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Quote from: PA BEN on September 26, 2014, 05:38:09 AMThe native wolf to Washington is the Timber wolf. Smaller and not as aggressive than the bigger Canadian gray wolf. Talk to any old timer around here and they will tell you they have been around for years. Not many and they keep to themselves. If anything these new wolves will move any native wolves out of the State.I have heard this from several people but I can't find anything to back it up. I am not saying you're wrong but everything I've seen is that Timber Wolf is used to describe a gray wolf in the forest.
The native wolf to Washington is the Timber wolf. Smaller and not as aggressive than the bigger Canadian gray wolf. Talk to any old timer around here and they will tell you they have been around for years. Not many and they keep to themselves. If anything these new wolves will move any native wolves out of the State.
There are a few problems with trying to determine what sub-species of wolves were historically in Washington State. First problem is that wolf populations were heavily disrupted by time scientists started to collect data on the wolf populations, especially to the level of sub-species. The second problem is that with the wide range of habitats in Washington state there could have been more than one sub-species in the state. Third problem is that with the dynamics of wolf populations was a particular wolf was part of an established pack or in transit when the data was collected? Then you have the question, was the distribution of sub-species static or was one sub-species in the process of pushing another sub-species out? Along with that is the question about which sub-species a particular wolf belonged to. When you are working at a sub-species level things become a lot more complex. There can be some large differences in sub-species like between the keys deer in Florida and northern whitetails but a lot of the differences are much more subtle. With the advances in DNC there has been a lot of shuffling around especially at the sub-species level, not just with wolves but many species.
Quote from: ctwiggs1 on September 26, 2014, 06:12:16 AMQuote from: PA BEN on September 26, 2014, 05:38:09 AMThe native wolf to Washington is the Timber wolf. Smaller and not as aggressive than the bigger Canadian gray wolf. Talk to any old timer around here and they will tell you they have been around for years. Not many and they keep to themselves. If anything these new wolves will move any native wolves out of the State.I have heard this from several people but I can't find anything to back it up. I am not saying you're wrong but everything I've seen is that Timber Wolf is used to describe a gray wolf in the forest.ctwiggs - Generally, you will find credible evidence lacking for arguments that support canadian wolves being a different species than "native washington wolves" or that wolves have been transplanted into Washington. In the absence of this factual data/evidence, one must resort to some interesting conspiracies to support either of these arguments. There is no shortage of misinformation floating around on the internet...my advice: consider the source. From there, its your decision on what you believe the evidence suggests.
I have a hard time subscribing to the theory that WDFW actually "brought" them here (willing to listen to arguments though). Their website says they didn't. I know that sounds ignorant/naive to some, but if we have members of SEAL Team 6 writing books about the Bin Ladin raid, Snowden talking about the NSA, etc..... I have a hard time believing all the WDFW people involved would have kept their mouths shut this whole time about wolves. In the end they're still people. Unless you guys know of somebody involved in the wolf relocation/planting that has spilled the beans?That sound right to you guys?Curtis
nor has any other state or federal agency.
Quotenor has any other state or federal agency.Really? Must mean everything else is true in the story as well. Oh, they just mean into Wa
The million dollar question: Why now?If all the above is true..............Then lets look at this from a "Scientific Method"Why did wolves decide in 2008 to start repopulating Washington?Was there more game?No!Was there more available territory?No!Was there a lack of food in Canada?No!Was there over hunting in Canada?No!Was there a population explosion in Canada pushing young wolves out?No!What changed in the last decade, that instigated this southerly (and Westerly from Idaho) migration so to speak?No answer is being provided.That is what has been bothering me this whole time. I can't believe all the Bio's in the WDFW and the other "agencies" can not or have not asked this same question and determined an answer.Before trapping, DNA samples, collaring, tracking, adding another pack to the list, the question "Why Now" would have to have been answered.
As others have said, they have been here the whole time. Through the 80-90s the lettered government entities were denying the existence of "establish" wolves. They were on a blitz to discredit all wolf sightings as coyotes. Yet at the same time those flyers showing the differences between wolves and coyotes started to appear LOL.Using the Lookout pack as an example, they blamed this pack for all the kills from Alta to Winthrop, some times on the same day!That has got to be the biggest baddest most traveled pack of 6-8 wolves to ever exist. They denied the existence of a NW corner pack, yet pictures appeared of wolves the had been collared by a "Wolf Support group" years before their denials.What has everyone going "Huh!"Is the fact that they were here for decades, why the population "pack" explosion between 2008 (the first acknowledged pack) and now?For decades, no measurable increase, in the six years they "admit" to wolf packs being in Washington, the acknowledged packs have grown to 14 Packs and over 60 animals.Do the math:1 pack, 6-8 animals in 2008 14 packs over 60 2014That is over 1000% increase in six years!This represents only the wolves they "admit" to being here.Previous countless decades, with more game, more territory, no measurable gains.