A gray wolf is seen in 2003 after being collared. The idea of using them to shrink burgeoning elk and deer herds is controversial.
William Campbell, Associated Press
BILLINGS, Mont. — With ballooning elk and deer populations eating up greenery and altering ecosystems at national parks across the country, a group of researchers is suggesting an unusual solution: introduce small packs of gray wolves to curb the expanding herds.
They acknowledge that it's a tricky endeavor: the hungry predators breed prolifically, roam hundreds of square miles and have a taste for cows and sheep.
But the researchers have got a solution for that, too: Neuter the wolves, fence them in, fit them with shock collars and — just in case — add a tracking device so they can be hunted and killed if they get too far afield.
"If there's lots of food, they're happy," said Dan Licht, National Park Service biologist for the Northern Plains region. "An intensively managed dozen, ten (wolves) — we think that is doable with today's technology,"
Licht led a team of five researchers who authored a paper in the February issue of the journal BioScience proposing to put wolves back atop the food chain at sites across the country. The predators would become park "stewards," responsible for keeping game numbers down in areas as small as 15 square miles.
A single pack can go through an elk every three to four days. But when they wander, it's often not long before wolves start getting into livestock.
From New York's Adirondack Mountains to California's Sierra Nevada, the extermination of wolves last century allowed big game herds to balloon — tipping nature's scales and caused overgrazing in many parks and protected areas.
For years after wolves were gone, excess elk from parks including North Dakota's Theodore Roosevelt National Park were captured and shipped out, to establish new herds in Kentucky, South Dakota and Pennsylvania.
Those shipments have since been restricted because of worries about spreading animal sicknesses like chronic wasting disease. In their absence, Theodore Roosevelt park officials will use volunteer shooters to help trim its 900 elk herd by more than half over the next several years.
In Rocky Mountain National Park — where elk have wiped out aspen and willow groves, prime habitat for beavers and birds — officials last year enlisted paid and volunteer shooters to kill 33 elk. The Park Service rejected proposals to use wolves for the job.
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