This comes as a
consequence of the significant increase of complaints regarding wolf attacks
received by authorities from livestock owners.
Despite the fact that
environmental groups are planning to sue the federal government in order to
restore wolf protection, the scheduling of hunts has already begun.
“Americans will howl
with rage when they learn that their government is jeopardizing this iconic
animal,” said NRDC’s Louisa Willcox last month after the US Department of the
Interior decided that gray wolves should be removed from the endangered species
list. “Why snatch defeat from the jaws of victory when we’ve made so much
progress toward recovering wolves in the Greater Yellowstone region?”
There is however a clearly stated objective for this action, namely to bring
down the population to somewhere between 900 and 1,250 animals. This number is
considered ideal for this area. It appears that when the officials listed the
wolves as endangered in 1973, when the species was almost extinct, they did not
expect them to breed so rapidly. A genuine breakthrough was possible thanks to
considerable efforts made by authorities in 1995 and 1996, when 66 wolves were
placed in
"We did a
thorough analysis," said Ed Bangs, the wolf recovery coordinator for the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, quoted by CNN.
"The consensus [for recovery] is a population of 300 wolves and 30
breeding pairs." "The wolf population is fully recovered. We have
more wolves than we ever predicted and we have fewer problems than we ever
predicted", he added.
During 2007,
biologists documented 83 resident wolf packs in
The gray wolf or timber wolf, Canis
lupus, is the largest wild member of the Canidae family, weighing in
at around 70–150 pounds. Overall, across the world, the wolf is classified as
being of least concern for extinction, as categorized by the International
Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN).