Commercial hunt and predator control? The case of Rennie lake area wolf kill

A controversial wolf hunt in 1998 killed 633 wolves in the 13,000 km2 Rennie Lake area of the Northwest Territories, a region straddling the tundra-boreal forest transition, and another 125 wolves from adjacent areas. Although wolves have been hunted there for decades, the controversy focused on the...

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Main Authors: Cluff HD, Paquet PC, Musiani M.
Other Authors: Cluff HD, Paquet PC, Musiani M.
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11585/906186
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spelling ftunibolognairis:oai:cris.unibo.it:11585/906186 2024-04-14T08:16:49+00:00 Commercial hunt and predator control? The case of Rennie lake area wolf kill Cluff HD Paquet PC Musiani M. Cluff HD, Paquet PC, Musiani M. 2003 ELETTRONICO https://hdl.handle.net/11585/906186 eng eng ispartofbook:Book of abstracts - World Wolf Congress 2003 — Bridging Science and Community World Wolf Congress 2003 — Bridging Science and Community firstpage:43 lastpage:44 numberofpages:2 https://hdl.handle.net/11585/906186 No keywords available info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2003 ftunibolognairis 2024-03-21T18:57:33Z A controversial wolf hunt in 1998 killed 633 wolves in the 13,000 km2 Rennie Lake area of the Northwest Territories, a region straddling the tundra-boreal forest transition, and another 125 wolves from adjacent areas. Although wolves have been hunted there for decades, the controversy focused on the number of wolves killed and use of snowmobiles in the hunt. From available records, annual kill has averaged 258 wolves ±59.7 (±1 SE, n=10 years). The territorial government considered the 1998 hunt sustainable given the reproductive potential of wolves and also noted that a higher than average number of caribou brought a corresponding increase in wolves following them. We re-examined the Rennie Lake area wolf hunt and evaluated radio-tracking and genetic data for wolves to determine the potential influence of the hunt on overall wolf survival and implications of reduced wolf predation on caribou. Our analysis suggests that the 1998 hunt targeted an estimated 2700 wolves from an area of at least 200,000 km2 in which an unusually high number of migratory caribou had congregated. Removal of about 750 wolves in 1998 could have released an estimated 15,000 caribou from predation that year, or 3% of the estimated half million caribou in the area then. If predation is additive mortality for caribou, then our data challenges the hypothesis that migratory caribou are lightly influenced by wolf predation. Accordingly, the commercial Rennie Lake wolf hunt may not only be a commercial hunt for fur, but also an indirect form of predator control. Conference Object Northwest Territories Tundra IRIS Università degli Studi di Bologna (CRIS - Current Research Information System) Northwest Territories Rennie ENVELOPE(-63.576,-63.576,-64.692,-64.692)
institution Open Polar
collection IRIS Università degli Studi di Bologna (CRIS - Current Research Information System)
op_collection_id ftunibolognairis
language English
topic No keywords available
spellingShingle No keywords available
Cluff HD
Paquet PC
Musiani M.
Commercial hunt and predator control? The case of Rennie lake area wolf kill
topic_facet No keywords available
description A controversial wolf hunt in 1998 killed 633 wolves in the 13,000 km2 Rennie Lake area of the Northwest Territories, a region straddling the tundra-boreal forest transition, and another 125 wolves from adjacent areas. Although wolves have been hunted there for decades, the controversy focused on the number of wolves killed and use of snowmobiles in the hunt. From available records, annual kill has averaged 258 wolves ±59.7 (±1 SE, n=10 years). The territorial government considered the 1998 hunt sustainable given the reproductive potential of wolves and also noted that a higher than average number of caribou brought a corresponding increase in wolves following them. We re-examined the Rennie Lake area wolf hunt and evaluated radio-tracking and genetic data for wolves to determine the potential influence of the hunt on overall wolf survival and implications of reduced wolf predation on caribou. Our analysis suggests that the 1998 hunt targeted an estimated 2700 wolves from an area of at least 200,000 km2 in which an unusually high number of migratory caribou had congregated. Removal of about 750 wolves in 1998 could have released an estimated 15,000 caribou from predation that year, or 3% of the estimated half million caribou in the area then. If predation is additive mortality for caribou, then our data challenges the hypothesis that migratory caribou are lightly influenced by wolf predation. Accordingly, the commercial Rennie Lake wolf hunt may not only be a commercial hunt for fur, but also an indirect form of predator control.
author2 Cluff HD, Paquet PC, Musiani M.
format Conference Object
author Cluff HD
Paquet PC
Musiani M.
author_facet Cluff HD
Paquet PC
Musiani M.
author_sort Cluff HD
title Commercial hunt and predator control? The case of Rennie lake area wolf kill
title_short Commercial hunt and predator control? The case of Rennie lake area wolf kill
title_full Commercial hunt and predator control? The case of Rennie lake area wolf kill
title_fullStr Commercial hunt and predator control? The case of Rennie lake area wolf kill
title_full_unstemmed Commercial hunt and predator control? The case of Rennie lake area wolf kill
title_sort commercial hunt and predator control? the case of rennie lake area wolf kill
publishDate 2003
url https://hdl.handle.net/11585/906186
long_lat ENVELOPE(-63.576,-63.576,-64.692,-64.692)
geographic Northwest Territories
Rennie
geographic_facet Northwest Territories
Rennie
genre Northwest Territories
Tundra
genre_facet Northwest Territories
Tundra
op_relation ispartofbook:Book of abstracts - World Wolf Congress 2003 — Bridging Science and Community
World Wolf Congress 2003 — Bridging Science and Community
firstpage:43
lastpage:44
numberofpages:2
https://hdl.handle.net/11585/906186
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