Denali Wolves Wiped out

Ecologists worry the longest-studied wolf Denali pack may be dead 

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Denali Wolves Wiped out

Alaskan Officials Have officially succeeded in Making the News for their destroying the Denali Pack.The first ecologist to study the pack was Adolph Murie in the 1930s.

The wolf pack that taught scientists how wolf packs work may be dead, scientists worry.

Last they knew, the East Fork pack in Alaska’s Denali National Park was down to a male, a female, and two pups. But as we first saw reported by The Guardian, a park ecologist told the media that the male was found dead and there’s no sign of the rest of the pack at their den.

The last male was killed by hunters. He was the latest in a troubling yearlong trend of about 75% of East Fork wolf deaths being due to hunting and trapping. And it’s not just wolves: as many as one in four mammal species are threatened, due largely to hunting and habitat loss.

Wolves in Alaska are protected on park land itself, but not beyond its borders — borders the wolves can’t see.

Overall, biologists think Denali is down to about 50 wolves in a dozen packs. And in the past two years, the park has been actively working to try to increase the frequency of wolf sightings by visitors.

The East Fork pack were wolf celebrities, often greeting visitors entering the park. Sean McGuire at Alaskans for Wildlife told a local radio station they were “probably the most viewed wolf pack in the world’s history.”

Offshoot packs formed by East Fork wolves are still roaming Denali. That means ecologists can still track this lineage of wolves — just not in the same community.

But for scientists, having almost 80 years of observations of the same pack was priceless. The first ecologist to study the pack was Adolph Murie in the 1930s.

Murie just watched the wolves, but modern scientists have been using a higher-tech methods like genetic sequencing and radio collars to better understand how the wolves are doing and how their packs are changing.

Source: Ecologists worry the longest-studied wolf pack may be dead – Business Insider

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