Strong Support For Mexican Gray Wolf Recovery

ESC News:
 
BOULDER, Colo.  Of the more than 100,000 comments submitted to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) on the Mexican Wolf Draft Recovery Plan, more than 99 percent were in support of recovery, according to wildlife conservation organizations who reviewed the comments submitted this summer.
 
“We wanted to be able to definitively say that the recovery of the Mexican gray wolf is important to Americans, and we can,” Hailey Hawkins, Southern Rockies Field Representative for the Endangered Species Coalition said. “Americans overwhelmingly support Mexican wolf recovery and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s recovery plan needs to reflect that.”
 
Seven organizations and dozens of volunteers came together to tally the comments, publicly available on the government comment portal, Regulations.gov. The organizations included the Endangered Species Coalition, Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project, Lobos of the Southwest, Wolf Conservation Center, White Mountain Conservation League, Sierra Club’s Grand Canyon Chapter, and Sierra Club’s Rio Grande Chapter. It took weeks and over a hundred hours for the volunteers to tally the thousands of comments, which came from all 50 states.
 
The comment period was open from June 30, 2017 to August 31, 2017, during which time USFWS received more than 100,000 comments on their Draft Mexican Wolf Recovery Plan. The last recovery plan was drafted in 1982 and has been in critical need of updating. The current draft recovery plan must be completed by Nov. 30, 2017, as mandated by a court order.
 
Most commentors are worried that the USFWS draft recovery plan wasn’t based on the best available science in its calculation of wolf recovery goals, and that barriers to habitat connectivity weren’t adequately addressed. For instance, the proposed plan calls for only about 300 wolves in the Southwest United States, even though biologists on the USFWS’ own Science and Planning Subgroup calculated that a population of at least 750 wolves should be established before delisting. This was just one of a number of intentional blind spots on the science of wolf recovery adopted in the proposed plan.
 
“Folks across the country want a wolf recovery plan based on the best available science–one that accounts for habitat fragmentation, severely low genetic diversity, poaching, and a potentially disastrous border wall,” Hawkins said. “The proposed draft recovery plan does not allow Mexican wolves to fully recover in the Southwest.”
 
The Mexican gray wolf is one of the rarest mammals in North America, with only 113 individuals in the wild. There are many hurdles hindering the recovery of the Mexican wolf, including poaching, declining genetic diversity, and federal legislation aimed at removing protections for the wolf.
 
The Mexican gray wolf was almost completely extinct when it was listed under the Endangered Species Act in 1976. Shortly after, a captive breeding program was initiated with the only five remaining individuals.  
 
After 30 years of absence, the Mexican wolf finally returned to the American southwest when they were released to the wild in 1998.
 
However, after almost 20 years, the endangered Mexican wolf is still struggling to recover due to a lack of investment in scientific recovery requirements. Without a strong recovery plan from US Fish and Wildlife Service, it is unlikely the Mexican wolf will fully recover from the brink of extinction.
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