Free: Contests & Raffles.
I'm sure the logging and habitat loss played a certain part in their downfall, but there are plenty of other mountain (woodland) caribou herds throughout Canada that are doing extremely well these days and they don't have 1/100th the forests of this particular herd.
Quote from: WAcoyotehunter on April 01, 2019, 06:15:14 PMHow do you explain wolves and Caribou living in the same general area for the last 10000 years?Habitat change has occurred from the valley bottoms through the mid elevation forests all the way to the high country. What that has done is removed the old growth forest where the Caribou lived (basically alone) and replaced it with new growth, which is what elk and moose prefer. The population expansion of elk and moose into higher elevation areas is what allows wolves to make a living at higher elevation than they would have historically.So, while wolves can't sustain themselves on just a few Caribou, their interaction rates are higher than they ever would have been due to habitat change and the small, less fecund population of caribou can't support that kind of predation.It's habitat change.I don't buy the idea that logging is the main problem. There is no logging in the Frank Church or the Bob Marshall yet wolves are impacting herds in those backcountry areas. Isle Royale is a park but it's been an up and down cycle for both moose and wolves. Considering that Alaska and Canadian provinces have done wolf control to help herds in certain areas on numerous occasions, I think if hound hunters had been used to remove cougars and trappers used to remove wolves, that we might still have caribou in the Selkirks?We'll never know if predator management could have worked because wolves were held above all other wildlife as being the most important specie, all other species were expendable to promote wolves.
How do you explain wolves and Caribou living in the same general area for the last 10000 years?Habitat change has occurred from the valley bottoms through the mid elevation forests all the way to the high country. What that has done is removed the old growth forest where the Caribou lived (basically alone) and replaced it with new growth, which is what elk and moose prefer. The population expansion of elk and moose into higher elevation areas is what allows wolves to make a living at higher elevation than they would have historically.So, while wolves can't sustain themselves on just a few Caribou, their interaction rates are higher than they ever would have been due to habitat change and the small, less fecund population of caribou can't support that kind of predation.It's habitat change.
Caribou are a victim of habitat change. (the habitat is still there, it isn't lost but it is better suited for other species due to logging) indirectly. The logging made the new growth timber better suited for elk and moose, which brought in wolves and exposed the caribou to them. The caribou never went hungry due to habitat change and logging so it didn't affect them directly, there was always more old growth timber than they could utilize ( I know, I seen miles and miles and miles of it!) growing more moss and lichen than they could ever eat, and that's still true, if there were any left to eat it that is.
protections are adequate on our side of the border.
Quoteprotections are adequate on our side of the border.Thank you. We did our part with habitat protections here in WA, but without predator management.......the herd didn't stand a chance. As for what goes on in BC and greater Canada we can't help that, the tribes have way more pull than most so I applaud their efforts for sure.
" I agree that we could have kept caribou on the landscape and recovering if we would have been heavy handed in predator management. Actually, I have no doubt that that's the case. But that does not mean that predators are the cause of decline. " - WACoyotehunter The final sentence is a true head-scratcher. Why do people like you feel you have to add this? Why is aggressive predator management never pushed? Let's be honest. Groups like Conservation Northwest are more interested in power above all else, and aggressive predator management simply doesn't fit their end game.
Quote from: buglebrush on April 02, 2019, 11:29:09 AM" I agree that we could have kept caribou on the landscape and recovering if we would have been heavy handed in predator management. Actually, I have no doubt that that's the case. But that does not mean that predators are the cause of decline. " - WACoyotehunter The final sentence is a true head-scratcher. Why do people like you feel you have to add this? Why is aggressive predator management never pushed? Let's be honest. Groups like Conservation Northwest are more interested in power above all else, and aggressive predator management simply doesn't fit their end game. You didn't put the entire quote... the wolf population there is a symptom of the highly altered habitat. Imagine for a second that we had never logged NE WA, N Idaho and South BC, do you think caribou would be in the same situation? Do you think we would have as many wolves, or deer/elk/moose, which are the primary prey for wolves? It is a bit of a head scratcher. Lots of issues are complicated and simple answer (blame wolves) doesn't address the underlying causes of the problem. "People like me" add this to invoke some real thought into the issue, which is more complicated that people generally realize.
I'm not sure what point you're trying to make? Lions were shown to be a problem in the 90's collaring project. Wolves re appeared in 2009.After logging was done and the habitat was screwed we should have killed predators to make up for that? Ok.