Long-studied Alaskan wolf pack may be dead after years of aggressive hunting
Long-studied Alaskan wolf pack may be dead after years of aggressive hunting
East Fork wolf pack, found near Denali, was first researched in the 1930s and had shrunk significantly this year and its now believed all may have perished
Oliver Milman
@olliemilman
Monday 8 August 2016 13.24 EDT
The worlds longest-studied wolf pack may have been wiped out, wildlife officials fear amid an escalating battle between federal and state authorities in Alaska over the aggressive hunting of predators such as wolves and bears.
The East Fork wolf pack, found near Denali, North Americas tallest mountain, was first researched in the 1930s and provided the first detailed accounts of wolf behavior and ecology. But years of hunting, trapping and habitat disturbance reduced numbers to just one known female, a male and two pups earlier this year. Its now believed all may have perished.
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Three of the four pack members fitted with tracking collars have now been killed by hunters in the past year. The possible demise of the entire pack, which was once a common sight for visitors entering Denali, also Americas largest national park, is likely to heighten criticism of Alaskas intensive hunting of its largest predators.
On Friday, the US Fish and Wildlife Service ruled that hunters will not be allowed to conduct predator control in Alaskas vast national refuges unless there are exceptional circumstances. National wildlife refuges span more than 73m acres of Alaska, including the 20m acre Arctic National Wildlife Refuge the largest land-based protected area in the US.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/aug/08/alaska-wolf-pack-east-fork-denali-dead-hunting