Man vs. Wild: The Many Issues of Manipulation in Idaho’s Wilderness
June 17, 2010.There is no mistaking or denying Idaho’s rugged beauty. It is a place of vast and magnificent wilderness. It would be a rare thing for someone not to feel the strong call of nature here. However, Idaho’s wilderness has a history and on-going record of the call of man and his influence on nature’s order. There are several examples of this issue we continue to follow as we travel down Idaho’s vast waterways, asking ourselves when is it beneficial for man to manipulate the natural world, and when would it be better to let Mother Earth tend to her own? I don’t propose to have the answers, or even venture forth my opinions, but suffice it to say there is no lack of strong, relevant material to motivate our campfire talks here on the rivers of Idaho.
Reintroduction of the Gray Wolf
Wolf reintroduction occurs by repopulating a previously extirpated area with a group of wolves, with the hope that they will reestablish themselves in the area and ecosystem. Although wolves are the most environmentally adaptable mammals next to man, they had been hunted out of all of the lower 48 states, with the exception of a few small packs in remote northeastern Minnesota. Wolves were highly prevalent in North America until westward expansion occurred in the 1800’s – settlers hunted the wild bison, deer, elk and moose, forcing the wolves to then hunt domestic livestock (sheep and cattle). When this occurred, bounties were issued for wolf kills, and continued as late as the 1960’s.
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