The Guardian (USA)

‘I got to know the wolf’: how Spain’s shepherds are learning to live with their old enemy

- Ofelia de Pablo and Javier Zurita

In the pre-dawn darkness of Sierra de la Culebra, Zamora, Spain, a sudden howl pierces the cold. More join in, until the baying chorus echoes all around. As the sky begins to lighten, their shapes emerge: first the alpha male, and then the rest of the wolf pack, appearing in the twilight where light and darkness merge.

In Europe, this large carnivore was hunted for centuries and almost exterminat­ed, surviving only in inaccessib­le or sparsely populated areas. Now, thanks to changing attitudes and increased protection, Europe’s wolf population is slowly recovering, and the apex predators are gradually returning to their former territorie­s.

Spain – where Iberian wolves had dwindled to just 200-500 individual­s by the 1970s – now has the highest concentrat­ion on the continent. As the animals return, however, the age-old conflict between shepherds and wolves has intensifie­d.

The Iberian wolf had practicall­y disappeare­d by the 1970s, but numbers have been steadily growing

For the communitie­s that live and tend animals in proximity to wolves, their return provokes a range of emotions, from fear to euphoria, and conflicts between humans and wolves are quick to resurface. In the pastoral settlement­s in the hills of northern Spain, shepherds are trying new strategies in an effort to coexist with these large carnivores.

Farmer Fernando Rodríguez Tábara looks after 100 cows in the Sanabria area in Zamora, Spain – one of the most densely populated wolf areas in Europe

Fernando Rodríguez Tábara arrives on horseback wearing a wide-brimmed hat, at his home in Cerdillo, a village with just four registered inhabitant­s. Rodríguez Tábara knows a lot about the struggle for coexistenc­e with wolves. At 22 years old, he already manages a farm inherited from his parentswit­h more than 100 cows in one of the most densely populated wolf areas in Europe, the Sanabria area in Zamora.

Fernando Rodríguez Tábara with the mastiff puppies that will grow up with his herd and protect them from wolves

Tonight, however, he will leave his precious livestock to sleep without fear of wolves. His secret? His “army” of dogs, as he calls them: 13 mastiffs that guard the cattle. “Now, I sleep soundly,” he says, smiling.

His mother, Luisa Tábara, tells us that it wasn’t always like this. “In 2012, wolves killed 12 calves, it was a tragedy. For me, my cows are part of my family,” she says. It was at that point, Rodríguez Tábara says, that some neighbours gave them mastiff puppies to raise alongside the cows and defend them against wolves. “My father told me it was impossible,” he says.

Fernando grazing his herd with his mastiffs by his side

Today, Rodríguez Tábara rides back to the mountains on his mare, Canela. The calves have started to be born, and the mastiffs never leave their side. “We put them in the stable with the calves from a young age, and in the end, they feel like part of the herd,” he says. “We realised that with the mastiffs, the problem is eradicated.”

Juan Díez leads his flock to fresh pastures

The temperatur­e drops as evening falls near the Picos de Europa national park. The rocky silhouette of Espigüete peak stands out against a starry sky, as thousands of sheep make their way to the pen that Juan Díez has just set up. A transhuman­t shepherd, Díez started working with livestock at a very young age, following his grandfathe­r in Extremadur­a. At the age of 17, he had his own flock and moved to Asturias. “That’s where I really got to know the wolf – because that summer it killed 121 of my animals,” he says. “Of course, I was an inexperien­ced kid.”

Juan Díez, a transhuman­t shepherd in Asturais. One summer, wolves killed 121 of his sheep

Díez came from an area where the wolf had disappeare­d a long time before, along with traditiona­l practices to prevent their damage. Later, he returned to León, near to the region where he had lost his animals, walking from Extremadur­a with more than 500 goats. But this time, he was prepared: the dogs he brought with him were mastiffs.

“That year, they didn’t touch a single one,” Díez says. When the livestock is in an electric fencing enclosure or gathered with the dogs, “the wolf won’t get to them”, he says. Asked about the conflict between shepherds and wolves, he says: “Why did the dog enter the church? Because the door was open.”

One of Juan Díez’s mastiffs keeps watch over his flock

The recovery of wolf population­s in Spain has taken decades. In the 1970s, with the wolf on the brink of extinction, naturalist Félix Rodríguez de la Fuente began campaignin­g to save the creatures. His work, along with that of other organisati­ons, contribute­d to a significan­t change in mentality. The Iberian wolf went from being legal to hunt at any time to having the time and method of hunting regulated. In the 1990s, the wolf began to reappear timidly in places where it had long disappeare­d. Since 2021, a law has prohibited its hunting. Over the past year, however, the recovery of Iberian wolves has again become politicise­d in Spain, with right wing parties campaignin­g ahead of elections in July on the promise to make it legal to hunt them once more.

Prevention-focused methods to control the wolves can result in a significan­t reduction in the number of dead or injured livestock: up to 61% in the case of mastiffs, 99.9% with electric fences, and 100% for fixed enclosures, according to WWF citing research by European project Coex.

Sofía González Berdasco, who grew up as a transhuman­t shepherd

Sofía González Berdasco grew up as a transhuman­t shepherd in northern Spain, between the mountains of the Somiedo natural park in Asturias and the pastures of Santa Marina on the coast. Every night as a child, she went to sleep to stories like those of Little Red Riding Hood, but “they weren’t stories, they were real-life experience­s”, she says. González Berdasco’s mother would send her young daughters to watch over the goats in the mountains because there were wolves. One summer’s day, while González Berdasco was tending the livestock, a wolf approached. She was five years old, and it was the first time she had seen one face to face. She saw it take one of the kids and disappear. “For us, our animals are like our family, and when a wolf comes and kills one of them, it hurts,” she says. “You still don’t have the idea of, well, the wolves killed a calf because they have to feed their pups, just like I love my kids.”

Over time, González Berdasco discovered the importance of the role of large carnivores in the ecosystem, and decided she had to break the mental barrier: her fear of wolves. She ventured into the hills alone to spend the night in her sleeping bag in an area where she knew the wolves were. “I came back transforme­d; I conquered the last step, the most complicate­d one – the one in my soul,” she says.

Sofía González Berdasco believes shepherds must find a way to live with the wolves

González Berdasco admits that sometimes she feels as if she is in a no man’s land, understand­ing the needs of shepherds and the wolf packs they live alongside. She now guides tourist groups with her company, Somiedo Experience. “Working with tourists, I see some who think that if the farmers here disappeare­d, the wolves could live, and that we, the people from the villages, are superfluou­s,” González Berdasco says. “And then I listen to many farmers who say that all the wolves should be killed, and it will be better for us. I don’t see that one side is more right than the other.”

She believes that the only possibilit­y for reaching an understand­ing is to sit down and negotiate. “Neither side can lose everything, and the other side gain everything.”

Wolves are are now protected by law to prevent them being hunted across Spain

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversi­ty reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on X (formerly known as Twitter) for all the latest news and features

 ?? Photograph: Ofelia de Pablo & Javier Zurita ?? A wolf pack in northern Spain, where shepherds are trying new strategies to coexist with the animals.
Photograph: Ofelia de Pablo & Javier Zurita A wolf pack in northern Spain, where shepherds are trying new strategies to coexist with the animals.
 ?? Pablo & Javier Zurita ?? The Iberian wolf had practicall­y disappeare­d by the 1970s, but numbers have been steadily growing Photograph: Ofelia de
Pablo & Javier Zurita The Iberian wolf had practicall­y disappeare­d by the 1970s, but numbers have been steadily growing Photograph: Ofelia de

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