Environment

Guest Opinion: The life and death of Wolf 253M

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

By Franz Camenzind

Jackson Hole, Wyo.-A wolf died the other day in Wyoming. Along with three others, it was shot and killed on the first day that wolves in most of the state lost the protection of the Endangered Species Act. These were legal kills made by people simply because they could. Nothing more was required of them but to report the kills to state officials - no license, no fees, no restrictions.

For sportsmen, one of the proudly held rules is: “Know Your Target.” What did these hunters know about their targets?

One of the four dead wolves was a female that may have been pregnant. Two of the males were unknown and will be remembered simply as body count numbers in the West’s war on wolves. But one wolf has a history known to many throughout the region. To some he was “Limpy,” to others he was “The Wanderer.” Officially, he was 253M, the 253rd wolf to be radio-collared in the Greater Yellowstone area since wolves were reintroduced in the mid-90s.

253M was born in April 2000 into the Druid Peak Pack, whose territory encompasses Yellowstone National Park’s Lamar Valley. His father was likely 21M, a leader of renown and a story unto himself. 21M was one of the first generation of wolves born in Yellowstone in more than 60 years.

253M was black, as are nearly half of Yellowstone’s wolves. Before he was two, he was injured defending his territory from intruders from a nearby pack. Although the Druids held their territory, 253M’s left hind leg was injured, causing a life-long limp distinguishing him from other wolves.

In the fall of 2002, he left his home territory, typical behavior for wolves of that age. Later that fall, on Nov. 30, 253M was accidentally caught in a trap set for coyotes about 20 miles northeast of Salt Lake City, making him the first confirmed wolf in Utah in more than 70 years. Tracks around the site suggested that he was traveling with another wolf - perhaps they were a pair exploring for a place to begin a new life.

253M was taken back to Wyoming and released three days later by a federal biologist south of Yellowstone Park. He made his way back to the Druid Pack before Christmas, surprising the “experts,” who thought he would immediately head back south.

This second time around, he remained with the Druids for nearly two years and rose to the level of second-ranking male - subordinate only to the now-famous, but aging, 21M. In the summer of 2004, 21M died, and most observers thought that 253M would take over as leader of the Druids. But again, he managed to fool the experts and waged only a minor battle with “New Black,” as the victor and new Druid leader came to be known.
Immediately after New Black assumed his alpha status, 253M broke from the pack and began wandering about Yellowstone, mostly undetected, only to unexpectedly appear on the National Elk Refuge in Jackson Hole - 90 miles south of his birthplace - alone, but looking healthy.

It was in early 2005 that 253M may have fathered his only offspring. He was observed with another male and female, and 5 pups, forming the new Flat Creek Pack. But within a year, 253M again headed south, and the Flat Creek Pack dissolved. The cause of the sudden disintegration of this new pack will never be known. Was 253M simply living up to one of his names, The Wanderer?

Meanwhile, the Daniel Pack, which roamed across a mix of ranching and wild lands 60 miles southeast of Jackson, was implicated in cattle depredations and thus under constant surveillance and control. Sometime in the next year or so, 253M found his way into this persecuted pack.

During his eight years of travel across thousands of miles and at least two states, 253M was never accused of any destruction of human property. He was a “good wolf” - one who adapted to his human-dominated world. The kind of wolf we should be able to live with.

But on the morning of March 28, his luck ran out. Not because of anything he did, but because of what a minority of people in Wyoming wanted - to take all protection off wolves in 88 percent of the state, where anyone can now kill any wolf by any means at any time. 253M and three others were killed for nothing more than being wolves in Wyoming’s politically designated predator zone.

253M and other wolves are now dead in Wyoming because some don’t want wolves in the Equality State.
Now we “Know the Target.” What have we learned?

Courtesy photo
Does Wyoming ‘know its target’?

PERMALINK:
Guest Opinion: The life and death of Wolf 253M | Planet JH News Article: General Environment

Reader Comments

Amazing insight into Wolf 253Ms life. I can only have more respect for his species, and less for my own. As with the buffalo, why are we persecuting these animals?
Allison Dubenezic

Ditto. How could protection turn so abrubtly into this persecution? All because they crossed an invisible line.
Andrea Dubenezic

If the invisible line would have been your back yard and your dog,cat or child was killed, would this make your view different? Hunting pressure will hopefully keep the wolves outside of people's homes and ranches and in the wilderness.
Bob Swan

^Exactly. Wolves ARE a problem for ranchers, whether or not most people in Jackson Hole believe it. Most haven't lived in this area long enough to even have a clue! Why don't we just put grizzlies back into central park, NY? They used to live there to. Not to mention the amount of wolf packs sustained is far greater than the bar was set at. Just butt out and go back east.
Daniel

If wolves and other wildlife are a problem, then maybe you are the one living in the wrong place? Who was here before the ranchers and the cattle? I don't think it was you, or your parents or grandparents, or cattle, or your cats or dogs. Wildlife was here first and humans over a century ago did co-exist with them. Humans have just become so greedy that we have to control everything and everyone else in our path. Your intolerance is ignorance. I'm sorry but cattle have no business dominating some of the western landscape like they do. Cattle make for very easy prey for wolves, they are far more damaging to the grasslands, and they require a lot of fencing that further hampers natural wildlife migration corridors. Buffalo grazed the lands and they were beneficial to the growth of native grasses and to the soil health. Do cattle do the same? The cattle industry even introduced brucellosis to the buffalo, so shame on anyone to punish the buffalo for the possibility (which has not been documented)of giving it back to the cattle. Before you go telling anyone else what to think, at least do some thinking yourself.
Allison

With that said, there is a lot of conflict going on here on many levels, but I do think that a somewhat happy level of co-existence can be achieved....with careful stewardship of the land and understanding of the whole system. Of all areas, the Greater Yellowstone Area should be a place where native wildlife has a chance (on public lands at least). This area is home to such a diversity of wildlife, large wildlife...They need a habitat that is intact and extensive...we have this in NW Wyoming, it would be a shame to shrink it... I think some of these big ranches do provide human-less space for some animals....a positive (not to mention that careful grazing can be used as a tool to improve nutritious forage for some smaller wildlife). It's just a dynamic, complex balance. It definitely requires a little bit of tolerance and cooperation. Maybe some wolves will need to be killed, likewise some sheep may be preyed upon. I don't think the number is so high that ranchers can't be reimbursed for their lossses.
Allison

I agree with Allison, creatures of nature have been around far longer than we have, too many people think that because we are a few thousand years old and already top species that we don't have to co-exist, just control, this is wrong. WE have done more damage to our world than any other species has. Think ove rhtat, and we kill for fun, not for food. America used to be the home of wolves, until we came, now we destroy it and them. Humans are fools in many cases, destroying the wolves is a mistake, one of the main reasons is it would throw the Ecosystem completely out of wack, which would cause more problems than a few wolves can
Cheyenne Lennon

It is my overall opinion that coexistence is a must, meaning in other words, that humans must give more than they take. This applies to more than just these wolf packs. Anyone remember the quote "that which governs least, governs best"?
Lazarus

I agree with Allison,it will take work and cooperation.We can't just kill wildlife because of fear or ignorance.By the way I have a cattle operation in Florida and own a home in the Yellowstone area .
Debbie



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