Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumStoried Alaska wolf pack beloved for decades has vanished, thanks to hunting
For decades, the wolves of the storied East Fork pack were beloved by researchers and tourists alike at Alaskas Denali National Park. They frequented the parks entrance and roads and became the stars of hundreds of thousands of family vacation photos.
Since the 1930s, scientists have documented every detail of the packs lives: their hunting ranges, mating rituals, even the content of their droppings. They traced family lineage through dozens of generations, giving individual wolves names like The Dandy, Grandpa and Robber Mask.
Now the researchers must record one final detail in the wolves long history: They may all be dead.
The last radio-collared male was found shot dead near a hunting camp in May. Now, park officials cant find the last three pack members: a uncollared female and her two pups. Its impossible to know for sure what happened to them, officials said, but its unlikely that the mother and her pups will survive without the support and protection of a pack. The familys den is empty and overgrown with weeds. Porcupines have taken it over since June 28, when the group was last seen.
The wolf pack is the most recent fatality of a controversial Alaska policy that allows hunters to kill wolves and other large predators in the states national wildlife refuges, wildlife advocates say. Park officials estimated 49 wolves lived in Denali National Park this spring, only three more than the parks all-time low of 46 in 1986 and a significant decline from the early 2000s when it was common to count more than 100. In 2015, only 5 percent of Denali visitors reported seeing a wolf down from 45 percent in 2010.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/storied-alaska-wolf-pack-beloved-for-decades-has-vanished-thanks-to-hunting/ar-BBvqgBq?li=BBnbfcL&ocid=edgsp
JonathanRackham
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