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Today, Wisconsin has about 782 wolves, Michigan 687
-- far above what biologists said were sustainable populations. The success story is hardly surprising in woodlands teeming with deer, said John Vucetich, a biologist at Michigan Tech University. But even in such an ideal setting, the wolves were able to return only when killing them became illegal. "What do wolves need to survive?" Vucetich said. "They need forest cover, and they need prey. And they need not to be shot." Shooting already is happening -- legally or not -- as adventurous wolves range into new regions such as Michigan's Lower Peninsula and the plains of eastern Montana. Those sightings are unsettling to farmers because packs have killed thousands of livestock nationwide during their comeback. If marauding wolves begin taking out livestock, people may quietly take matters into their own hands
-- "shoot, shovel and shut up," said Jim Baker, who raises 60 beef cattle near the village of Atlanta, Mich. Wolves "could wipe me out in a couple of nights if they wanted," Baker said. Since the late 1980s, more than 5,000 wolves have been killed legally, according to an AP review of state and federal records. Hundreds more have been killed illegally over the past two decades in the
northern Rockies alone. Ranchers in some areas are allowed under federal law to shoot wolves to defend their livestock. In the northern Rockies, government wildlife agents have routinely shot wolves from aircraft in response to such attacks. Often that involves trapping a single wolf, fitting it with a radio collar and tracking it back to its den so the entire pack can be killed. Biologists are confident that neither legal hunts nor poaching are likely to push wolves back to the brink of extinction. Idaho has been the most aggressive in reducing wolf numbers, offering a 10-month hunting season that sets no limits. State officials say they intend to reduce the population from 750 to as few as 150
-- the minimum the federal government says is needed in each Northern Rockies state to keep the animal off the endangered list. Studies indicate plentiful habitat remains in other regions, including upstate New York, northern New England and the southern Rockies of Colorado and Utah. But experts say the Fish and Wildlife Service's plan would mean that any wolves wandering into those states could be shot on sight unless protected by state laws. "Wolves, next to people, are one of the most adaptable animals in the world," said Ed Bangs, a former Fish and Wildlife Service biologist who led the effort to return wolves to the northern Rockies. "The key with wolves is, it's all about human tolerance."
[Associated
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