New Predator in Yellowstone Reshapes Park's Entire Ecosystem

Ithaca 37

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I'm gonna post the whole article so you don't have to register to see it at the Wash. Post site.

This is pretty interesting. How about a few of you anti-wolf nuts explaining why these changes are bad?
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A47284-2004Jan25.html

Reintroduction of Gray Wolves Creates Dangers For Elk but Opportunities for Other Animals
By Guy Gugliotta
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, January 26, 2004; Page A08


Yellowstone National Park's riverside cottonwoods stopped growing in the mid-1920s and 1930s. Same with willows and aspen. Shoots sprang up, lingered awhile, but never matured. Park officials suspected elk were eating the new growth, but culling the herd did not help.



Beginning in the late 1990s, however, things suddenly began to change. The elk moved away from the streams, and trees and willows began to grow. Researchers wondered why. They ruled out drought, flood, fire or climate change. Only one answer remained.

Wolves.

"For 70 years, the elk congregated next to the rivers, eating the vegetation," said Oregon State University forest ecologist William Ripple, co-author of a study on the cottonwood recovery in the park. "They don't do that anymore."

Nine years have elapsed since the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service imported 15 gray wolves from Canada to colonize Yellowstone, wolfless since 1926, when hunters finished exterminating them as unwelcome pests and dangerous predators.

Today, the park has 250 to 300 wolves, too many to track them all with radio collars. They are no longer classified as an endangered species, but are now "threatened," and, if a dispute between the Fish and Wildlife Service and the state of Wyoming is resolved, they may soon be "delisted" altogether, allowing carefully controlled hunting.

But, for scientists, this triumph is only the beginning. Wolves, it turns out, constitute a "keystone species" that is reshaping an entire ecosystem in ways not foreseen when researchers began a crossed-fingers experiment in wildlife preservation.

Today, America's most famous stretch of wilderness has become an ecologist's bonanza. It appears to be evolving in reverse -- returning to a time when flora and fauna were in a balance dictated exclusively by forces of nature, not by humans: "For the first time in 70 years, the park has a complete suite of predators and prey," Ripple said in an interview from his Corvallis, Ore., office. "This is a grand experiment."

The cottonwood resurgence, reported late last year by Ripple and OSU colleague Robert Beschta in the journal Forest Ecology and Management, documents only one instance of what Ripple calls a "cascade" of environmental changes.

Wolves stalk the elk, so elk leave the rivers, where they are vulnerable. The willows, cottonwoods and aspens grow, casting shade that cools the water to temperatures favored by trout. Migratory birds return to roost in the new foliage.

But it does not stop there, said National Park Service wildlife biologist Douglas Smith, leader of the Yellowstone Wolf Project: "In 1996, we had no beaver colonies, and now we have seven, because the beavers can eat the low-hanging willow branches." And the beavers build dams, creating marshland that "brings back the otters, mink, muskrats and ducks," he said.

Smith, speaking by telephone from his Yellowstone office, said that "it may take 20 or 30 years to measure the full effects" of the wolves' return. And with no ranching, farming or hunting allowed, the park is a perfect laboratory -- a fully protected piece of wild country bigger, at 2.2 million acres, than the state of Delaware.

Ten years ago, Yellowstone had 17,000 elk, the largest single population in the world. Weighing as much as 700 pounds apiece, they had no serious rivals. Grizzly bears, Yellowstone's top predators, are capable of bringing down an adult elk, but they mainly prey on calves. Coyotes, though numerous, were much too small to attack elk.

"The first thing that happened was that the elk ignored the wolves," said Wildlife Conservation Society senior scientist Joel Berger, speaking by telephone from Driggs, Idaho. "The elk were treating 90- and 100-pound wolves like they were 35-pound coyotes. The elk were naive. They aren't naive anymore."

The wolves flourished in what Smith described as "arguably the best wolf habitat on Earth," feasting on elk and multiplying rapidly both in Yellowstone and in central Idaho, the new home for 14 more Canadian imports. A third wolf population, which migrated into northwest Montana from Canada on its own, has grown more slowly.



Elk, not surprisingly, have suffered, both from weather and wolves, their numbers in the park shrinking to about 8,000 today. This, however, should not be cause for alarm, Smith said, but instead regarded as another aspect of the park's environmental transformation. "Ravens, magpies, golden eagles, bears, bald eagles and coyotes feed off every elk kill," Smith said, "and I'm not even mentioning smaller mammals or insects."

Wolves sit right below grizzlies on the Yellowstone food chain, not because of their individual prowess as hunters -- they are no match for cougars or black bears -- but because they hunt in packs and learn quickly.

And as the packs have grown, livestock has taken a hit. "I used to lose five or six head per year," said rancher Dave Nelson, who grazes about 1,000 cattle on lands abutting both the park and the Idaho preserve. "Last year, I lost 21 head, and the year before that, I lost 15. I can't tell you definitely it's wolves, but I highly suspect it."

Nelson, a past president of the Idaho Cattle Association, in recent years helped negotiate Idaho's piece of a Fish and Wildlife Service-sponsored plan to drop wolves from the endangered species list and give the states of Idaho, Montana and Wyoming authority to allow hunting as long as the overall wolf population remains at 30 packs, with a pack defined as a breeding pair of wolves with cubs.

Federal authorities approved plans from Idaho and Montana two weeks ago, but refused to delist until Wyoming changes its management proposal to conform with its neighbors'. Despite the delay, the overall strategy has won cautious endorsement from both environmentalists and ranchers.

"We certainly would have liked to see more improvements, but the plan is acceptable," said Michael Scott, executive director of the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, a Bozeman, Mont.-based advocacy group. "The states regulate, but federal authorities can intervene if wolf numbers plummet."

For Nelson, selective hunting will keep the wolves honest -- and out of the pasture. "They need to learn they will pay a price if they come out of the woods to kill cattle," Nelson said in a telephone interview from his Mackay, Idaho, home. "The way it is now, they're half-domestic. They're real brassy."

For now, elk remain the wolves' meal of choice, but as the two populations reach equilibrium, researchers expect wolves to take on more difficult targets -- moose first, and then bison. This last confrontation will test one of Smith's favorite hypotheses:

"Why do wolves hunt in packs? I think it's for the bison," he suggests. "It takes three wolves to kill an elk, but I have seen 10 wolves hanging off a 2,000-pound bull bison. They killed it, but it took nine hours, and the bison killed one wolf, gored another and broke the leg of the alpha female. Bison just pound them."
 
There are only a few erroneous statements.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR> ...America's most famous stretch of wilderness... <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>...because the beavers can eat the low-hanging willow branches.... <HR></BLOCKQUOTE> They'd never cut a willow or cottonwood down......(?)
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Sure, they'd cut down all sorts of willows and cottonwoods down, if there were any there.
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Kind of hard to cut down imaginery trees.
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From the above:

"Yellowstone National Park's riverside cottonwoods stopped growing in the mid-1920s and 1930s. Same with willows and aspen. Shoots sprang up, lingered awhile, but never matured. Park officials suspected elk were eating the new growth, but culling the herd did not help.

Beginning in the late 1990s, however, things suddenly began to change. The elk moved away from the streams, and trees and willows began to grow."

<FONT COLOR="#800080" SIZE="1">[ 01-27-2004 11:24: Message edited by: BuzzH ]</font>
 
Hmm, that article sounds just like a current college Ecology lecture.

So, the elk aren't standing around out in the middle of the open parks anymore, eh? Do you suppose those that say the wolves are eating ALL the elk may not have figured that out yet?

Oak
 
Maybe the elk moved away from the rivers and streams because the FIRES opened up about 7 million acres of new growth... Including many new aspen groves. The fires distributed aspen trees into areas that previously never had them... Maybe the elk moved in to eat on them?

No doubt the wolves have had some impact but there were to many damn elk in the park anyway and still are. The population has started to drop pretty dramatically since the late 90's as well. Could that have anything to do with the aspens and cottonwoods coming back?

Maybe these "biologists" should dig a little deeper before they start patting them selves on the back.
 
Bambi,

Give the "biologist" a break. Their just trying to justify their existance. If it wasn't for them, Jellystone would be a wasteland! Urgent!!! Please send more money.

Paul
 
I would think wolves hammering the moose would impact stream side trees more than elk. Elk are primarily grazers and moose browsers.
Yellowstone is so out of wack from a biological standpoint its ridiculous. For starters buffalo have over grazed large portions of the park and severely so.
 
This article is from 2004. I’ve read it many times and piles of others. We must remember that this is a news article by a journalist. This isn’t a wildlife biologist writing in a scientific journal.

There is science that backs the importance of wolves to the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. In what number is in question though.

Naming wolves as keystones species is dicey. Keystone species shape environments.

Beavers are THE keystone species of North America. They literally create ecosystems for species that can’t survive without them.
 
This article is from 2004. I’ve read it many times and piles of others. We must remember that this is a news article by a journalist. This isn’t a wildlife biologist writing in a scientific journal.

There is science that backs the importance of wolves to the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. In what number is in question though.

Naming wolves as keystones species is dicey. Keystone species shape environments.

Beavers are THE keystone species of North America. They literally create ecosystems for species that can’t survive without them.
Love me some beavers. They make the world go 'round.
OIP.R71kVEp7o24187gt8oSeowHaEK
 
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