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Scientific Classification of Wolves
Gray Wolves
Red Wolves
Ethiopian Wolves
Wolf Prey and Predation
United States
Regional Information:
 Eastern DPS
 Southwestern DPS
 Western DPS
International Wolf Populations
Wolf Management and Conservation
Human Perspectives

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by Debi Davidson - International
Wolf Center, Speakers Bureau
that
his staff mistakenly processed. It was the first time in Maine history
that such a document was repealed. The media grabbed the opportunity
to label it "Wolf UN-Awareness Week." Reporters wrote detailed stories
on wolves, local columnists voiced their opinions, and Maine citizens
wrote impassioned letters to the editor. Strong feelings about wolves
are common in the northeast. In 1997, a survey showed that 79 percent
of Maine residents polled favored wolf recovery on some level. The
results also revealed that 30 percent of hunters and 60 percent
of non-hunters did not know it is illegal to kill wolves in the
state. Bounties, over-harvest and loss of habitat resulted in wolves
disappearing in Maine by the turn of the century. Wolves are currently
protected as an endangered species. In June 1998, Interior Secretary
Bruce Babbitt announced that wolves would be delisted and dow nlisted
throughout the U.S., with management of the species gradually passing
from the federal government to the states.
Federal and state wildlife officials from the northeast met with
interested organizations to discuss the implications of moving the
wolf from endangered to threatened status. Paul Nickerson, Head
of the federal endangered species program in the northeast, said
he will propose downlisting in the spring of 1999. A federal recovery
plan would be written for the northeast, and each state would decide
whether it wants wolf recovery to occur within its boundaries. In
rescinding the wolf awareness proclamation in Maine, Governor King
said he could not support federal or state wolf reintroduction efforts.
He pointed to conflict between those who "believe that wolves can
live in harmony with people and other wildlife species," and those
who are "concerned that wolves will dramatically affect the status
of other, more highly regarded, wildlife populations," such as moose
and deer. He also noted that the state would be obligated to protect
wolves if they establish themselves naturally.
In Maine, researchers are trying to learn whether wolves are recovering
naturally by dispersing and traveling south from packs in Canada.
A 67-pound female killed in Maine in 1993 was verified to be a wolf.
In 1996 a male wolf-like canid weighing 85 1/2 pounds was trapped
and killed there. Maine's Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife
is seeking funds to conduct its fourth winter of track surveys.
The Maine Wolf Coalition does howling surveys and follows up on
credible sightings called in on an 800-number Wolf Sighting Hotline.
If wolves do return, naturally or through reintroduction, favorable
habitat is waiting. Researchers using Geographical Information Systems
and measurements of road density have indicated that Maine has 18,000
square miles of suitable wolf territory. Throughout New York, Vermont,
New Hampshire and Maine, they estimate that sufficient prey and
habitat on 29,722 square miles of available land could support 1,312
wolves.

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