Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

Increase Wolf Cull, Pen Pregnant Cows To Save Endangered Caribou: Study

The Canadian Press, 11 Mar, 2019 08:49 PM
  • Increase Wolf Cull, Pen Pregnant Cows To Save Endangered Caribou: Study

EDMONTON — An extensive study of caribou herds across British Columbia and Alberta suggests a way to reverse a long and steady decline of the endangered species — kill more wolves and moose and pen pregnant cows.


"It's go hard or go home," said Rob Serrouya, a University of Alberta biologist and lead author of the study released Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.


"Unfortunately, it's that black or white."


Another study released within days of Serrouya's suggests another way. And wildlife advocates worry Serrouya's findings could be misused, illustrating the complexity of what he calls the "toughest conservation challenge in North America."


Serrouya and his colleagues looked at 18 caribou herds ranging over more than 90,000 square kilometres. At the study's start in 2004, 16 herds were declining.


Restoring habitat damaged by oil, gas and forestry activity is too slow, said Serrouya. Herds don't have the decades that takes.


The scientists compared four government-run management programs — killing wolves, protecting pregnant cows, moving caribou between ranges and culling moose that attract predators. Six of the herds were not managed.


By 2018, the unmanaged herds remained unchanged.


But eight of the 12 managed herds improved. Half of them had either stabilized or begun increasing. One almost doubled over three years to 67 from 36 animals.


"That's almost unprecedented," Serrouya said.


"It doesn't mean recovery, but it means some of these herds have turned around. It's the first study to show management has turned around sharp declines of caribou on such a broad scale."


Herds with the best growth rates were linked to both maternity pens to protect pregnant cows during calving and extensive wolf kills. Ranges with the best herd growth had the most intense cull.


Those five ranges saw a total of 144 wolves killed every year, mostly by aerial gunning and strychnine. A cull that large over the entire study area would result annually in nearly 650 carcasses, although Serrouya said that's not being recommended.


Removing moose at the same time would allow managers to kill up to 80 per cent fewer wolves, he said. Still, moose numbers in any one range would have to be reduced by up to 83 per cent.


Jonah Keim, an independent biologist and consultant, offers a different solution. In research published in the British Ecological Society's journal, he suggests caribou can be adequately protected by making it tough for wolves to get to them.


"What we need to do is reduce the encounters between wolves and caribou," he said. "You can do that without reducing the number of wolves."


Between 2011 and 2014, Keim studied what would happen if it weren't so easy for wolves, deer and moose to follow cutlines and forestry roads into caribou habitat. Over an 800-square-kilometre area, researchers dropped 200 cubic metres of tree debris every 200 metres.


The rate at which wolves stopped using the paths dropped 70 per cent, the study found.


"It was unbelievably effective at reducing wolf use," said Keim.


Serrouya applauded Keim's paper, but questioned its practicality on a landscape with 350,000 kilometres of linear disturbance.


"To block 350,000 kilometres would take years and years," he said. "What would happen in the meantime?"


Four herds vanished between 2004 and 2018.


Keim said efforts could be focused on where they'd do the most good. He suggested that snowmobile trails could be designed to draw wolf packs away from caribou. It wouldn't be that hard, he said.


"That type of work can be done in the summer or winter by somebody on foot."


Carolyn Campbell of the Alberta Wilderness Association fears Serrouya's findings could be used to declare "a war on wildlife."


"These findings could be used by industry and government to prolong unsustainable forest exploitation while endlessly harming wildlife species," she said.


She urged governments to keep restoring habitat.


Serrouya said drastic measures will be needed into the foreseeable future.


"Society would have to change the way it values natural resources. Society would have to decide to reduce the rate of resource extraction."

MORE National ARTICLES

A Dinner Party For $10 A Guest Is Possible With Good Planning, Foodies Say

A Dinner Party For $10 A Guest Is Possible With Good Planning, Foodies Say
VANCOUVER — Tara Noland hosts dinner parties at her Calgary home at least once a month, plus for almost every Super Bowl and much more often over the holidays.

A Dinner Party For $10 A Guest Is Possible With Good Planning, Foodies Say

B.C. Proposes Stronger Security For Witnesses Testifying At Criminal Trials

B.C. Proposes Stronger Security For Witnesses Testifying At Criminal Trials
British Columbia is proposing changes to its witness protection program in order to strengthen security for people who could provide police with information on serious crimes.  

B.C. Proposes Stronger Security For Witnesses Testifying At Criminal Trials

RAVI KAHLON, NDP MLA With Taxi-Driving Dad Seeks Advice From B.C.'s Conflict Commissioner

B.C.'s Opposition Liberals and the New Democrat member of the legislature who is accused of a conflict of interest have both asked the province's conflict commissioner to intervene in a complaint.

RAVI KAHLON, NDP MLA With Taxi-Driving Dad Seeks Advice From B.C.'s Conflict Commissioner

New Democrat's Taxi-Driver Dad Should Prompt Committee Resignation, Say Liberals

British Columbia's Opposition Liberals are calling for New Democrat Ravi Kahlon to resign from an all-party committee reviewing ride hailing for the province because his dad holds a taxi licence.

New Democrat's Taxi-Driver Dad Should Prompt Committee Resignation, Say Liberals

Charge Recommended Against Burnaby Man Accused Of Groping Seven-Year-Old On Vancouver SkyTrain

NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — Metro Vancouver Transit Police say a charge of sexual interference has been recommended against a 57-year-old Burnaby man who allegedly groped and made vulgar sexual comments to a seven-year-old girl. 

Charge Recommended Against Burnaby Man Accused Of Groping Seven-Year-Old On Vancouver SkyTrain

Transit Police Say Man Accused Of Groping Seven-Year-Old Girl On Vancouver SkyTrain Surrenders

NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — Metro Vancouver Transit Police say a man who allegedly made vulgar sexual comments to a seven-year-old girl before groping her has surrendered.

Transit Police Say Man Accused Of Groping Seven-Year-Old Girl On Vancouver SkyTrain Surrenders