IdaRam, You mentioned that IDF&G now has control of the Wolf Management issue. Has Wolf hunting resumed? If so, has there been any data published about the results? I expect it takes a couple of years to see the whole picture, but at this stage any improvement would be welcomed.
It just "dawned" on me why some folks disregard the Isle Royal findings. There is no hunting allowed on Isle Royal. Nature was / is allowed to take care of itself. Once the desire and expectation of a "normal" Hunting Quota is added to the mix, it is easy to see why the Wolves are considered a "threat" that needs to be dealt with.
@Shootist43 , yes wolf hunting resumed statewide in 2011. Here is some info on wolf harvest below. In addition I believe there was another study underway beginning in 2015 to assess wolf predation on elk, deer and moose. I have not been able to find that info so it may not be compiled and published yet.
https://idfg.idaho.gov/hunt/wolf/quota
Harvest quotas (limits) were initially used for managing wolf harvest in Idaho to ensure harvest was well-distributed across the state. After 7 years of harvest, it was apparent that harvest quotas were not needed as none had been reached. Consequently, harvest quotas requirements were removed beginning 2017.
Harvest data by year and unit can be found here. Note: there was no hunt in 2010, harvest data is control actions.
https://idfg.idaho.gov/ifwis/huntplanner/stats/?season=general&game=wolf&yr=2017
There used to be info available on IDF&G website which showed wolf harvest numbers broken out by hunting and trapping. It does not appear to be available any longer.
Regarding Isle Royale, it may be a large island by some standards, but is actually quite small in terms of canines and undulates. Additionally, it is a very closed ecosystem.
Some info on Isle Royale from Wikipedia:
The island is 45 miles long and 9 miles wide, with an area of 206.73 square miles.
Historically neither moose nor wolves inhabited Isle Royale. Just prior to becoming a national park the largest mammals on Isle Royale were Canadian
Lynx and the
Boreal woodland caribou. Archeological evidence indicates both of these species were present on Isle Royale for 3,500 years prior to being removed by direct human actions (hunting, trapping, mining, logging, fires and possibly the introduction of invasive species). The last
Boreal woodland caribou documented on Isle Royale was in 1925. Though Canadian
Lynxwere removed by the 1930s some have periodically crossed the ice bridge from neighboring
Ontario, Canada, the most recent being an individual sighting in 1980.Though Lynx are no longer present on the island, their primary prey,
snowshoe hares, remain. Before the appearance of wolves,
coyotes were also a predator on the island. Coyotes appeared around 1905 and disappeared shortly after wolves arrived in the 1950s. Four wolves were brought from Minnesota in 2018.
The island is well known among
ecologists as the site of a long-term study of a
predator-prey system, between
moose and
eastern timber wolves. There is a cyclical relationship between the two animals: as the moose increase in population, so do the wolves. Eventually, the wolves kill too many moose and begin to starve and lower their reproductive rates.
Where to even start?
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For example, when wolves in Idaho deplete a food source they have a sigificant number of options at their disposal. Shift to an alternate food source. No more moose, shift to elk. No moose or elk, shift to deer. No moose, elk or deer. Move.
Low populations of moose or elk and deer, supplement the diet with domestic sheep and cattle, and in some areas possibly big horn sheep, hares, grouse, turkey, beaver, etc.
On Isle Royale what options do they have? Two. Starve and reduce reproduction.
There are many other incongruities between Isle Royale and western U.S. wolf populations, yet “researchers” insist on applying data collected on Isle Royale studies and asserting they are applicable to wolves everywhere. This smacks of agenda to me. Obviously data collected on Isle Royale suits there purposes nicely, so use that and all other data be damned.
There is an immense and obvious difference in the management of resources when comparing an isolated area of 207 sq miles and a region of nearly 5000 sq miles encompassing several different climates and diverse topography where wolves move freely at will.