O-W-I-N-G 98-62 Ken Burton, Washington D.C. - 202-208-5657 Georgia Parham - Bloomington, IN - 812-334-4261, ext.203 Hugh Vickery , Washington, D.C. - 202-208-5634 June 29, 1998
GRAY WOLVES MAKING A STRONG COMEBACK; U.S. FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE TAKING A NEW LOOK AT THEIR
STATUS Once hunted nearly to extinction, the gray wolf has rebounded so well in the lower 48
states that the Interior Department's U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will propose to
remove some gray wolf populations from the endangered species list and to reclassify
others, Secretary Bruce Babbitt announced today during a news conference at the Wildlife
Science Center in Forest Lake, Minnesota. "Few animals have ever haunted our dreams or fired our imaginations more than the
wolf," said Secretary Babbitt. "Unfortunately, by the early part of this
century, man had almost exterminated the wolf from the lower 48 states. Now, in Minnesota
and elsewhere, the recovery of the wolf is becoming an impressive conservation success
story and a gift to future generations. I believe it's time to stand back and take a close
look at wolf populations throughout the country and to carefully consider if all of the
wolves still need the same level of special protection under the Endangered Species
Act." "The Fish and Wildlife Service intends to publish a proposed rule to delist or
reclassify specific wolf populations where appropriate," said Service Director Jamie
Rappaport Clark. Clark said that consultation with states, Tribes, and others involved in wolf
conservation and management will occur as the Service prepares an offl proposal, which it
plans to publish in the Federal Register this winter. The proposal will include a
lengthy public comment period. Changes in the wolf's legal status are not likely to occur
before 1999. In the Rocky Mountains, there are approximately 235 wolves. This includes naturally
occurring wolves in northwest Montana, numbering about 85, and reintroduced wolves in
Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho, which now total about 150. The reintroduced
wolves have been nearly doubling their population annually. Rocky Mountain wolves are all
listed as "endangered," but the reintroduced population is considered an
"experimental, non-essential population" which enables more flexible management
activities. Clark said that Rocky Mountain wolves will be proposed for reclassification
from endangered to the less dire status of "threatened." If this ultimately
occurs, the special rules for managing the reintroduced wolves would remain in place. Wolf conservation and recovery in the Southwest took a major step forward this spring
when captive-bred Mexican wolves were reintroduced to restore their populations in Arizona
and New Mexico. Mexican wolves have not yet reached recovery goals and are not being
considered for delisting or reclassification. There is potential for wolf recovery in some areas of the Northeast where suitable
habitat and prey species remain. In view of the possible recovery potential there, the
wolf will remain under the protection of the Endangered Species Act but will be proposed
for reclassification to threatened in the Northeast. Clark attributed the wolf's comeback to a combination of scientific research,
conservation and management programs, and education efforts that helped increase public
understanding of wolves. Successful reintroduction and management programs greatly
accelerated wolf recovery in the Rocky Mountains. Restoration of wolf prey species such as
deer, elk, and moose; science-based management; and habitat and legal protection all have
allowed gray wolf populations to greatly expand their numbers and distribution. If a species' status under the Endangered Species Act is changed to either endangered
or threatened, the species remains under Federal protection. If wolves are removed from
the list, management then becomes the responsibility of the state or Native American Tribe
where the population is located. However, the Service monitors delisted populations for at
least 5 years following removal from the list and provides technical assistance or other
management guidance, if requested. "This program is like an emergency room and a recovery ward in a hospital. Once
the patient's trauma is past and recovery is progressing well, it's time for the patient
to get on with life," Babbitt said. "We are at that point with some of our wolf
populations. Our goal is not to keep them in the hospital indefinitely. Perpetual
protection is not the goal; seeing species reach the point that they can survive in the
wild, on their own, is." Red wolves, which have been reintroduced to eastern Tennessee and North Carolina, would
not be affected by the review, nor would wolves in Alaska, which have never been Federally
listed as endangered or threatened. Before the arrival of European settlers, wolves ranged widely across the continent.
Gray wolves were found throughout most of the United States, Canada, and Mexico, with red
wolves primarily inhabiting the southeastern United States. In the United States, wolves were killed not only by individual settlers, fur traders,
or hunters, but also subjected to organized government predator-control efforts. By the
late 1920s, wolves were eradicated from the Rocky Mountains. Gray wolves in the East were
virtually eliminated with the exception of several hundred animals in Minnesota. Mexican
wolves also vanished from the wild in the southwestern United States. The last remaining
red wolves were removed from the wild for captive breeding in the 1970s; they survive in
the wild today only through reintroduction programs. The Fish and Wildlife Service posts information about the various gray wolf populations at graywolfmail@mail.fws.gov , http://www.r6.fws.gov/wolf, http://ifw2es.fws.gov/wolf/ , and http://www.fws.gov/r3pao/wolf/ on the Internet. Individuals and organizations wanting to be placed on the Service's mailing list to obtain updates on the wolf's status can write U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Gray Wolf Review, 1 Federal Drive, Fort Snelling, MN 55111-4056 or
use either the http://www.fws.gov/r3pao/wolf/
or graywolfmail@mail.fws.gov
Internet address. Individuals may also call the Service's gray wolf information
line at 612-713-7337. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is the principal Federal agency responsible for
conserving, protecting, and enhancing fish and wildlife and their habitats for the
continuing benefit of the American people. The Service's nearly 93 million acres include
514 national wildlife refuges, 78 ecological services field stations, 66 national fish
hatcheries, 50 wildlife coordination areas, and 38 wetland management districts with
waterfowl production areas. The agency enforces Federal wildlife laws, manages migratory bird populations, restores
nationally significant fisheries, conserves and restores wildlife habitat such as
wetlands, administers the Endangered Species Act, and helps foreign governments with their
conservation efforts. It also oversees the Federal Aid program that distributes Federal
excise taxes on fishing and hunting equipment to state wildlife agencies. This program is
a cornerstone of the Nation's wildlife management efforts, funding fish and wildlife
restoration, boating access, hunter education, shooting ranges, and related projects
across America. x x x |