Only three wolves seem to remain in
Isle1 Royale National Park. Researchers from Michigan
Technological2 University observed the wolves during their annual Winter Study, and the
lone3 group, at an
unprecedented4 low, is a sharp decline from nine wolves observed last winter. The study's report, released today, marks the project's 57th year of observing wolves and moose in Isle Royale. It is the longest running
predator5-
prey6 study in the world. This year, along with the three resident wolves, scientists estimated 1,250 moose on the island and observed two visiting wolves, which came and then left across an ice bridge to the mainland. This growing gap between the predator and prey populations is a trend that Michigan Tech researchers have tracked over the past four years.
"It's not the presence of wolves that matters so much, it's whether wolves are performing their
ecological7 function," says John Vucetich, an associate professor of wildlife ecology who leads the study along with Rolf Peterson, a research professor at Michigan Tech.
Last April, the Isle Royale National Park released a statement concerning wolf
intervention8 options. Part of the statement reads: "There is still a chance of nature replenishing the
gene9 pool as wolves are able to move to and from the island when ice bridges form."
But with only three wolves remaining, Vucetich says, "There is now a good chance that it is too late to conduct
genetic10 rescue." He also points out that one of the Isle Royale wolves left on an ice bridge last winter, and this winter, two wolves visited the island and
promptly11 traveled back over the ice bridge.