katqanna
Well-known member
I was sent the Review of Proposed Rule Regarding Status of the Wolf Under the Endangered Species Act a few days ago and finally made time to read it this evening.
This is a review of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (USFWS’s) plan to delist the Gray Wolf. An independent, peer-review panel reviewed all the documentation utilized by the USFWS, was given a number of questions to determine if they had met certain criteria, based on science, not policy. They agreed that the USFWS had not utilized the latest science; they had pretty much relied solely on Chambers et al, which was written in house by 4 USFWS employees (I am not sure if they determined if that paper had ever been peer reviewed.) Chambers et al is not widely received and based on older science, so not a good foundation for a current decision making process.
An example of the science is that Chambers bases the wolf genetics on a study that only used mitochondrial DNA (from the mother) and only used less than 25 markers, where current science is using mtDNA, microsatellites (kinship and population) and Y chromosomes (from father to son). This is at the heart of part of the controversy - was the gray wold in the eastern part of the US? The wolf there currently, if determined to be a different species genetically, would not be part of the endangered species restoration of the gray wolf, likewise the Mexican wolf.
I know y'all frequently discuss the wolf issues and wondered if any of you read the paper, or even Chambers et al, and what your thoughts were, I mean serious thoughts, not the, "they look good mounted on my wall" thoughts.
This is a review of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (USFWS’s) plan to delist the Gray Wolf. An independent, peer-review panel reviewed all the documentation utilized by the USFWS, was given a number of questions to determine if they had met certain criteria, based on science, not policy. They agreed that the USFWS had not utilized the latest science; they had pretty much relied solely on Chambers et al, which was written in house by 4 USFWS employees (I am not sure if they determined if that paper had ever been peer reviewed.) Chambers et al is not widely received and based on older science, so not a good foundation for a current decision making process.
An example of the science is that Chambers bases the wolf genetics on a study that only used mitochondrial DNA (from the mother) and only used less than 25 markers, where current science is using mtDNA, microsatellites (kinship and population) and Y chromosomes (from father to son). This is at the heart of part of the controversy - was the gray wold in the eastern part of the US? The wolf there currently, if determined to be a different species genetically, would not be part of the endangered species restoration of the gray wolf, likewise the Mexican wolf.
I know y'all frequently discuss the wolf issues and wondered if any of you read the paper, or even Chambers et al, and what your thoughts were, I mean serious thoughts, not the, "they look good mounted on my wall" thoughts.