DNR News Release
- August 1, 2008
Media contacts: Dr. John Erb, DNR research biologist (218)
999-7930
Dan Stark, DNR wolf management specialist (651) 259-5175
DNR
Survey Indicates Wolf Range and Population Similar to 2004
Minnesota’s
gray wolf population has changed little in the past 10 years,
accordingto a recent survey by the Department of Natural
Resources (DNR). The preliminary
estimate
for the 2008 wolf populations is 2,922 animals, compared
with the 1998 estimate of 2,450 and the 2004 estimate of
3,020. The overall range of wolves in Minnesota has not
changed since 1998, encompassing approximately 34,100 square
miles of northern Minnesota.
According to
Dr. John Erb, DNR wolf research biologist, “the recent
survey indicates wolves currently occupy about 81 percent
of this overall area, similar to results from the past two
surveys (77 percent and 84 percent). Considering the estimated
margin of error from each survey, the population estimates
from the past three surveys are
statistically similar,” Erb said. “The lack
of notable change in wolf numbers is not surprising given
that northern deer populations have remained relatively
stable since 1998, and most forested portions of northern
Minnesota are already occupied by wolves.”
According to
the study, the average mid-winter pack size was 4.9 wolves.
Late winter generally represents the low point in the annual
cycle, with pack size increasing again in early summer following
pup production. The study estimated that radio-marked wolf
packs were occupying territories that averaged 40 square-miles
in size, similar to results from the 2003-2004 survey.
In March 2007,
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service removed the gray wolf
from the endangered species list in the western Great Lakes
region, including Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan. Wisconsin
has about 550 wolves. Michigan's Upper Peninsula also has
510 wolves.
Since the wolf
was removed from the endangered species list, DNR has been
managing gray wolves in accordance with state laws and a
wolf management plan completed in 2001, said Dan Stark,
DNR wolf management specialist.
“This survey
presents more evidence that the gray wolf continues to be
recovered in Minnesota, and that Minnesota’s state
wolf management program is effectively protecting wolves,"
Stark said.
The survey, completed
last winter, used methods identical to the 1997-1998 and
2003-2004 surveys. A variety of sources were used in estimating
the wolf population, including field observations, habitat
models, and data based on current radio telemetry studies.
Previous surveys were completed at 10-year intervals starting
in 1978. Under state management, future wolf population
surveys are being conducted at five-year intervals.
The complete
2008 wolf survey report will be available online at www.mndnr.gov
by mid August.