Wolf pack that attacked Colorado livestock to be relocated as reintroduction program stumbles

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Wildlife agencies are trying to capture and relocate the first pack of wolves that formed under Colorado’s ambitious wolf reintroduction program after the animals repeatedly attacked livestock, marking an early stumble in the voter-driven initiative.
The move comes only a week after state officials touted three pups born to the Copper Creek pack, which formed after 10 of the predators from Oregon were released in December over bitter opposition from livestock groups. The pack has at least two adults.
The bid to capture them goes against Colorado’s wolf management plan that was adopted last year. It included guidance that relocation “has little technical merit” because it could create problems elsewhere if the animals continue attacking livestock. The plan calls for using non-lethal approaches, such as patrolling ranches with range riders and scaring away problem wolves or killing them if necessary to stop ongoing attacks on livestock.
Officials did not say where the Copper Creek pack would be relocated, nor whether they would be released into the wild or kept in captivity.
Ranching groups had wanted the wolf pack killed. Wildlife advocates said more should have been done to keep them from killing livestock, such as using electric fencing that can better deters attacks.
In other parts of the U.S. where wolves are well-established — including in the Northern U.S. Rocky Mountains and around the Great Lakes — the predators are routinely killed by wildlife officials in response to livestock attacks. Wolves are prolific breeders so removing some animals doesn’t have population-wide effects.
Colorado’s attempt to instead capture problem wolves comes after an agency spokesperson told The Associated Press last week that officials wanted to avoid killing them because “it’s too early in the process” of reintroduction.
“We don’t have enough wolves on the landscape to lethally remove” the pack, spokesperson Travis Duncan said.
State officials did not disclose where the capture operations were taking place but said the work was being done with help from federal officials and under U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service rules. More details will be released after the relocation is completed, Duncan said Wednesday.
Michael Saul with Defenders of Wildlife said it was a “big setback” for the reintroduction.
“There are lots of ranchers using existing tools who are living with wolves and not having this problem,” Saul said. “Even if the individual wolves survived, taking them out of the wild is removing the one successful breeding pack for Colorado.”
Saul said he was concerned the pups might not survive the capture operations and that the two adult wolves might not be released. That would be contrary to the voter-approved plan to reintroduce the animals to the wild, he said.
Rancher Ted Ritschard, who lives about 15 miles from the ranch in Grand County, Colorado, where most of the livestock attacks took place, said he was glad the pack would be removed. He blamed them for killing at least 16 cattle and sheep and wants them in captivity so they don’t kill again.
“These pups have learned to kill livestock so they’re going to keep doing it,” said Ritschard, president of the Middle Park Stockgrowers Association. “Once they get a taste of sheep or cattle, that’s a whole different world.

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