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Last year, the Interior Department relented to pressure from environmentalists in the Great Lakes. The agency agreed to put wolves back on the endangered list at least temporarily
-- just months after they had been removed for the second time in recent years. Wolves are notorious predators with a hunger for livestock, and experts say they could survive in most of the country if they were allowed. Young adult wolves sometimes travel hundreds of miles when looking to establish a new territory. In the last several years, packs have gained a toehold in parts of Oregon and Washington. Others have been spotted in Colorado, Utah and northern New England. But with wolves, more than just biology is at play. Politics serves the deciding role in where wolves are allowed, said David Mech, a wolf expert and senior scientist with the U.S. Geological Survey. "In the areas where they are not acceptable, they will be killed out
-- illegally if nothing else, Mech said. The northern Rockies population has stirred the most rancor, largely
because of sheep and cattle killings and wolves preying on big game herds that had swelled when the predators were absent.
Idaho and Montana initiated public wolf hunts last year, and both intend to increase their quotas on the animals this fall. The states want to put a dent in the animal's population growth rate, which has been as high as 30 percent annually. Wyoming, which has about 525 wolves, was blocked in its efforts to start a hunt after federal officials said state law was too hostile to wolves to ensure their survival. That ruling has been challenged in federal court. Wyoming House Speaker Colin Simpson said Tuesday it should serve as a warning for other states that are asked to take wolves. "Be careful," Simpson said. "We don't need more of that in the West."
[Associated
Press;
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