Relocation of Colorado wolf pack leaves people wondering: Where will they go next? (2024)

Relocation of Colorado wolf pack leaves people wondering: Where will they go next? (1)

Colorado Parks and Wildlife has begun an operation to capture and relocate the Copper Creek wolf pack in Grand County following numerous attacks on livestock.

The wildlife agency said it will not share where the animals will be relocated for the safety of the wolves and its staff.

“Our options in this unique case were very limited, and this action is by no means a precedent for how (Parks and Wildlife) will resolve wolf-livestock conflict moving forward,” Jeff Davis, the wildlife agency’s director, said in a statement. “The ultimate goal of the operation is to relocate the pack to another location while we assess our best options for them to continue to contribute to the successful restoration of wolves in Colorado.”

The adult pair, who have three pups, in the pack have caused the “main issues in depredation,” as Reid Dewalt, deputy director of policy for Parks and Wildlife, told the commission last Friday. Since the wolves were released, the wildlife agency has confirmed that wolves have killed 15 cattle and nine sheep.

“We have had a few other depredations from the other wolves but nothing to the level that we’ve seen in Middle Park,” he said.

The decision to relocate the pack comes less than a month after the agency denied a chronic depredation permit that was requested by the Middle Park Stockgrowers Association in May. A depredation permit, issued for 45 days, would allow producers to protect herds by killing wolves that were chronic or consistent depredators.

Parks and Wildlife declined to answer additional questions about the details of relocation or the agency’s plans if the pack continues to prey on livestock. The agency said it will provide more information and details following the operation.

It will undergo the relocation effort with support from federal partners, following the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s rules for experimental populations.

What does the wolf plan say about chronic depredation?

According to Park and Wildlife’s final wolf plan, the agency does not have a specific definition for what qualifies as a “‘chronically depredating’ pack or wolf.”

“Program managers will make the determination as to whether a situation is characterized as chronic depredation on a case-by-case basis,” the plan states.

It says officials should consider the number of documented depredation events in the area, the practices used to reduce depredation, the likelihood that more depredation will occur without control, and the unintentional or intentional attractants luring or baiting the wolves in the region.

The general conflict management strategy outlined in Parks and Wildlife’s final wolf plan allows for flexibility and case-by-case determinations.

The plan goes into several scenarios demonstrating negative impacts and identifies possible management actions.

In identifying possible actions for “confirmed depredations (injury or death) of livestock by wolves,” the plan suggests education, both non-injurious and potentially injurious hazing, and lethal control.”

“The translocation of depredating wolves to a different part of the state will not be considered, as this is viewed as translocating the problem along with the wolves,” the plan adds.

The plan, however, is careful to note that these actions are not “prescribed,” and maintaining flexibility is key to the overall strategy.

“It must be emphasized that not all impacts can be predicted and that future management flexibility is crucial for adaptively managing impacts as they arise,” it states.

As indicated in Davis’ statement on Tuesday night, he notes that the situation with the Copper Creek pack is “unique” and does not indicate how the agency will handle other situations in the future.

Was this the right course of action for the agency to take?

Following Parks and Wildlife’s decision to relocate the pack, public response has varied.

Tim Ritschard, president of the Middle Park Stockgrowers, said the decision was “overdue.”

“We’re glad to hear they’re going to remove the pack. If a wolf wanders in and kills a cow or a calf, that’s tolerable. But when they set up camp and repeatedly (depredate) on livestock … that’s where the problem is,” he said, reading a statement. “I’m glad the fed stepped in and took action before a rancher or local CPW staff had to. Hopefully, CPW can learn from this and eventually learn from this and prevent something similar happening in the future.”

Before requesting the chronic depredation permit, the Middle Park group had sent Parks and Wildlife numerous letters requesting help, including asking the agency to lethally remove the two problem wolves or relocate them to a sanctuary. In April, the group received a $20,000 grant from the wildlife agency and Colorado Department of Agriculture for nonlethal deterrents including nighttime patrols and herd protection, such as hiring range riders.

Ritschard said that “from the get-go,” after the first depredation, the Middle Park group used nonlethal deterrents including fox lights and critter getters. They also set up a range rider, who was using spotlights, voice commands, and had cracker shells on hand, he added.

“Just recently, we got more into the non-injurious hazing permit, which is rubber bullets, so we had that capacity, too, and then we’ve got into guard dogs recently,” he said. “After snow melted, we were able to move cows out of areas and tried to get them away from locations where the wolves were.”

Adam VanValkenburg, president of the North Park Stockgrowers, echoed that the removal of this pack was “necessary and long overdue.”

“I think it’s a great thing because you know these wolves are obviously chronically depredating,” he said. “And either relocation or lethal management, it was that time to either do one of those options because they were clearly chronically depredating and needed to be managed as such.”

In North Park, he said they’ve been dealing with wolves on their ranch since February. He said they have not had any depredations they could find, noting that their summer pastures are in “very large, high mountain” settings, and that depredations would be “almost impossible” to locate “until it’s too late.”

He said they have used fladry, shell crackers, fox lights, critter getters, and human presence as nonlethal deterrents in the range.

While some agreed that something needed to be done with the depredating pack, wildlife advocates expressed their concerns over Parks and Wildlife’s decision. Mike Senatore, senior vice president of conservation programs for Defenders of Wildlife, called the decision “deeply flawed” in a press release.

“This decision is being driven by politics, is not rooted in science-based management, and stands to significantly delay the progress of the reintroduction program,” he said. “All parties involved in the events that led to this deeply flawed decision should be held accountable for failure to effectively utilize proven coexistence tools.”

Delaney Rudy, Colorado director at the Western Watersheds Project, stated that it was “disappointing that those wolves may now be deprived of the chance to live wild lives on the natural landscape in Colorado,” in a press release.

In both press releases, these organizations cited Parks and Wildlife’s denial of the lethal action permit as proof that ranchers in the area had not used nonlethal strategies to their full capacity. The denial letter states that the ranchers in question, who are redacted from the shared document, “failed to timely implement available nonlethal conflict minimization materials and techniques.”

“Because these nonlethal measures could have prevented some, if not all, of (redacted’s) depredations,” there was a rationale for the denial, the letter states.

“We commend (Parks and Wildlife) for taking affirmative steps to keep these wolves alive and to bolster the success of the wolf reintroduction, but (officials) must go further and establish robust requirements for nonlethal coexistence to prevent this kind of conflict in the future,” Rudy stated.

The wolves’ next destination

Relocation of Colorado wolf pack leaves people wondering: Where will they go next? (2)

While the pack’s next destination is unknown, there are still concerns.

“They’ve been depredating on livestock now, and so you know I don’t think that’s going to not stop ever,” Ritschard said, adding that he hopes the wolves “go to a sanctuary.”

VanValkenburg said, “whoever is going to be getting the wolves, it’s going to be a great concern on their part.”

“Once a wolf learns that, you know, beef and sheep are an easy meal or an easy prey source, it’s not like you can train it out of them,” he said. “They’ve got that ingrained in their brain.”

He added that the agency may need to consider lethal action in the future.

“With any wildlife management, lethal control is part of the equation, and as we get more wolves in the state, that has to come into play,” he said.

Still, he called the agency’s decision to relocate “a small step forward in the right direction.”

“Chronic depredation needs to be addressed, and it got way out of hand over there,” he said.

As Parks and Wildlife continues to manage the 11 adult wolves currently in the state, it is preparing to release an additional 10 to 15 wolves this fall or winter as part of reintroduction efforts. While the agency no longer has a source for the wolves, it indicated last week that it will again be releasing the new wolves into the state’s northern zone.

According to a map released on Wednesday by Parks and Wildlife, the state’s collared wolves have continued to primarily explore parts of Routt, Jackson, Eagle, Grand, and Summit counties. The most recent map, showing activity between July 23 and Aug. 27, reveals the wolves explored greater areas in Routt and Jackson counties compared the the previous month. One of the wolves also spent some time in Rocky Mountain National Park.

The map uses Colorado’s watershed boundaries to show where the wolves have been detected in the last month. As such, the maps do not show the wolves’ exact locations, but rather what watershed boundaries they have been in. In its update, the agency reported the wolves have remained north of Interstate 70. The agency has released this map every month since January, following its release of the first 10 wolves in December.

Relocation of Colorado wolf pack leaves people wondering: Where will they go next? (2024)

FAQs

Where will Colorado reintroduce wolves? ›

Between December 18 - 21, 2023, Colorado Parks and Wildlife experts captured 10 gray wolves in Oregon and released them onto public land in Summit and Grand counties in a historic effort to create a permanent, self-sustaining wolf population and fulfill a voter approved initiative to re-establish gray wolves in ...

What happens when a wolf leaves its pack? ›

While some may think it's a brave choice—one reserved for the truly independent—a wild wolf's decision to leave a pack and strike out alone is quite common. Known as “dispersing,” this is how wolves find mates and form new packs.

Why do people not want wolves in Colorado? ›

Because wolves killed livestock and game, by the mid-1940's, wolves were eradicated from Colorado by shooting, trapping, and poisoning. Similarly, government sponsored predator control eliminated wolves throughout most of the western United States.

What would wolf reintroduction mean for Colorado? ›

The goal of reintroducing the apex predator is to restore balance to ecosystems. Wolves can help manage populations of deer and elk, eliminating sick members of those herds and preventing them from remaining clustered in large groups.

How many wolves are in Colorado in 2024? ›

Colorado is home to 11 adult wolves, nine of which the state released in December as part of a voter-mandated reintroduction plan. The other two are the remnants of a pack formed by wolves that migrated from Wyoming. Two of the reintroduced wolves mated and CPW last week confirmed the birth of at least one pup.

Where in Colorado do most wolves live? ›

The range of Colorado wolves currently includes about 4,500 square miles of the Western Slope but doesn't span east of Granby, south of Vail or west of Glenwood Springs. Not every place highlighted on the map is necessarily a hotbed for Colorado's latest lupine residents, either.

What happens when the pack leader dies? ›

When the leader of a wild dog pack dies, a period of instability results during which the whole pack is at risk until a new leader emerges.

Can a wolf survive without a pack? ›

All wolves are social animals that live and hunt in families called packs, although adult wolves can and do survive alone. Most wolves hold territories, and all communicate through body language, vocalization and scent marking.

Do female wolves leave the pack? ›

Both males and females can leave the pack, but predominantly young female wolves between the ages of one to four years old leave their pack in search of a pack of their own due to the constraints of only being one breeding pair in a pack.

What is the fine for killing a wolf in Colorado? ›

Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials, who did not respond to an interview request for this story, reminded the public in that 2020 press release that wolves are protected by the Endangered Species Act in the state. Killing one, the agency noted, can result in a $100,000 fine and a year in prison.

How many wolves can Colorado support? ›

– Colorado Gov.

The agency's reintroduction plan, finalized earlier this year, calls for the release of 10 to 15 wolves per year over the next three to five years, with an initial target of a stable population of at least 50 animals within the state.

Is reintroducing wolves bad? ›

Negative effects of reintroduction:

Loss of pets and hobby animals. Concentration of wild ungulates on private lands possibly resulting in property damage. Reduced ungulate hunting or viewing opportunities and related economic considerations.

Where are wolves being reintroduced in Colorado? ›

18 release of five wolves in Grand County — the first to be reintroduced in Colorado. Sen. Dylan Roberts, a Democrat whose district includes Grand, Eagle and Summit counties, said there had been a loss of trust between ranchers and the department because of the lack of communication.

Who is in charge of wolf reintroduction in Colorado? ›

Instead, this reintroduction will be handled by Colorado Parks and Wildlife. This in itself is truly historical and groundbreaking. Instead of being a federal level initiative, this was the result of a citizen-led ballot initiative – Proposition 114 – that was voted into law as of November 2020.

What is the controversy with the wolves in Colorado? ›

Colorado's controversial plan has received widespread opposition from farmers and ranchers, who consider wolves a dangerous threat to wildlife and livestock. Several other states also refused to supply Colorado with wolves, citing concerns over wolf population growth and wolves crossing state borders.

Does Colorado have a wolf sanctuary? ›

The Colorado Wolf and Wildlife Center is home to wolves, coyotes and fox that each live and thrive in large wooded enclosures that provide privacy, sanctuary and stimulation for these amazing and beautiful animals. Experience the thrill of the intense gaze of these beautiful creatures.

What states are wolves being reintroduced to? ›

Current Distribution and Population

As of March 2023, the Northern Rocky Mountains gray wolf population is now distributed across western Montana (1,100 wolves), western Wyoming (311 wolves), Idaho (1,337 wolves), eastern Washington (206 wolves), and Eastern Oregon (175 wolves).

Where have the wolves roamed in Colorado? ›

In July, the 11 wolves and one pup stayed relatively in the same watershed areas as they did in May and June, traveling between Routt, Jackson, Larimer, Grand, Eagle and Summit counties, according to a new location map released Tuesday by Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

Did Colorado release 5 wolves? ›

In an effort to restore an endangered species, Colorado just released five gray wolves in the western part of the state. On Monday, Colorado parks and wildlife released two female and three male wolves on to remote public land.

References

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