Moose calf mystery solved: Too many wolves
Posted on April 19, 2015 Written by timberjay.com Mech
study shows a steep increase in wolf numbers coincided with a sharp decline
in moose calf survival
Sometimes, no matter how hard you try to
avoid it, the answer to your question is staring you in the face. And it
appears that could well be the case as it relates to the declining moose population
in northeastern Minnesota.
For several years, the Department of Natural
Resources has conducted millions of dollars worth of research trying to
determine why it seems our region’s moose herd is disappearing.
Since early on in the effort, researchers have
focused on warmer temperatures, and that’s due in large part to the results
of a 2009 study by DNR biologist Mark Lenarz, which correlated declining
moose numbers in the region to rising average temperatures in January.
The theory goes something like this: moose have a competitive advantage
over whitetail deer in areas with extreme cold and plentiful snow, which has
typified northern Minnesota for many years. But as winters have warmed
(which, on average, they have), that competitive advantage is undermined.
Greater deer survival leads to more competition for food and an increased
prevalence of deer-borne parasites, such as liver flukes and brain worms, that weaken and often eventually kill
infected moose. In addition, goes the theory, warmer winters have increased
the survival of winter ticks, another parasite with a number of negative
impacts to moose.
I don’t discount in any way that some of
these trends may be playing a role in the moose decline.
But in the rush to demonstrate a
climate-related connection, the DNR has, at least to date, downplayed a much
more direct cause of the moose decline: wolves.
It comes down to Occam’s razor, the principle
that the most likely answer to a question or problem is the most straightforward,
requiring the fewest assumptions.
The notion that moose are declining because
more wolves are in the woods to eat them is about as direct an answer as one
could find. But is it true?
Indeed it is, says Dr. L. David Mech, who has
studied wolves throughout a good chunk of northern St. Louis and Lake counties
for decades. In a paper published several months ago, Mech provided compelling
evidence that the primary cause of the moose decline is the sharp rise in
wolf numbers, at least within that portion of the primary moose range that
overlaps with Mech’s study area.
Mech, in his study, re-examined the Lenarz
data and conclusions and found his correlations of the moose decline with
warming temperatures in mid-winter to be dubious. Mech, of course, wasn’t
the first to doubt this connection. While our region has certainly seen a
trend towards warmer winters over the past 25 years, our winters remain far
colder than many other parts of North America where moose continue to do reasonably
well— and that’s a point that many have made.
Keep in mind, correlation is used in
research all the time, but correlation does not prove causation, and can
often be misleading. And questions certainly arise with the correlations
cited by Lenarz. Why would the moose decline, for example, be linked to
mid-winter temperatures? If deer survival and winter ticks were the primary
issues related to a warming climate, one would expect to see the moose
decline more directly linked to warmer temperatures in March and April, when
deer are the most stressed (and most likely to succumb to conditions), and
when winter ticks are susceptible to freezing (they drop off their moose
hosts in March and April).
It’s true that mid-winter temperatures in
Minnesota have been increasing (more so than during other parts of the year)
and that moose are declining, but is there reason to believe the two trends
are linked? It’s a stretch.
While Mech’s study relies on correlation as
well, he demonstrates a remarkably strong link between rising wolf numbers
in his study area and the decline in moose survival, both for adults and, particularly,
for calves.
Consider the numbers. Mech compared DNR aerial
moose survey results, including adults and calf ratios within his wolf study
area, to the changes in wolf numbers in the same area— and the correlation
was astonishing. Back in the 1990s and early 2000s, when wolf numbers in
Mech’s study area ranged roughly between 50–65, moose numbers remained strong
and calf-to-cow ratios were consistently above 50 percent in DNR surveys.
But beginning in 2004, the wolf population
steadily increased in Mech’s study area, from 58 in 2003, to 97 by 2009. It’s
hovered around the 90s ever since.
In 2003, seven of every ten cows sighted on
the DNR’s aerial survey had a calf. By 2007, when the wolf population had
jumped from 58 to 81, barely one-in-four cows had a living calf by the time of
the aerial survey. During the same period, the percentage of calves in the
moose population fell, from 28 percent to just 14 percent. Given that
calves are the most vulnerable to wolf predation, their declining proportion
in the population makes sense.
This trend of rapid decline in calf success
cannot be accounted for through climatic change. The differences in temperatures
between 2003, when calves were apparently doing quite well, and 2009, by which
time their numbers had plummeted, are too insignificant to show such a
direct effect.
And Mech has more data. He cited other studies,
from eastern Ontario, which compared wolf densities to moose calf survival.
Remarkably, Mech found that wolf densities in the Canadian study area were
two-thirds that found in his Minnesota study zone. And calf survival in Minnesota
was, you guessed it, about two-thirds that found in the Canadian study. It’s
pretty powerful evidence that wolf densities are a much better predictor
of calf survival, than temperature fluctuations. That’s especially so,
since climate factors would presumably play a role in Canada as well as
Minnesota.
And, most significantly, we don’t need to
rely on correlation alone. While the ongoing moose calf study in the region
has had its problems, what data it has collected fits exactly with Mech’s conclusions.
The vast majority of our moose calves are dying in wolf attacks.
The good news is this is a wildlife management
issue, which can be controlled, or at least could be controlled if anti-wolf
hunting organizations hadn’t succeeded in ending the wolf hunt in Minnesota.
Assuming the legal issues are resolved soon, Mech recommends that the state
focus more of its wolf harvest quota in future years in the primary moose
range, to give the moose population some breathing room.
The alternative is to do nothing, and to
let nature take its course. In the long run, if moose continue to decline,
wolf numbers will decline as well, particularly in those regions where
wolves rely almost exclusively on moose in winter. But before that happens,
the moose could be all but extirpated from Minnesota, and any recovery would
be difficult at best.
There’s really little reason to delay. The
evidence is increasingly clear. While climate factors may play some indirect
roles in the moose decline (such as making moose less healthy and more vulnerable
to wolf predation), wolves are the primary direct factor behind the disappearance
of this northwoods icon. That’s a scientific conclusion that’s hard to
refute.
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Filed Under: Wildlands NetworkCommentsThis is nuts. The same government that is increasing the wolf population for the wilding project is studying why the Moose are disappearing. It’s time to close the US Department of Interior. Minnesota should just lift the wolf hunting ban and let the voters decide. Then Minnesota should deport all federal employees to border states to end the invasion at the Mexican border.Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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