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Wolves continue to plague livestock owners

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The often-cited 3,000-wolf figure is a wintertime estimate, said Stark. The wolf population is continually changing over the year, he said, adding that the population may jump to 5,000 in the spring when pups are born.

“Then it declines throughout the year because of mortality factors,” he said.

Wolves killed to control depredations, and those killed by hunters and trappers in the controversial new season, will include wolves that would have died from other causes, Stark said — a concept known to biologists as compensatory mortality.

“The population is based on reproduction and mortality, not just mortality,” Stark said. Other wolves will fill the population gap left by those that are killed, he said.

Hunt won’t affect complaints

Hackett counters that the killing of more than 260 wolves this year for the loss of 90 to 100 cattle and sheep is an overreaction.

“There is no evidence lethal control works, or hunting works. There’s supposedly 265,000 cattle in the wolf range, and they lose 90 to wolves,” she said. “That’s not very many.”

But, said Stark: “The hunting season wasn’t intended to reduce depredation conflicts.” That could change in the future if the DNR increases wolf harvest quotas in problem areas, he said.

Hackett agrees farmers should be paid for their losses and should perhaps be allotted a “cost-of-business” payment for operating in wolf country. But she said they also should be encouraged to use nonlethal methods to reduce depredation, including guard dogs, electric fencing, noise devices or flashing lights.

“They’d rather just kill wolves,” she said.

She believes the hunting and trapping season will disrupt packs and could actually exacerbate wolf-livestock conflicts.

Waiting … for wolves

Back at Lorentz’s farm, he acknowledged that raising livestock in wolf country carries some risk. “But I expect them deep in the woods, I don’t expect them out back of the barn,” he said.

“You talk to people here — no one wants the wolves around. There’s getting to be too many.”

He was pleased Hughley trapped two from his place, but he has no delusions he’s seen the last of them.

“I’m glad they’re gone,” Lorentz said. “But I know there’ll be more.”

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