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Cry Wolf Essay Research Paper Cry WolfThree 2

Cry Wolf Essay, Research Paper

Cry Wolf

Three little pigs dance in a circle singing “Who’s afraid of the big, bad wolf?”

Little Red Riding Hood barely escapes the cunning advances of the ravenous wolf

disguised as her grandmother.

Movie audiences shriek as a gentle young man is transformed before their eyes

into a blood-thirsty werewolf, a symbol for centuries of the essence of evil.

Such myths and legends have portrayed the wolf as a threat to human existence.

Feared as cold-blooded killers, they were hated and persecuted. Wolves were not

merely shot and killed; they were tortured as well. In what was believed to be a

battle between good and evil, wolves were poisoned, drawn and quartered, doused

with gasoline and set on fire, and, in some cases, left with their mouths wired

shut to starve (Begley 53). Convinced that they were a problem to be solved, U.S.

citizens gradually eradicated gray wolves from the lower 48 states over a period

of 25 years.

Today many people are convinced that the elimination of the gray wolf was not

only an error, but also a detriment to the quality of life in this country.

There has been a public outcry to rectify the situation created by the ignorance

of our ancestors. However, in seeking to address a situation created by the

human compulsion to control nature, it is crucial to discern how much human

interference is necessary. Human control must be tempered by respect and

restraint. Programs designed for the protection and restoration of wildlife must

reflect deference for the natural order rather than dominance over it.

The consequences of human actions involving the elimination of the gray wolf

have been especially acute in Yellowstone National Park, where the lack of a

natural predator has resulted in the overpopulation of bison, deer, and elk.

According to Sharon Begley of Newsweek magazine, “Absent a natural predator,

thousands of the ungulates have starved during tough winters, and there has been

no selection pressure to keep deer fast and moose powerful” (53).

Another issue is more subtle. As Ms. Begley points out, “The wolf has been the

only native animal missing from Yellowstone” (53). In one of the few places

where the wildness of the west could be preserved, the wolf’s absence leaves a

big hole. In a world filled with skyscrapers, subdivisions, and superhighways,

human beings yearn for the wolf’s untamable majesty.

In 1995, it is obvious that the hatred and fear which fueled the elimination of

the gray wolf stemmed from a gross misunderstanding of wolves and their behavior.

Cultural myths picturing wolves as scheming, aggressive beasts plotting to

pounce on innocent victims do not reflect the truth. In reality, wolves are

elusive creatures who keep to themselves. The wolf’s social structure is much

like ours. They live in family units called packs consisting of a mated pair,

young pups, and older offspring. It is through the intricate relationships and

interactions within the pack that offspring learn how to live as adult wolves.

As the environmentalist Charles Bergman points out, “Wolves are intensely social

animals, living in packs that are structured in rigid hierarchies. In the chain

of power each wolf has a defined place on a ladder of dominance and submission”

(3l). The entire pack works together according to position to raise and nurture

the pups, teaching them a highly sophisticated system of communication used “for

expressing their status relative to each other” (Bergman 31). Also, from parents

and older siblings, young wolves learn not only how to hunt, but what to hunt as

well. Wolves are trained early to go after certain prey and leave others alone.

Since their prey is usually larger and stronger than they, wolves are taught

specifically to hunt the weak and sick in order to avoid injury.

Information given in Friends of the Forest describes the similarity between

humans and wolves. This publication states, “Like humans, some wolves stay with

their families until they die, others leave the pack during adolescence in

search of uninhabited territory and a mate” (1-2). Unlike humans, wolves

instinctively control their population. The number in a pack rarely exceeds

twelve and is determined by the availability and size of prey in their territory.

Faced with the consequences of hasty actions to eliminate the wolves, as well as

increased knowledge about their behavior, the U.S. Congress passed the

Endangered Species Act in 1973, giving full protection to the gray wolf. In

Section 1531 of the Act, Congressional findings state that since certain species

of wildlife have been threatened with extinction, “the United States has pledged

itself as a sovereign state in the international community to conserve to the

extent practicable the various species of fish or wildlife and plants facing

extinction” (United 1, 2).

However, many believe that protection has not been enough. In January 1995, the

Department of the Interior flew 29 wolves from Canada to Idaho’s River of No

Return Wilderness Area and to Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming. Fifteen were

released directly into the Idaho area, and the rest were put in pens in

Yellowstone, scheduled to be released after an acclimation period of 6 to 12

weeks. This program to reintroduce the gray wolf into the lower 48 states

provides for fifteen more wolves to be relocated each year for the next three to

five years (Begley 53).

Critics of the program have raised a number of concerns. First of all is the

apprehension of ranchers regarding the possible loss of livestock. Wolves have

been absent from Yellowstone for 60 years. Although some statistics claim that

“Less than 1% of the sheep and cattle living in wolf range in Canada are killed

by wolves annually,” others tell a different story. According to the policy

director of the National Wildlife Institute, “In Canada, 41 percent of livestock

found dead have been killed by wolves” (qtd. in Richardson 30). The difference

in these statistics is alarming. Obviously, statistics can be expressed in a

variety of ways depending on what point one is trying to prove. However, the

fact remains that wolves do, at least occasionally, prey on livestock.

In addition to their concern for livestock, ranchers fear the possibility that,

to help ensure the wolf’s survival, wildlife managers will fence off thousands

of acres now used for grazing. This could lead to the shutdown of ranches,

resulting in the loss of hundreds of jobs.

Finally, ranchers know that they have very little recourse if the wolves prey on

their livestock. They are allowed to shoot a wolf caught in the act of killing a

sheep or cow if the animal belongs to them. However, it is very difficult to be

in the right place at the right time to catch a wolf in a kill. It is even more

unlikely that a rancher would witness the kill of his own animal. Yet the

penalty for defending a neighbor’s property is the possibility of up to one year

in prison and $l00,000 in fines (Richardson 30).

Another problem critics point out is the exorbitant cost of implementing the

reintroduction program. Estimated at $65,000 per wolf, the federal government

will spend up to 13 million dollars to helicopter lift 200 wolves over the next

five years (Richardson 28, 30). At a time when budget cuts are affecting food,

housing and medical care for the needy, it is difficult to justify the

expenditure. Even certain environmentalists have questioned the advisability of

capturing and relocating wolves. Recently, a lawsuit was filed by the Sierra

Club Legal Defense Fund stating, “the grey wolves have been migrating steadily

south from Canada for years. Some have already reached Montana, and wolf packs

are expected to settle in Yellowstone in about thirty years on their own

initiative” (Richardson 28). But some wildlife biologists say that 30 years is

too long to wait. They want to reduce Yellowstone’s overpopulated bison and elk

herds now. These biologists also want to study wolves before they settle in

naturally. However, as Richardson states, “Taxpayers might argue that, for

$65,000 per animal, the Fish and Wildlife Service could afford to send the

biologists on weekly junkets to Alberta for wolf observation” (30).

If assurances could be made that this program would work, perhaps the cost could

be more easily justified. However, there are inherent problems in capturing and

relocating wolves successfully. Even biologists in favor of the program admit

that the number one challenge is to overcome the natural tendency of wolves to

try to get home. The only solution to this dilemma is to pen the animals up for

a period of time until they get used to their new surroundings. Unfortunately,

whenever wolves are penned, there is a danger that they will lose some of their

wildness. But such measures have already been necessary in the case of one of

the wolf families in Yellowstone. Following the illegal killing of the dominant

male in one of the packs, a recent update reports:

The alpha female from the defunct Rose Creek pack remains in the Rose Creek wolf

enclosure with her eight pups. The pups are healthy, and have been vaccinated

against about everything a canine can get. It is hoped that by fall (when they

will likely be released), they will be big enough to fight off the coyotes. I

suspect their winter mortality will be high, since they have had no opportunity

to learn to hunt. (Maughan)

In an effort to help the wolves form viable packs, biologists hope to solve the

other problem that concerns them, “the tendency of a stressed wolf to go it

alone” (Carpenter 15). A consequence of moving wolves from their habitat is that

their social structure breaks down. In an interview with Dr. Marcella Cranford,

proponent of wolf relocation, veterinarian and expert on wolf behavior, she

explained, “Lone wolves don’t make it. They survive as a family or they don’t

survive at all” (n.p.). A result of the breakdown is that “mates separate and

some abandon pups in their haste to return to familiar turf” (Carpenter 15).

Biologists believe that in order to form viable packs, they must capture wolves

of different ages. The assumption is that when they calm down, the captured

wolves will establish a new pack. It is evident from biologists’ concerns that

wolves not only are intelligent creatures, but also have ties to family and fear

of change, as humans do.

The process used to capture wolves and relocate them in Idaho and Yellowstone

has attempted to address these concerns. In November 1995, the U.S. Fish and

Wildlife Service paid fur trappers $2,000 each to use their special talent for

hunting down wolves (Begley 53). This talent included using neck snares

“equipped with ’stops’” which would prevent the wolves from being killed

(Neimeyer 13). Mr. Neimeyer in International Wolf further explains, “Any live

wolf restrained by a neck snare was quickly immobilized with drugs injected with

a jabstick” (13). Radio collars were then slipped around the animals’ necks and

these “Judas wolves” (Neimeyer 13), as they have been called, were followed back

to the pack where agents selected the wolves of their choice for transport to

Yellowstone and central Idaho. The sedated wolves were then locked in traveling

cages. Each cage measured no more than 2 feet by 3 feet by 4 feet (Begley 53).

Unfortunately, due to unexpected litigation, the wolves were forced to remain in

these cages for more than 24 hours. In the case of the wolves bound for Idaho,

they endured more than 80 hours in their crates (Johnson 17).

Given the elusive nature of wolves and the strong ties whichbind them to their

own pack, all these measures seem invasive and extreme. Such techniques are

often necessary in attempts to save animals from extinction. However, the gray

wolf is in no such peril. Although the number of wolves in the lower 48 states

is minuscule, 60,000 roam the ranges of Canada and about 7,000 thrive in Alaska

(Richardson 30). Even the proponents of the reintroduction program admit that

moving wolves to Idaho and Yellowstone has nothing to do with “saving wolves.”

In a recent Congressional hearing, Renee Askins, Executive Director of the Wolf

Fund, testified in favor of the plan. She explained that the restoration of

wolves would not “rescue us from our economic or ecological troubles, but

neither will their presence contribute to them” (Askins 16-17). Ms. Askins

claimed that the significance of returning the wolf to Yellowstone resided in

its power as a “deeply and profoundly symbolic act” (17). She told the House

Committee on Resources:

The story of this conflict is the story of how we view ourselves in relation to

animals, whether we can replace the assumption of “dominion” that has been so

destructive to us and the natural world with a world view that recognizes that

we live in a state of reciprocity with the birds and the beasts–that we are not

only the product of nature but also part of it. Our attitudes toward wolves and

our treatment of them cut to the very marrow of how we view our relationship to

the natural world. (17)

If the driving motivation for the reintroduction of wolves into Idaho and

Yellowstone is the symbolic act of restoring a relationship of respect and

cooperation with nature, the actions of capture and relocation do not fit the

symbol. Capture shows no respect for the highly developed social structure of

the pack. Relocation denies the wolf’s natural tendency to seek new territory

when its own territory is overpopulated. The action appears to be more

representative of a different kind of “dominion” rather than reciprocity between

humankind and the animal kingdom.

With the best of intentions, it is all too easy for human beings to cross the

line between necessary concern and unnecessary control. The environmentalist and

author, Charles Bergman, makes this point in his book,Wild Echoes:

For all the pure motives of most of our wildlife managers–and I honor and

respect their good intentions–wolf control nevertheless derives from the same

world view that has enabled Americans to dominate nature wherever we have gone.

Humans are superior to nature. If we no longer try to conquer or eliminate

wolves, we at least try to control them. (29)

The majestic gray wolf–skillful predator, nurturing family member–has been

misunderstood to the point of endangerment. Fear, hatred and the need to control

the wolf’s untamable wildness created an environment in which slaughter was not

only acceptable, but advocated. There is no doubt that human beings bear

responsibility for the protection of these magnificent creatures. However, the

awe and admiration which have replaced the fear and hatred have not removed the

human need to control. When this need to control results in tactics which are

invasive and which disregard the very nature of the wolf itself, the danger is

that human interference will unintentionally diminish the very wildness

environmentalists seek to preserve.

Appendix

The following interview with Dr. Marcella Cranford, veterinarian and expert in

wolf behavior, was conducted by telephone on November 30, 1995: Berven: What is

your opinion of the reintroduction of the gray wolf into Yellowstone National

Park?

Cranford: Well, it’s one of the missing links. The overpopulation of the elk is

a problem. Right now, we’re feeding them. Not having wolves in Yellowstone is

like a tear in the fabric of nature. Someone said that.

Berven: What do you think are the repercussions for packs in Canada from which

the wolves are taken?

Cranford: I’m hoping they’re going to do it right. If you kill the best ones,

the hunters, the pack won’t make it. Lone wolves don’t make it. They survive as

a family or they don’t survive at all.

Berven: What about the ranchers? They’re very upset from what I have read.

Cranford: The ranchers should shape up! I mean, after all, we’re paying money to

subsidize their cattle.

Berven: What about their concern that the wolves will kill their sheep and

cattle?

Cranford: They have more of a problem with feral dogs. Wolves prefer ungulates.

They don’t want to come near us. They’re not like the coyote.

Berven: I know you are short on time. Is there anything else you can tell me?

Cranford: I have a magazine, International Wolf. It has all the information

concerning the Environmental Impact Statement and how this whole thing got

started. I know it started in 1991, so there have been years of debate and

controversy about it. There were 160,000 responses to it [the reintroduction].

It was one of the largest responses on a proposed government action.

Works Cited

Askins, Renee. “Releasing Wolves from Symbolism.” Harpers April 1995: 15-17.

Begley, Sharon with Daniel Glick. “The Return of the Native.” Newsweek 23 Jan.

1995: 53.

Bergman, Charles. Wild Echoes: Encounters With the Most Endangered Animals in

North America New York: McGraw-Hill, 1990.

Carpenter, Betsy. “A Precarious Return of the Wolf.” U.S. News and World Report

16 Jan. 1995: 16.

Cranford, Marcella. Personal interview. 30 Nov. 1995. Friends of the Forest

Ketchum, Idaho: Wolf Education and Research Center, 1993.

Johnson, Mark. “Dual Citizenship Awarded to Transported Wolves.” International

Wolf 5.2 (1995): 17.

Maughan, Ralph. “Yellowstone Wolf Update.” Return to Wolf Home Page.

maugralp@cwis.isu.edu (27 Nov. 1995).

Neimeyer, Carter. “Precapture Operation–Snaring and Radio Collaring of `Judas’

Wolves.” International Wolf 5.2 (1995):13.

Richardson, Valerie. “Decrying Wolves.” National Review 20 Mar. 1995: 28-30.

United States. Department of the Interior. Endangered Species Act. 1973. Section

1531.




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