Las Vegas Review-Journal

Critics say Idaho’s method to count wolves uses ‘smoke and mirrors,’ misleads public

- By Nicole Blanchard The Idaho Statesman (TNS)

BOISE, Idaho — As a scruffy gray-andbrown wolf stood in a grassy Idaho clearing, it fixed its gaze straight ahead. Another dark wolf trotted down a muddy dirt road. A third stepped over gravelly terrain, its mouth open as it panted in the sun. Motion-triggered cameras, placed by the Idaho Department of Fish and Game, snapped photos of the wild animals along trails. Later, the agency would use those photos to help determine the number of wolves in Idaho.

But the accuracy of that method has been put into question.

For the past several years, the agency has used cameras placed throughout the state to record timed and motion-triggered images to count the number of wolves in Idaho. Critics have said its methods — in particular the motion-triggered photos — are seriously Scientists, flawed.conservati­onists and even Idaho students have cited a paper written by Montana State University ecology professor Scott Creel that alleged major issues with the wolf population estimate model Idaho implemente­d in 2019.

Critics of the technique told the Idaho Statesman the agency still hasn’t addressed their concerns just before the commission is due to decide on a management plan that could reduce the state’s wolf population by two-thirds. An incorrect population estimate could eventually put wolves back on the Endangered Species Act list if their numbers are allowed to drop too low.

“Having an accurate estimate of the wolf population is key to any sort of management policy that Idaho Fish and Game does,” Michel Liao, a Timberline High School senior who publicly criticized the method at a Fish and Game Commission meeting, told the Statesman in an interview. “It’s like running a grocery store without knowing how much supply you have.”

Fish and Game researcher­s told the Statesman they stand by their population estimates and are actively fine-tuning them. But skeptics fear a plan that OKS a drastic population cut could have devastatin­g effects — like the total eradicatio­n of Idaho wolves — if the agency’s methods are flawed.

Counting methods

For years after wolves were reintroduc­ed to Idaho in 1995, Fish and Game counted them by using radio collars, observing wolf packs to create an estimate of average pack size and applying that estimate to the total number of known packs in the state. It was expensive and labor intensive, said Fish and Game state game manager Jon Rachael.

“When we were doing that, nobody really thought it was great,” Rachael said. “We were working harder and harder, and we weren’t even treading water.”

Rachael said the agency couldn’t say how accurate its estimates were, and providing an annual count became more difficult as wolves spread across the state.

Twenty years after wolves were reintroduc­ed, Fish and Game began looking into other counting methods. It worked with researcher­s at the University of Montana and University of Idaho to develop the model it now uses, which relies on a network of 500 trail cameras that take a photo every 10 minutes as well as when they detect motion — a detail researcher­s are highly skeptical of.

Fish and Game then uses artificial intelligen­ce to analyze the resulting millions of photos, finding those that contain wolves and applying a statistica­l model called a “space-to-event” model that calculates the average amount of space between wolves. Using that average, researcher­s create a population estimate.

In an interim report published in February 2022, Fish and Game researcher­s said the method is based on the idea that if there are more wolves in one survey area, you would have to sample less space — or look at fewer photograph­s — in that area before finding a wolf.

Critics said the agency’s camera placement and use of motion-triggered images could lead to an overcount. Idaho would be at risk of federal interventi­on if its wolf count fell to around 150 animals or fewer.

Fish and Game fully switched to the camera estimation method in 2019. That year, it estimated Idaho had 1,545 wolves. In 2020 and 2021, lawmakers made broad expansions of wolf hunting and trapping seasons and removed wolf bag limits.

By 2022, Fish and Game wildlife research manager Shane Roberts said, estimates showed a 13% drop to 1,337 wolves. Rachael told the Fish and Game Commission in January that a new management plan proposed whittling the number even further, to an estimated 500 wolves.

Professor decries model

Liao, the Timberline High student, said he didn’t know much about Idaho’s wolves until 2021, when the Idaho Legislatur­e vastly expanded wolf hunting and trapping.

He learned his school had “adopted” a pack near Idaho City in 2003 through the Nez Perce tribe, which had primary responsibi­lity for managing Idaho’s wolves at the time.

Students and teachers tracked the animals for years and made field trips to study them. Later in 2021, Liao found out pups from the school’s pack had been killed by Wildlife Services agents in their den.

Then he saw Creel’s comments, which were submitted in 2021 to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service as it weighs reinstatin­g Endangered Species Act protection­s for Rocky Mountain wolves. Creel, who studies large carnivore population­s, criticized methods used for wolf population estimates in Idaho and Montana.

The points Creel made in his paper have become leading arguments for opponents of Idaho’s wolf policies, including Liao, who has testified in front of the Fish and Game Commission twice.

Many of Creel’s criticisms of Idaho’s method focus on a paper Roberts co-authored that was published last year. In it, the authors used motion-triggered cameras to gather images for the space-to-event wolf counting method.

According to Creel and the researcher­s who pioneered the method, motion-triggered cameras can’t be used with the spaceto-event model to accurately count wolves. The model calls for instantane­ous photos, while motion-triggered images introduce the need for researcher­s to calculate how fast an animal is moving.

Fish and Game’s current method is slightly different from the paper Creel criticized. It uses both time-lapse photograph­y and motion-triggered cameras, and a different system for camera placement.

Still, Creel told the Statesman in an interview, his initial concerns hold water against the official Fish and Game model. For instance, the agency is still using motion-triggered camera images for part of its analysis.

The original model also requires that researcher­s use randomly placed cameras. Fish and Game instead aims its cameras at trails or roads where wolves are more likely to travel.

In an interview, Roberts told the Statesman that’s because wolves almost exclusivel­y travel on establishe­d roads or game trails. But researcher­s say the method would skew toward an overestima­tion.

Creel said had the camera placement been random, “99.999%” of the agency’s photos wouldn’t have wolves.

“So instead of just acknowledg­ing that (the model) didn’t work, they’re instead bending the assumption­s and hoping that they haven’t bent them so bad that the method broke,” Creel said. “I’m fairly persuaded they’ve bent the assumption so badly that the method broke.”

Creel said the space-to-event method was developed on elk population­s, and the researcher­s who created it said it’s “more useful for common species than for very rare or elusive animals.” Creel said wolves are just that — a difficult-to-detect species that’s a poor fit for the current counting method.

Adrian Treves, an environmen­tal studies professor at University of Wisconsin-madison, has also been critical of various states’ wolf-counting techniques. In a paper critiquing Wisconsin’s method, Treves and his coauthor, Francisco J. Santiago-ávila, also expressed concerns about methods in Idaho and Montana.

Treves told the Statesman that Wisconsin wildlife officials had largely ignored his critiques, and Idaho wildlife officials seemed to be doing the same thing with Creel’s comments.

“I feel like the agency just views us as like biting flies: They swat us away with the power of the state government, and they forge ahead with the science that is demonstrab­ly not the best available,” Treves said.

For their part, Idaho Fish and Game officials said they’ve heard few complaints about the model. Roberts and Rachael defended the method despite its inconsiste­ncies with the original space-toevent counting method.

“There are things we do — like pointing (cameras) at trails — that are a violation of a random camera placement model assumption,” Roberts said. “As wildlife biologists using statistic models, there are few natural systems that hit every statistica­l model assumption. We try to match the best we can.”

Roberts said when the agency must break a method’s rules — for example by using motion-sensored cameras — it experiment­s to see how its changes affected the results. In 2022, for example, agency officials compared its camera wolf count with population estimates from genetic samples they collected from wolf feces. In two of the three years, they “closely mirrored” one another.

Roberts said the agency concluded the camera method was “pretty robust” despite the inconsiste­ncies with the original model.

A political motive?

Fish and Game’s assurances about its technique, critics said they view the agency’s motivation­s as political, not scientific.

Dick Jordan, a former Timberline High School science teacher who led the push to adopt the school’s pack, said he thinks Fish and Game is “using smoke and mirrors to mislead the public to think they’ve got a sound estimate” on wolves.

“We’re not seeing the best of science being used, and that’s what really bothers me,” Jordan said. “It’s sad when the science and the math is not looked at with scrutiny and with a fine-tooth comb. The politics set the stage in a state like Idaho.”

Jordan and Wood River Wolf Project co-founder Suzanne Stone said Idaho doesn’t count any other wildlife species in the same way as wolves or manage any other species as aggressive­ly. Indeed, Fish and Game isn’t using the space-to-event model to create official estimates for any other species, though researcher­s told the Statesman it has been tested on mountain lions.

Stone said there’s “no scientific justificat­ion” for the agency’s proposed wolf management plan, which would reduce wolf numbers from its estimated 1,300 to 500. What’s more, she and other critics said, if Fish and Game’s population estimate is off, wolf numbers could drop even lower than 500.

“Even though you want to trust the state wildlife agency, it’s being manipulate­d both internally and externally by the state Legislatur­e, by people who are very anti-wolf,” Stone said. “And it’s affecting the decisions they’re making and how they’re making them.”

Fish and Game officials acknowledg­ed emotions run high on all sides of wolf issues. Rachael said trusting a complex method like the camera-counting technique can require people to take a “leap of faith.” He said some people believe the agency is vastly overcounti­ng the animals, while others are convinced Idaho’s wolf population is twice the Fish and Game estimate.

“There’s people that aren’t really interested in believing anything different than what they already believe,” Rachael said. “We’re not going to satisfy those people. We’ll continue to do the best we can, implementi­ng the best science we have available, and when we find out there are issues with that, we take steps to make it better.”

State wildlife officials said they’ll forge ahead with camera-based counting methods. Stone and Creel said the agency would be better off with triedand-true methods that include radio collaring, animal surveys and good, old-fashioned counting. Jordan said he’s the first to admit he doesn’t know what the best method would be.

“I can only pray there would be a sensible approach that brings the public in and brings the scientists in,” Jordan said. “I’ve lost all faith in Fish and Game biologists that have to answer to the political powers that be.”

 ?? SHUTTERSTO­CK PHOTOS ?? The accuracy of the method that Idaho uses to determine the number of wolves residing in the state has been called into question.
SHUTTERSTO­CK PHOTOS The accuracy of the method that Idaho uses to determine the number of wolves residing in the state has been called into question.
 ?? ?? Scientists, conservati­onists and students have cited a paper written by a Montana State University ecology professor that alleged major issues with the wolf population estimate model Idaho implemente­d in 2019.
Scientists, conservati­onists and students have cited a paper written by a Montana State University ecology professor that alleged major issues with the wolf population estimate model Idaho implemente­d in 2019.

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