Consensus on Criteria for Potential Areas for Wolf Reintroduction in Mexico

Given the conflict with human interests that in many cases results in the extirpation of large carnivores, acceptance of their reintroduction is a considerable challenge. By the 1980s Mexican wolves (Canis lupus) were extinct in the wild. In 1998 a population was reintroduced in the Blue Range Mount...

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Main Author: Araiza, Marcela
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Conservation Biology 2012
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11056/18004
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spelling ftunivncostarica:oai:https://repositorio.una.ac.cr:11056/18004 2023-05-15T15:50:58+02:00 Consensus on Criteria for Potential Areas for Wolf Reintroduction in Mexico Araiza, Marcela 2012-07-19 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11056/18004 eng eng Conservation Biology http://hdl.handle.net/11056/18004 Acceso abierto http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 2012 ftunivncostarica 2022-10-30T05:40:29Z Given the conflict with human interests that in many cases results in the extirpation of large carnivores, acceptance of their reintroduction is a considerable challenge. By the 1980s Mexican wolves (Canis lupus) were extinct in the wild. In 1998 a population was reintroduced in the Blue Range Mountains of New Mexico (U.S.A.). Efforts to reintroduce the species in Mexico have been ongoing since the late 1980s. Four teams working independently identified 6 areas in northern Mexico in the historic range of Mexican wolves, where reintroductions could potentially be successful. Each team used different methods and criteria to identify the areas, which makes it difficult to prioritize among these areas. Therefore, members of the different teams worked together to devise criteria for use in identifying priority areas. They identified areas with high, intermediate, and low potential levels of conflict between wolves and humans. Areas with low potential conflict had larger buffers (i.e., distance from human settlement to areas suitable for wolves) around human settlements than high- and intermediate-conflict areas and thus were thought most appropriate for the first reintroduction. High-conflict areas contained habitat associated with wolf presence, but were closer to human activity. The first reintroduction of Mexican wolves to Mexico occurred in October 2011 in one of the identified low-conflict areas. The identification of suitable areas for reintroduction represents a crucial step in the process toward the restoration of large carnivores. Choice of the first reintroduction area can determine whether the reintroduction is successful or fails. A failure may preclude future reintroduction efforts in a region or country. Universidad Nacional, Costa Rica Instituto Internacional en Conservación y Manejo de Vida Silvestre Other/Unknown Material Canis lupus Universidad Nacional Costa Rica (UNA): Repositorio Institucional
institution Open Polar
collection Universidad Nacional Costa Rica (UNA): Repositorio Institucional
op_collection_id ftunivncostarica
language English
description Given the conflict with human interests that in many cases results in the extirpation of large carnivores, acceptance of their reintroduction is a considerable challenge. By the 1980s Mexican wolves (Canis lupus) were extinct in the wild. In 1998 a population was reintroduced in the Blue Range Mountains of New Mexico (U.S.A.). Efforts to reintroduce the species in Mexico have been ongoing since the late 1980s. Four teams working independently identified 6 areas in northern Mexico in the historic range of Mexican wolves, where reintroductions could potentially be successful. Each team used different methods and criteria to identify the areas, which makes it difficult to prioritize among these areas. Therefore, members of the different teams worked together to devise criteria for use in identifying priority areas. They identified areas with high, intermediate, and low potential levels of conflict between wolves and humans. Areas with low potential conflict had larger buffers (i.e., distance from human settlement to areas suitable for wolves) around human settlements than high- and intermediate-conflict areas and thus were thought most appropriate for the first reintroduction. High-conflict areas contained habitat associated with wolf presence, but were closer to human activity. The first reintroduction of Mexican wolves to Mexico occurred in October 2011 in one of the identified low-conflict areas. The identification of suitable areas for reintroduction represents a crucial step in the process toward the restoration of large carnivores. Choice of the first reintroduction area can determine whether the reintroduction is successful or fails. A failure may preclude future reintroduction efforts in a region or country. Universidad Nacional, Costa Rica Instituto Internacional en Conservación y Manejo de Vida Silvestre
format Other/Unknown Material
author Araiza, Marcela
spellingShingle Araiza, Marcela
Consensus on Criteria for Potential Areas for Wolf Reintroduction in Mexico
author_facet Araiza, Marcela
author_sort Araiza, Marcela
title Consensus on Criteria for Potential Areas for Wolf Reintroduction in Mexico
title_short Consensus on Criteria for Potential Areas for Wolf Reintroduction in Mexico
title_full Consensus on Criteria for Potential Areas for Wolf Reintroduction in Mexico
title_fullStr Consensus on Criteria for Potential Areas for Wolf Reintroduction in Mexico
title_full_unstemmed Consensus on Criteria for Potential Areas for Wolf Reintroduction in Mexico
title_sort consensus on criteria for potential areas for wolf reintroduction in mexico
publisher Conservation Biology
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/11056/18004
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11056/18004
op_rights Acceso abierto
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