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News / Northwest

Report finds record number of wolves now at home in Oregon

By ANDREW SELSKY, Associated Press
Published: April 9, 2019, 7:58pm
4 Photos
FILE - This February, 2017 file photo provided by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife shows a wolf of the Wenaha Pack captured on a remote camera on U.S. Forest Service land in Oregon’s northern Wallowa County. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife said in a report released Monday, April 8, 2019 that the number of known wolves in Oregon at the end of 2018 was 137, a 10 percent increase over the previous year.
FILE - This February, 2017 file photo provided by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife shows a wolf of the Wenaha Pack captured on a remote camera on U.S. Forest Service land in Oregon’s northern Wallowa County. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife said in a report released Monday, April 8, 2019 that the number of known wolves in Oregon at the end of 2018 was 137, a 10 percent increase over the previous year. (Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife via AP, File) Photo Gallery

SALEM, Ore. — A record number of wolves are roaming the forests and fields of Oregon, 20 years after the species returned to the state.

The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife reported Monday that the number of known wolves in Oregon at the end of 2018 was 137, a 10 percent increase over the previous year. There are likely even more wolves because not all individuals or packs are located during the winter count.

“The ongoing recovery of Oregon’s wolf population is something to celebrate, and perhaps 2019 will be the year that wolves return home to the Oregon Coast Range and Siskiyou Mountains,” said Nick Cady, legal director of Cascadia Wildlands, a conservation organization.

Still, the group warned against lifting wolf protections — as the Trump administration is proposing — saying it would be premature and a setback for the species that was almost exterminated in the contiguous United States.

Sixteen wolf packs — defined as four or more wolves traveling together in winter — were documented during the Oregon count, up from 12 packs in 2017. For the second straight year, resident wolves were documented in a new area of the state — the central portion of the Cascade Range.

Confirmed wolf attacks on domesticated animals increased 65 percent from the previous year, with 28 confirmed incidents, most of them on calves. But the attacks have not kept pace with the increase in wolf population over the past nine years.

Wildlife agency spokeswoman Michelle Dennehy attributed it to use of nonlethal measures by the department and ranchers, such as removing carcass and bone piles, electrified flagging, deterrent lighting and other scare devices.

Despite the territorial expansion, the objective of maintaining four breeding pairs in Central and Western Oregon for three years had not been reached. In the east, the objective of seven breeding pairs was exceeded.

Oregon delisted wolves from its Endangered Species Act in 2016, though they’re protected statewide as a special status game mammal. Wolves in Central and Western Oregon continue to be federally listed as endangered species.

But in March, the U.S. Interior Department proposed lifting protections for gray wolves across the Lower 48 states. That would allow states to hold wolf hunting and trapping seasons.

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