Albuquerque Journal

Wolves to have new home at Ted Turner’s NM ranch

Location of parents and pups a first on private land

- BY SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

One of Ted Turner’s ranches in southern New Mexico will be the new home for a pair of Mexican gray wolves and their soon-tobe-born pups as federal wildlife managers look at more options for boosting the genetic diversity of the endangered species.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service confirmed Monday that it is teaming up with the Ladder Ranch for the project. While the ranch has been involved over the years with captive breeding efforts and other endangered species work, this will mark the first time a translocat­ion of Mexican gray wolves has been done on private land.

The male wolf — considered one of the most geneticall­y valuable wolves in the wild population — and his pregnant mate are currently being kept at a wildlife refuge in central New Mexico. After their pups are born, the pack will be moved to the ranch, where they will be kept in a remote chain-link pen for a couple of weeks so they can acclimate to the area.

With the pups being so young, officials said the wolves will naturally establish a home range near the translocat­ion site. They also said the timing will coincide with elk calving in the area, which will provide a food source for the predators.

Aside from introducin­g more diversity into the wild gene pool, officials said the goal is to find a place where the pack can establish a territory with few to no conflicts with livestock.

For more than two decades, the effort to return Mexican gray wolves to the wild in the U.S. Southwest has been fraught with conf lict as ranchers have complained about the challenges of having to scare away the wolves to keep their cattle from being eaten. Many have said their livelihood­s and rural way of life are at stake.

Environmen­talists argue that wolf reintroduc­tion has stumbled as a result of illegal killings and management decisions they contend are rooted in the Fish and Wildlife Service’s attempt to accommodat­e ranchers and the region’s year-round cattle calving season.

Brady McGee, the agency’s Mexican wolf recovery coordinato­r, said his team worked with the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish to analyze translocat­ion options based on a number of factors — from proximity to homes and grazing allotments to the distance from the wolves’ prior territory and the availabili­ty of prey.

“The translocat­ion site on the Ladder Ranch is ranked as the best option due to its large, resident elk herd and distance from active grazing allotments on the Gila National Forest,” he wrote in a recent email to landowners and others.

The Seco Creek area on the western side of the ranch features grasslands and pine forests in the foothills of the Black Range. It’s about 5 miles from the nearest grazing allotment on national forest land.

Spanning more than 243 square miles, the Ladder Ranch has worked with the Fish and Wildlife Service for years, providing a site for captive wolves and other endangered species projects through the Turner Endangered Species Fund. Across Turner’s vast land holdings, that work has ranged from breeding endangered Bolson tortoises to providing habitat for aplomado falcons, threatened Chiricahua leopard frogs and endangered black-footed ferrets.

North America’s rarest subspecies of gray wolf, the Mexican gray wolf was listed

as endangered in 1976 after being pushed to the brink of extinction. From the 1960s to the 1980s, seven gray wolves — believed to be the last of their kind — were captured and the captive breeding program began.

Wolves started being released in the late ’90s. The wild population has nearly doubled over the past five years, with the latest annual census finding at least 186 Mexican gray wolves in the wild in New Mexico and Arizona.

Federal officials had faced a court-ordered deadline next week for rewriting the rules that govern management of the species. Despite the objections of environmen­talists, a federal judge has agreed to push the deadline to July 2022.

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