By Jacy Gomez
Special to Campus News
Special to Campus News
The U.S. and Wildlife Service (FWS) could soon derail years of conservation efforts for one of America’s most iconic and important predators: Mexican gray wolves or “El Lobo.”
Currently, FWS is considering legislation that would prevent wolves from reaching essential habitats and growing the population to healthy levels. The plan – disguised as a recovery effort – goes against the recommendations of wildlife scientists and advocates. FWS should abandon this plan and opt for one that enables habitat access and boosts population growth to stable levels.
Thousands of Mexican gray wolves once roamed the wilds of New Mexico, Texas, Arizona, as well as Northern Mexico. By the 1970s, the wolves were driven to near extinct in the United States due to massive habitat loss and ruthless, deliberate hunting measures. By 1976, the species was placed on the Endangered Species List, and the last seven remaining wolves were captured from the wild to ensure that the species would not become extinct.
El Lobo made a small comeback in 1998. Thanks to wildlife advocates, descendants from the seven remaining Mexican gray wolves were slowly reintroduced to parts of Arizona. Now, there are only 113 Mexican Gray Wolves roaming free in the southwest U.S.
To aid the ongoing recovery, FWS has just drafted a plan that establishes criteria that, when met, will allow FWS to remove Mexican Gray Wolves from their list of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife.
Here’s the problem: FWS’ proposed “recovery” plan falls fantastically short in helping the wolves.
For starters, their plan ignores scientific recommendations for stable population growth. Scientists dedicated to wolf recovery in the region have repeatedly concluded that the population needs to total at least 750 wolves in three interconnected U.S. locations to ensure survival. FWS’ current recovery plan would have them removed from their List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife once they number 320 wolves in just two non-connected populations. That’s not even half of the suggested total.
What’s more, the plan allows for artificial barriers that would prevent wolves from interbreeding. Currently, the plan prevents wolves from dispersing outside of the Mexican Wolf Experimental Population Area (MWEPA). This means wolves are unable to expand throughout the Grand Canyon, parts of New Mexico, and Colorado.
Unfortunately, some of the most suitable habitat areas occur outside FWS’ designated MWEPA. By depriving wolves of these great habitats, FWS makes it harder for the species to thrive in new environments and to breed with one another. A recovery plan that discourages population growth is no recovery at all.
By accepting the recovery plan as is, FWS is abandoning gray wolf recovery in the southwest. After once obliterating the population to near extinction, humans owe it to El Lobo to stand up against this reckless plan.
Jacy Gomez is a communications specialist based in Washington, D.C., and a former congressional staffer.
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