| Wolves
had been removed from the northern Rocky Mountains region
since the 1930s.
-
- In
1986, naturally recolonizing wolves, emigrating from
Canada were denning in the northern Rockies.
- In
the early 1990s, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
funded studies in the southern Rockies, including Colorado,
that revealed there is habitat and prey capable of
supporting 1,000 wolves or more in the region.
- In
1995, wolves were reintroduced into the Greater Yellowstone
Ecosystem and central Idaho.
- Utah
and Colorado are forming Wolf Working Groups, respectively,
to develop state management plans for dispersing wolves.
- By
mid-summer 2002, there were roughly 563 adult and yearling
wolves and possibly another 200 pups in about 33-40
reproducing packs and include:
- 218
adults and yearlings in the Yellowstone Ecosystem
with at least 75 pups born Spring 2002 to 15
packs.
- 84
adults and yearlings in northwest Montana with
roughly 50 pups born Spring 2002 to 10 packs.
- 261
adults and yearlings in central Idaho with roughly
80 pups born Spring 2002 to 15 packs.
- The
recovery goal for wolves in the northern Rocky Mountains
is at least 30 breeding pairs to be distributed throughout
Montana, Idaho and Wyoming for three consecutive years.
The annual "official" count toward this goal is determined
on December 31. This year, the recovery goal for wolves
in the northern Rocky Mountains will have been achieved
for the third straight year meaning Gray Wolves in
this region could be proposed to be removed from the
federal Endangered Species List in 2003.
Source:
Timber Wolf Alliance News / October
2002
|