Canids Specialist Group

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ResourcesThe Wood River Wolf Project, Idaho USA

The Wood River Wolf Project

While livestock losses to wolves in the western USA represent a small fraction of overall livestock mortality, the response to these depredations has resulted in widespread conflicts. Significant lethal wolf control efforts are implemented to reduce impacts on livestock producers, especially those with large-scale grazing operations on public lands. A variety of nonlethal methods have proven effective in reducing livestock losses to wolves in small-scale operations but in large-scale, open-range grazing operations, nonlethal management strategies are often presumed ineffective or infeasible. To demonstrate that nonlethal techniques can be effective at large scales, we report a 7-year case study where we strategically applied nonlethal predator deterrents and animal husbandry techniques on an adaptive basis (i.e., based on terrain, proximity to den or rendezvous sites, avoiding overexposure to techniques such as certain lights or sound devices that could result in wolves losing their fear of that device, etc.) to protect sheep (Ovis aries) and wolves on public grazing lands in Idaho. We collected data on sheep depredation mortalities in the protected demonstration study area and compared these data to an adjacent wolf-occupied area where sheep were grazed without the added nonlethal protection measures. Over the 7-year period starting in 2008, sheep depredation losses to wolves were 3.5 times higher in the Nonprotected Area (NPA) than in the Protected Area (PA). Furthermore, no wolves were lethally controlled within the PA and sheep depredation losses to wolves were just 0.02% of the total number of sheep present, the lowest loss rate among sheep-grazing areas in wolf range statewide, whereas wolves were lethally controlled in the NPA. Our demonstration project, which is now in year 13, provides evidence that proactive use of a variety of nonlethal techniques applied conditionally can help reduce depredation on large open-range operations.

 

Lead researchers:

Suzanne Asha Stone, Wood River Wolf Project, and Stewart Breck, USDA National Wildlife Research Center

Links:

https://academic.oup.com/jmammal/article/98/1/33/2977254

www.WoodRiverWolfProject.org