolved Mysteries

Outside July 2008

  • Andy Roddick
  • Fitness Special
  • Summer Road Trips
  • Canadian Adventures

Online Exclusives

  • Spooky Spots and Terrible Tales
  • Literary All-Stars
  • Oceanic Endeavors
  • Adventure Goddesses

Outside June 2008

  • Malia Jones
  • Weekend Escapes
  • Satellite Radio
  • Joe Papp

Online Favorites

  • Outside Gear Blog
  • Gear Guy
  • Fitness Q&A
  • Adventure Adviser

Outside May 2008

  • Anderson Cooper
  • Best Jobs 2008
  • Surf Genius
  • Russell Brice

Outside Classics

  • Into Thin Air
  • The Whale Hunters
  • Raising the Dead
  • The Long Way Home


Vacation Ideas from The Away Network

Outside's Best Towns 2008

  • Crested Butte, CO
  • New Orleans, LA
  • Portsmouth, NH
  • Washington, DC
  • Rest of the Best

Gay-Friendly Vacation Guides

  • Asia
  • Europe
  • South America
  • United States
  • All Vacation Destinations

Best Fall Foliage

  • Black Hills National Forest
  • Glacier National Park
  • Great Smoky Mountains
  • Monongahela National Forest
  • Shenandoah National Park

Trip-Planning Tools

  • Cheap Flights 101
  • Cheap Hotels 101
  • Compare Rates
  • Travel Insurance Tips
  • Vacation Rentals Index

Top Scenic Drives

  • California's Deserts
  • Mountain Tours
  • Upstate New York
  • Weekend Road Trips
  • See All Drives

GORP's Fall Outdoor Guides

  • Where to Camp
  • Where to Fish
  • Where to Hike
  • Where to Mountain Bike
  • All Fall Guides

GORPTravel Trips

  • Active Resorts
  • Horses & Riding
  • Nature Observation
  • Culinary Tours
  • Volunteer Vacations

Fall Travel Guides

  • Active Travel
  • Cultural Travel
  • Outdoor Travel
  • Romantic Travel
  • All Monthly Travel Guides



  • Home |
  • Travel |
  • Gear |
  • Bodywork |
  • Culture |
  • Videos |
  • Podcasts |
  • Photos |
  • Archives |
  • Feedback |
  • RSS Feeds |
  • Subscribe to Outside Magazine |
  • Join/Login




  • About Outside |
  • Advertise |
  • Terms of Use |
  • Subscription Services |
  • Sponsorship Policy |
  • Outside Info |
  • Site Map |
  • Press Room

  • Outside Magazine Media Kit |
  • Photo Department |
  • Privacy Policy |
  • Contact Us |
  • Contributor's Guidelines

Partner Sites:
  • Away.com |
  • GORP.com |
  • Orbitz |
  • Cheaptickets |
  • ebookers |
  • HotelClub.com |
  • RatesToGo.com |
  • asia-hotels.com |
  • Outside's Go


©1994-2008 Mariah Media Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction of material from any pages without written permission is strictly prohibited.