Common Name
Eastern Wolf
Scientific Name Canis lycaon
Other Names Eastern Canadian Wolf,
Algonquin Wolf
General Appearance: The Eastern Red Wolf is a member of the
dog family, like the other species of wolves found in North America. The
Eastern Wolf is conspecific (belonging to the same species) with the Red
Wolf (presently recognized as Canis rufus), a species that was
extirpated from the wild in the southeastern United States. Although
once part of the same continuum of wolves, land-clearing and direct
exploitation by people following European colonization resulted in a
large gap between the few remaining Red (Eastern) wolves in the
southeastern United States and the larger population in central Ontario
and southern Quebec. The Red Wolf is slowly being re-introduced into the
wild in areas like Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge in North
Carolina. Eastern Wolves (and therefore Red Wolves) are very small in
size compared to the Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) living in the
boreal forest north of Lake Superior in Ontario. Unlike the Gray Wolf,
the Eastern Wolf in Algonquin Park has never been recorded with an
all-black or all-white coat. Instead the Eastern Wolf typically has a
reddish-brown muzzle; reddish-brown behind the ears and on the lower
legs; with a black, white, and gray back. Most people lucky enough to
catch a quick glimpse of an Eastern Wolf in the wild for the first time
are surprised by the animal's small size (only about 60 to 68
centimetres at the shoulder). People from more southern areas dominated
by agriculture often believe that they have seen a Coyote (Canis
latrans) in Algonquin Park. Coyotes are generally absent from
Algonquin Park, since wolves will regularly kill any trespasser into
their territory and Coyotes have a difficult time finding food in
completely forested environments. However, wildlife biologists do know
that Coyotes have on occasion bred with wolves here in Algonquin Park.
Although this was likely more common when the land was cleared by
loggers in the late 1800s and early 1900s, some coyote genetic material
continues to find its way into some Eastern Wolf packs along the Park's
borders.
Weight: Adult female and male Eastern Wolves on average
weigh 25 and 30 kilograms, respectively.
Migration: Eastern Wolves are year-round residents of
Algonquin Park, however, wolves do travel long distances to find food.
For example, in Algonquin, a pack of wolves may occupy a territory that
can be up to 500 square kilometres in size, although the average is
closer to 150 square kilometres. Dr. John Theberge of the University of
Waterloo, Ontario, who studied wolves in Algonquin from 1987 to 1999,
found that wolves on the east side of Algonquin Park follow White-tailed
Deer to deer yards located outside the protection of the Park during the
winter months. Many White-tailed Deer on the Park's east side travel to
the Round Lake Deer Yard near Round Lake Centre, Ontario creating a
population of thousands of animals. Dr. Theberge discovered that wolves
would make trips into the deer yard to kill and consume deer and then
travel back to their home territories inside the protection of Algonquin
Park. This travel outside the protection of the Park resulted in a large
number of Dr. Theberge's wolves being killed by humans, either
accidentally or intentionally.
This documentation of the killing of wolves
resulted in the Ontario Minister of Natural Resources protecting wolves
when they entered the three townships in which the Round Lake Deer Yard
is located. This seasonal protection, granted in 1993, ensured the
protection of wolves when they leave the boundaries of the Park. This
protection was further extended in November of 2001 as a result of
recommendations from the Algonquin Wolf Advisory Group (AWAG).
Recommending a seasonal closure of harvesting of wolves in the 40
townships surrounding Algonquin Park, the Minister of Natural Resources
took it one step further and imposed a year-round ban for 30 months on
harvesting in the townships surrounding the Park. A permanent ban on the
harvesting of wolves (and the similar looking species, the Coyote) in 40
township surrounding Algonquin Park was put in place in May 2004. Recent
research has focused on assessing the impacts of this harvest ban on
wolves in Algonquin and indicates that this migratory behaviour is
continuing through 2007.
Food Sources: Wolves in Algonquin Park eat three primary
prey species which include White-tailed Deer, Moose, and Beaver. Wolves
prey primarily on White-tailed Deer, but both Moose and Beaver are very
important secondary food sources, and may be the primary food sources at
certain times of the year.
Sounds: When people think of wolf sound, most people think
of wolf howling. Biologists believe that wolves use howling for a
variety of functions. The single howl, or only one wolf howling, may be
used to keep in contact with other members of the pack while the pack is
spread out and not in visual contact. In this situation, in human terms,
one wolf may be saying to the other "I'm over here. Where are you?" A
pack howl containing more than one wolf is suspected to be used to
defend a pack's territory from other possible intruders. In this
situation, the pack is saying "This is our territory, keep out!". The
final reason some biologist believe wolves may howl is for social
cohesion, much like a family of humans all singing around the holiday
season.
Major Predators: Adult wolves have few predators,
including humans, bears, and other wolves. A recent study on pup
survival showed that two of 53 wolf pups implanted with small
radio-transmitters were killed by bears that entered the wolves
rendezvous sites in summer.
Breeding: Mating takes place in February between the two
leaders of the pack (the alpha male and alpha female). Wolf pups are
born approximately 63 days later in a den which has been excavated in
the ground. Generally from 4-7 pups are born per pack. The pups are
nursed by the mother for the first six to eight weeks. Once weaned, they
rely on other members of the pack to feed them. Initially, the adults
carry food in their stomachs to the pups. The pups pull on the corners
of an adult's mouth until the partially digested food is regurgitated.
As the pups mature throughout the summer and early fall, they are able
to eat solid food brought back by the adults.
During late July or August, when the pups have
become too big for the den site, they are moved to large open areas such
as a bog or Beaver meadow where the pups are left while the adult
members of the pack head off hunting. During this time the pups are not
yet big or strong enough to hunt with the rest of the pack. These
rendezvous sites as they are known act as a playpen for the pups while
the adults are away. The sites provide protection for pups, a source of
water, shelter, and numerous small animals and insects hidden in the
grasses that the pups pursue in efforts to hone their hunting skills.
Research Procedures: Dr. Doug Pimlott, a past wolf
researcher of the Department of Lands and Forests, conducted research in
Algonquin Park from 1958 to 1965. In those days, Dr. Pimlott spend a
great deal of time trying to locate wolves, especially in the spring,
summer and fall, when the lack of snow and thick leaf cover prevented
seeing these animals from the air. Since Pimlott's wolf research,
scientific and technological advancements have made our monitoring of
wolves much easier. Today, one of the most important pieces of equipment
that Dr. Brent Patterson, along with research colleagues Dr. Dennis
Murray, Ken Mills, and graduate student Karen Loveless use is very high
frequency (VHF) radio-collars and receivers.
Despite some limitations, radio-collars allow
researchers to keep tabs on wolf locations, survival, and hunting
behaviour, even in remote areas like Algonquin Park. Wolves are captured
for radio-collaring using foot-hold traps, live snaring, and nets fired
from helicopters. Once wolves are captured, which can be hundreds of
hours of field work per wolf, body measurements and blood samples are
taken. Then each captured animal is fitted with a radio-collar if it is
an adult or fitted with a radio implant if it is a young wolf pup. Over
200 wolves have been radio-tagged since 2002 and over 80 are now "on the
air" in Algonquin Park. These animals are located weekly from an
airplane using the radio telemetry receiver and antennas attached to the
plane's wings. By locating wolves on a weekly basis, territory size,
pack movement, survival, kill locations, den sites, and many other
aspects of wolf ecology can be monitored without having to handle the
wolf again.
One type of technological advancement that is
now being used in Algonquin that was not available just a few years ago
is global positioning system (GPS) collars which are now attached to
several animals in the Park. These collars allow researchers to collect
many more "fixes" (or locations where the wolf has been) and store them
in the electronics in the collar until they are remotely uploaded to a
plane circling high above the collared wolf. "Technology in wildlife
research is advancing at a very quick pace. Today we have
radio-telemetry equipment that is smaller and lighter than ever before.
This cutting edge technology is also capable of collecting things like
temperature, animal activity, and even sound, as opposed to just the
animal's location, all in a package not much bigger than a deck of
cards" says Dr. Patterson. "The GPS collars we deployed this year are a
real advance over previous technologies. Collars are presently recording
one location per hour and we can download this data remotely on demand.
This detailed and precise movement data is shedding much light on the
specifics of migratory behaviour by Algonquin wolves and enables us to
determine kill sites. These show up as clusters of locations (multiple
locations in one spot resulting from wolves feeding and resting at the
kill site). Since fall (2003), we have found the remains of more 250
White-tailed Deer, Moose or Beaver carcasses that the wolves were
feeding on using this technology."
Research Questions
How important are harvesting (hunting and
trapping), disease, and prey availability in limiting the population
growth of wolves in Algonquin Park?
To assess this question Dr. Patterson and
colleagues placed radio-collars (or radio ear-tags or implant
transmitters for some pups) on 208 different wolves, including 78 pups,
between August 2002 and February 2007. During winter they estimated wolf
densities separately in the eastern and western portions of the Park
based on differences in wolf behaviour as well as forest cover and
topography. For example, in winter 2003, five of six packs monitored in
eastern Algonquin made repeated forays to deer yards outside the Park.
In contrast, only one of 10 packs within our census area in western
Algonquin made excursions outside of their territory (and the Park)
during the same winter. Dr. Patterson and colleagues monitored 16 packs
in and around Algonquin Park during winter 2003, and approximately 25
during winters 2004-2007.
Our density estimates for both eastern (~2.9 wolves/100 square
kilometres) and western Algonquin (2.3-2.5 wolves/100 square kilometres)
have remained relatively stable since 2002, and are comparable to those
estimated by researchers Graham Forbes and John Theberge during winters
1988-92 but higher than estimated during by the Theberges' and their
graduate students during 1993-99. Similar to our findings, higher wolf
densities were observed in eastern Algonquin during the late 1980s and
early 90s, probably due to greater abundance of White-tailed Deer and
Beaver.
What are wolf survival rates in Algonquin
Park?
Our first collared wolf entered the study on
August 8, 2002. Fifty-one radio-collared yearling or adult wolves died
through to the end of February 2007, and the deaths of 40 of those
animals were attributable to natural causes (includes falling through
ice, strife among packs, malnutrition, mange, wounds inflicted by
White-tailed Deer or Moose). Of the 11 killed by people most were hit by
vehicles but 2 were killed in snares (both outside of Algonquin during
winter).
Dr. Patterson and colleagues consider survival and dispersal on the
basis of the "wolf-year", which runs from May 1 through April 30.
Depending on the fate of an adult female that went missing in March
2003, annual survival for yearling and adult wolves during the first
year of our study was 91-94%. During the next three winters estimated
annual survival for yearling and adult wolves was 79-84%, depending on
the assumptions around missing wolves. Despite the increase in natural
mortality after the first year of the ban, survival rates of yearling
and adult wolves during our study have been relatively high for
free-ranging wolves. To put this in context, during 1988-99 survival of
yearling and adult wolves in eastern Algonquin (there is insufficient
data from western Algonquin) averaged ~67% although small sample sizes
resulted in high annual variation in this estimate. Another important
consideration is that, at least for wolves in eastern Algonquin, there
has been a major shift in the primary causes of death for wolves.
Approximately 2/3 (~66%) of known mortalities of wolves during the
Theberges' study (1988-99) died of human related causes, whereas over
80% of documented wolf mortalities during our study have been due to
natural causes.
Do wolf packs change size? And why are pack
sizes relatively small in Algonquin?
Pack sizes change from one year to the next
through recruitment of new pups, mortality or dispersal of existing
members, and immigration of new wolves from other areas. Some
researchers have suggested that changes in pack size provide a good
indicator of changes in overall wolf density. Given the observed high
rates of adult survival, the researchers expected a noticeable increase
in pack sizes and, by extension, density following the implementation of
the harvest ban. However, during early winters 2002-06 median pack size
was 4.5, 4.5, 5, 4.75, and 5 in western Algonquin, and 4.5, 4.5, 5, and
5 (2003-06) in eastern Algonquin, respectively. Overall, pack sizes
observed during 2002-06 were similar to those observed during 1990-96,
but larger than observed in eastern Algonquin during the late 1990s.
Dr. Pimlott who conducted wolf research in Algonquin Park during the
1958-1963, found that the average wolf pack size at the end of the
winter numbered between five and seven wolves. When pups are born in the
month of May, pack size grows by an average of four.
Many researchers believe that wolf pack size in Algonquin Park is
smaller than other species of wolves because of the type of prey that is
consumed. Since White-tailed Deer are a very important food sources for
wolves in Algonquin Park, pack size is regulated by the amount of food
that is available when prey is killed. Therefore, a small animal like a
White-tailed Deer can only support a pack of five to seven Eastern
Wolves. Gray Wolves have a much larger pack size because they prey on
much larger animals such as Caribou and Musk Ox.
What role does pup survival, recruitment and
dispersal play in Algonquin's wolf population?
Whereas some
packs seemed to successfully recruit 2-4 pups into their ranks in
winters 2003-06, others declined in size from one winter to the next
despite relatively high adult survival and confirmed presence of pups
with the packs during the previous summer. For example, four of the
eight packs monitored in late summer and fall 2002 that were known to
have produced pups lacked pups by winter 2003. Gaining further
understanding of the seemingly low pup recruitment (whether due to poor
survival or high and early dispersal) was a high priority for our
research program, and was the focus of Ken Mills' Master of Science (MSc)
thesis. Analyses of 78 wolf pups captured from 2002-2006 indicate that
pup survival during the summer and fall is relatively high (~75%) for
litters born within the Park. Through the end of November a similar
proportion of pups dispersed from their packs as had died by that point
in the year. The combined effects of mortality and dispersal left an
average of 2.2 pups with each pack by the start of winter.
Although most wolves will eventually disperse
from their natal packs provided they live long enough, it is rare for
wolves younger than 8 months old to disperse (most disperse at 22-24
months). Yet Ken Mills documented pups dispersing as young as 3.5 months
old, the earliest record for any wolf population. The fates of these
dispersing pups and the mechanisms behind this early dispersal are
generally unknown and require more research. During the first year of
monitoring a minimum of 3, and maximum of 4, of the 40 pack-living
yearling and adult wolves dispersed from the packs they were in when Dr.
Patterson and colleagues began monitoring. During 2003-04, 12-14
yearling or older wolves dispersed from the packs they started the year
in (fates of two were uncertain). Based on these numbers, actual
dispersal rates during the first two years of our study were 10-12 and
24-28% respectively. During 2004-06, between 12-15 yearling and adult
wolves dispersed each year resulting in an estimated dispersal rate of
22-27%. Overall, recent dispersal rates of yearling and adult wolves are
relatively high, but similar rates have been observed in other areas.
Overall, our data suggests that the observed stability of pack sizes
occurs because annual pup recruitment is approximately equal to the
annual loss of yearling and adult wolves from the population through the
combination of mortality and dispersal (~45%).
So in summary, what have you concluded about
wolves in Algonquin Park?
Dr. Patterson
and colleagues documented an increase in annual survival rates of
yearling and adult wolves in Algonquin Park following a ban on all
hunting and trapping of wolves in the 40 townships surrounding the Park.
However, increased survival has not resulted in a detectable increase in
either pack size or overall population density. This appears to be due
to high rates of dispersal by both juvenile and adult pack members. That
relatively high survival is apparently being offset by high dispersal
with little overall change in wolf density suggests wolf densities may
presently be "self-regulated" at a level suitable for the present
abundance of prey (Moose, White-tailed Deer, Beaver) available to wolves
in the Park. The idea that the wolf "population" in Algonquin (as a
whole) was at risk of extinction because of human-caused mortality
outside the Park assumed that wolves from western Algonquin were leaving
the Park during winter, and being killed, at a similar rate as observed
in the eastern half of the Park during the 1990s. Preliminary findings
suggest that most packs in western Algonquin remain within their
territories, and the Park, year round. This suggests that wolves in the
west side of the Park may never have been subject to the same level of
human caused mortality as "east side" wolves. Findings of considerable
immigration into the Park based on genetic studies and the common
emigration of collared wolves from the Park suggest that it is
inappropriate to consider wolves in the Park (moreover a particular
section of the Park) as a discrete biological population. Although
intense harvesting in some years may have severely depressed wolf
numbers in eastern Algonquin it seems unlikely that complete extirpation
of wolves in this area was ever a possibility. Moreover, immigration
from western Algonquin, and surrounding areas, would facilitate
re-colonization of vacant territories within a few years.
Overall then, our preliminary conclusion is that although the harvest
ban does not seem necessary for wolf persistence in Algonquin,
the marked shift in dominant mortality sources for wolves (from
human-caused to natural), and apparent natural regulation of wolf
numbers presently occurring, indicates that the ban has played a
positive role in promoting a naturally functioning wolf-prey system
within the Park.
Taken From MNR Website
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