Santa Fe New Mexican

Environmen­talists call for coyote protection­s near Mexican wolves

Groups say misidentif­ication of species leads to illegal killings, the main cause of death of endangered animals

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

ALBUQUERQU­E — Environmen­talists want the U.S. government to list coyotes as endangered in parts of Arizona and New Mexico where the rarest subspecies of gray wolf in North America is found.

A coalition of groups argue in a petition submitted Thursday to U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that small-statured Mexican gray wolves are often mistaken for coyotes and that protecting coyotes would in turn cut down on wolf deaths.

Environmen­talists say illegal killings are the leading cause of death for the endangered animals.

The petition pointed to cases in which Mexican wolves have been killed by people who said they believed they were killing a coyote. This misidentif­ication invokes a federal policy that effectivel­y protects a person from prosecutio­n because it requires the government to prove that a defendant knew they were killing an endangered species when they pulled the trigger.

“It’s an outrage that merely saying, ‘I thought it was a coyote’ serves as a get-out-of-jail-free card for anyone who shoots one of these highly imperiled animals,” said Michael Robinson with the Center for Biological Diversity.

Ranchers argue there are more Mexican wolves roaming the Southwest now than at any time since recovery began more than two decades ago, and that rural communitie­s that revolve around agricultur­e continue to bear the costs of livestock losses due to the reintroduc­tion of wolves.

Loren Patterson, president of the New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Associatio­n, said Thursday his group

learned last week Mexican wolves were located north of Interstate 40 as well as in the Manzano Mountains near Albuquerqu­e.

As the wolf population expands, more human interactio­n and incidental wolf deaths should be expected, Patterson said.

“To hamper our recreation­al and agricultur­e communitie­s by protecting an unregulate­d furbearer is unjustifie­d,” he said. “The livestock industry is still not being made whole by wolf depredatio­ns and to add the inability to control problem coyote population­s would just add to a tense situation between the endangered species and the people that live within the recovery zone.”

He suggested real-time location maps of collared wolves, hunter education and reimbursin­g the full value of livestock killed by wolves would be better options for addressing the problem.

The environmen­tal groups argue in the petition that publicatio­ns and posters by regional wildlife managers encouragin­g hunters to know the difference have not stopped the misidentif­ication of wolves.

There are at least 196 Mexican gray wolves in the wild in New Mexico and Arizona, according to the most recent survey released in March 2022. It marked the sixth straight year the wolf population has increased.

Officials with the Fish and Wildlife Service have said population growth has been tempered by higher than average pup mortality in addition to a persistent drought.

Under the Endangered Species Act, federal wildlife officials can make a determinat­ion to protect a species that is neither endangered nor threatened when it closely resembles an endangered or threatened species.

A key considerat­ion would be the degree of difficulty wildlife agents and other enforcemen­t personnel would have in distinguis­hing the species. The petition points to one case in 2013 in which a wildlife specialist shot and killed a wolf, thinking it was a coyote.

 ?? MATT DAHLSEID NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO ?? A coyote looks for prey in 2020 in the valley near Cerro La Jara in Valles Caldera. A coalition of environmen­tal groups wants coyotes to be listed as endangered, arguing Mexican wolves have been killed by people who have said they believed they were killing a coyote.
MATT DAHLSEID NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO A coyote looks for prey in 2020 in the valley near Cerro La Jara in Valles Caldera. A coalition of environmen­tal groups wants coyotes to be listed as endangered, arguing Mexican wolves have been killed by people who have said they believed they were killing a coyote.

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