Wolves in Washington State

This entry was posted by on Friday, 8 August, 2008 at

Biologists work to verify wolves are back in the state
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Wolves are spreading

YAKIMA — State Fish and Wildlife biologists and wolf experts from Idaho captured what they believe are two wolves Friday in western Okanogan County, a development that could confirm the first wolf pack in Washington since the animals were eradicated decades ago.

The biologists fitted both animals with radio collars to track their movements and learn more about them. They also took fur samples for DNA testing to confirm that the animals are not hybrids, state Fish and Wildlife spokeswoman Madonna Luers said.

However, one of the wolves was a lactating female nursing pups, Luers said, and domesticated hybrid animals are not known to reproduce in the wild.

“We’re always cautious,” Luers said. “But if we do get results back and they show these are actual wolves, this will be solid confirmation of Washington’s first resident wolf pack since the species disappeared from the state in the 1930s.”

Test results are expected in a couple of weeks.

After being hunted to near-extinction and listed as an endangered species in 1974, gray wolves were reintroduced to the northern Rockies in the mid-1990s. They thrived, and the wolves in that region were removed from the endangered species list in March.

Environmentalists sued to overturn that decision and on Friday, U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy in Billings, Mont., restored federal protections for gray wolves in that region. Idaho, Montana and Wyoming have an estimated 2,000 wolves.

Wolves are considered endangered in Washington and were never reintroduced here.

Wildlife biologists have known from radio-collar transmissions that wolves sometimes roamed into Washington from Montana or Idaho, and individual wolf sightings have been reported in the state. But resident wolf breeding pairs or packs have not been confirmed.

In recent years, packers made numerous reports of wolves in Okanogan County’s high country, and the number of resident reports in the county’s Methow Valley also grew.

On July 7, biologists conducted a “howling survey” in the area in search of a wolf pack and heard both adult and juvenile howls in response.

“Howling was the first step. This is the second step. The third step will be getting the DNA results,” Luers said. If confirmed, the findings would be historic, she said.

“The species has been gone, in terms of a reproducing animal or species, something that’s actually going to build a population and be a part of our wildlife heritage again,” Luers said. “That’s what’s exciting about this.”

DNA tests also could provide information about their home territory.

DNA tests on an animal that was found dead on state Route 291 about 25 miles northwest of Spokane early last month showed that it was genetically similar to wolves in northwestern Montana and southern British Columbia. The tests confirmed that the animal was not a hybrid.

State officials have been working with biologists, environmentalists, ranchers and other interested citizens to develop a wolf conservation and management plan. A draft is expected to be released for public comment in early 2009

By SHANNON DININNY
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

5 Responses to “Wolves in Washington State”

  1. Shawn Bailey

    Are there any wolf packs in the snohomish area reported? My small dogs confronted some animals that looked like wolves and were attacked by them. I was less than 20 feet away from them in the home and I saw what looked like wolves, 2 of them. Are there any hybrids in the area? know what a healthy coyote lookes like and these were not coyotes…

  2. Given Snohomish’s proximity to Canada, and to Idaho, and considering that wolf populations are exploding, and given the fact that Washington state is “welcoming” wolves, and given wolves’ propensity to travel, I would say it is a definite possibility.

  3. carissa little

    i live in kirkland in the juanita area and at about 1 am last night is went i went for a short walk. i wasnt really paying any attention until i heard padded footsteps in front of me. i looked up and saw to what i believe to be grey wolves standing right in front of me. i made sure to call fish and wildlife but was told that it was ” highly unlikly” but they would check into it. later in the day i recieved a call from fish and wildlife and was basically told i was crazy and that it was just a coyote.now i know from being raised in monroe and sultan what a coyote looks like and yes they can get big but the animals i came across were definatly NOT coyotes. ive been doing research all day looking at different pictures and figuring out what it was i saw. my conclusion since they were only 10 feet in front of me and i definatly got a close look at them is that they are indeed grey wolves. now since i know these facts and proper people arent actually taking care of this situation i am simply letting the public know.

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