Biologists recommend taking wolves off Oregon’s endangered species list
The wildlife biologists in charge of Oregon’s gray wolf recovery program believe wolves should be taken off the state endangered species list.
The recommendation goes to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Commission, which will decide Nov. 9 whether to de-list wolves. Livestock producers, especially those represented by the Oregon Cattleman’s Association, favor de-listing.
Conservation groups oppose the idea. In a joint statement released Oct. 29, the Pacific Wolf Coalition said the staff recommendation is flawed and has not been peer reviewed as required by state law. The coalition includes Oregon Wild, Cascadia Wildlands and the Center for Biological Diversity.
Michael Paul Nelson, a College of Forestry professor of environmental ethics and philosophy at Oregon State University, called de-listing “logically indefensible” when wolves are present on only 12 percent of their potential range in the state.
“Dropping state protections for wolves right now would suggest that politics, rather than science and law, are guiding wildlife management decisions in Oregon,” Nelson said in a statement issued by Pacific Wolf Coalition.
If the ODFW commission agrees with the staff recommendation, it would mean wolves in the eastern third of the state are not protected under either state or federal endangered species laws. Federal ESA protection would still be in force in the rest of Oregon.
That wouldn’t mean open season on wolves, however. The state wolf plan would remain in force, and it allows ODFW-approved “controlled take,” or killing, of wolves in cases of chronic livestock attacks or if wolves cause a decline in prey populations, chiefly elk and deer. Ranchers, as they do now, would be able to shoot wolves caught in the act of attacking livestock or herd dogs. None have been killed in that manner.
Oregon’s wolf plan does not allow sport hunting of wolves in any phase of the recovery timeline, ODFW spokeswoman Michelle Dennehy said.
The ODFW staff recommendation was not a surprise. A biological status review completed earlier this fall said gray wolf recovery in Oregon has met the de-listing criteria in every instance.
Under the state plan, wolves can be de-listed if:
Wolves aren’t in danger of extinction in any portion of their range; their natural reproductive potential is not in danger of failing; there’s no imminent or active deterioration of their range or primary habitat; the species or its habitat won’t be “over-utilized” for scientific, recreational, commercial or educational reasons; and existing state or federal regulations are adequate to protect them.
State wildlife biologists, headed by ODFW’s Russ Morgan, believe the criteria have been met. Morgan describes Oregon’s wolf population as steadily increasing in number and geographic distribution.
The first wolves migrated to Oregon from Idaho, where they had been released as part of a national recovery program coordinated by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The first Oregon pack was documented in 2008, and the confirmed wolf population stood at 85 as of July 2015. Since then, three wolves have died: The Sled Springs pair were found dead of unknown cause in Wallowa County in late August, and a Grant County man hunting coyotes on private property in early October reported shooting a wolf designated as OR-22. A district attorney is reviewing evidence in the case.
The Nov. 9 ODFW Commission meeting begins at 8 a.m. at the department headquarters, 4034 Fairview Industrial Drive SE, Salem. Wolf de-listing is the only topic on the agenda.