Yellowstone wolf: US Park Service |
The Service considers the Great Lakes wolf to have recovered from its persecution, but the agency is under pressure from development and agricultural interests to remove species from endangerment protections instead of adding to the number of species protected. Not an easy task as global warming radically alters ecosystems and puts more species at risk. The Service labled Judge Howell's ruling a "step backward"; the judge criticized state wildlife management bureaus for having no-limit areas on wolf hunting. A number of seasons have also gone over quota. Thanks to legal protection and relocations there are an estimated 6,000 gray wolves in the lower 48 but dispersal has been fraught with danger for the top predator. The first wolf to reappear in Buchanan County, Iowa since 1925 was quickly killed as was the first wolf to return to the Grand Canyon. US Person agrees with the judge that the wolf is far from out of the woods.