Free: Contests & Raffles.
I spoke for a while with a retired wolf bio from Alaska abou this time last year. What he said is that wolf introduction follows a predictable cycle:1. Wolves are introduced2. They eat all the available food3. Their packs grow4. young males are forced out and some form new packs5. the food runs out6. wolves resort to wolf-on-wolf violence7. wolf numbers stabilize8. Game animals repopulate and their numbers stabilize9. With some fluctuation, both populations remain fairly stable
Quote from: Pathfinder101 on February 17, 2010, 10:37:24 AMI spoke for a while with a retired wolf bio from Alaska abou this time last year. What he said is that wolf introduction follows a predictable cycle:1. Wolves are introduced2. They eat all the available food3. Their packs grow4. young males are forced out and some form new packs5. the food runs out6. wolves resort to wolf-on-wolf violence7. wolf numbers stabilize8. Game animals repopulate and their numbers stabilize9. With some fluctuation, both populations remain fairly stableThat "biologist" doesn't know what he's talking about. Any self-respecting hunter knows that wolves will kill all game animals, women and children. And when those food sources run out they will begin hunting men and Volkswagens. I guess all of those people who like bashing wildlife biologists are right after all!
Quote from: Dipsnort on February 17, 2010, 02:06:27 PMQuote from: Pathfinder101 on February 17, 2010, 10:37:24 AMI spoke for a while with a retired wolf bio from Alaska abou this time last year. What he said is that wolf introduction follows a predictable cycle:1. Wolves are introduced2. They eat all the available food3. Their packs grow4. young males are forced out and some form new packs5. the food runs out6. wolves resort to wolf-on-wolf violence7. wolf numbers stabilize8. Game animals repopulate and their numbers stabilize9. With some fluctuation, both populations remain fairly stableThat "biologist" doesn't know what he's talking about. Any self-respecting hunter knows that wolves will kill all game animals, women and children. And when those food sources run out they will begin hunting men and Volkswagens. I guess all of those people who like bashing wildlife biologists are right after all! Keep in mind that this was not a newly graduated WA Game Bio from a "green" college... This was an old-school Alaska guy, who hunted and trapped wolves up there for years, both for his job, and for fur. He had retired about 10 years ago and moved here. He was dreading wolf introduction in this state, because as he said; "we don't have a moose population to support them".
Actually, in my estimation (and the bio that I was talking to), the "problem" is the "15 to 20 years of pain that it will take to get to that point" ( His workds, not mine). He was talking about it like there might not even be available tags for deer or elk between 5 and 8. (by the way, those "numbers" are mine, he didn't number them, he just told me the general process).
Quote from: Pathfinder101 on February 17, 2010, 03:50:41 PMActually, in my estimation (and the bio that I was talking to), the "problem" is the "15 to 20 years of pain that it will take to get to that point" ( His workds, not mine). He was talking about it like there might not even be available tags for deer or elk between 5 and 8. (by the way, those "numbers" are mine, he didn't number them, he just told me the general process).I think that is a very accurate assumption. In the short term I think that will be the area where hunting ends at least as we know it here in Washington. #8 and #9 will be the continuing reason for no return to hunting. As the deer and elk populations will stabailize vs the wolves never again growing in large enough numbers to allow for human hunting of those animals. I guess you could say in the area of #5 or #6 as the end of hunting and #8 and #9 as the final nail in the coffin.Shootmoore
That is the wrench in the comparison there 101. Comparison of the Alaskan habitat area vs what we have here in Washington. The prey as well as the wolf population has a greater area to spread out to allow for recoupment of the prey species. Here in Washington State with the limited habitat available due to population numbers, it is kind of like fish in the barrel for the wolves. The wolf and the deer and elk MUST share the same limited area. Where in Alaska there is room for the game animals to avoid the wolf packs, here there is only so much habitat. I would argue the same thing applies to Canada. There is just much much more prime habitat for the prey species to spread out to avoid the wolves.Here in Washington State, especially on the east side of the state, there is only so many wintering area's available for the deer and elk. With the numbers of wolves that are wanted, there will be enough wolf packs to cover all of those area's. You will either have predation by wolves or the wolves will drive the deer and elk to less quality wintering grounds causing a higher rate of winter kill.Think about 15 breeding pairs of wolves in Washington, then think about the elk feeding stations. Any bets that the wolves WILL be around the feed stations in the winter once they get established in sufficient numbers. Basically what you will have is an end of elk feeding programs. Now you will not only have predation reduction in the elk herds, but winter kill from lack of winter range. It's a downhill spiral either way you look at it.Thanks for the discussion, I enjoy it but I am beginning to ramble off the topic.
Quote from: Shootmoore on February 17, 2010, 04:31:08 PMThat is the wrench in the comparison there 101. Comparison of the Alaskan habitat area vs what we have here in Washington. The prey as well as the wolf population has a greater area to spread out to allow for recoupment of the prey species. Here in Washington State with the limited habitat available due to population numbers, it is kind of like fish in the barrel for the wolves. The wolf and the deer and elk MUST share the same limited area. Where in Alaska there is room for the game animals to avoid the wolf packs, here there is only so much habitat. I would argue the same thing applies to Canada. There is just much much more prime habitat for the prey species to spread out to avoid the wolves.Here in Washington State, especially on the east side of the state, there is only so many wintering area's available for the deer and elk. With the numbers of wolves that are wanted, there will be enough wolf packs to cover all of those area's. You will either have predation by wolves or the wolves will drive the deer and elk to less quality wintering grounds causing a higher rate of winter kill.Think about 15 breeding pairs of wolves in Washington, then think about the elk feeding stations. Any bets that the wolves WILL be around the feed stations in the winter once they get established in sufficient numbers. Basically what you will have is an end of elk feeding programs. Now you will not only have predation reduction in the elk herds, but winter kill from lack of winter range. It's a downhill spiral either way you look at it.Thanks for the discussion, I enjoy it but I am beginning to ramble off the topic. Oh, I completely agree with you Shootmore. I wasn't comparing WA and AK, I was contrasting them. I agree that AK and WA are completely different, that's why I said "but then again". Alaska actually controls their wolf population by hunting them...