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A Comprehensive Assessment of Red Wolf Reintroduction Sites
Abstract
The red wolf (Canis rufus) is the world’s rarest wild canid, with fewer than 60 wolves
living in the wild, and likely even fewer than 40. After being declared extinct in
the wild in 1980, the wolf was reintroduced to Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge
in North Carolina in 1987 and successfully established itself, with the small initial
population growing to 150 within two decades. Recent increases in mortality have reduced
the wolf’s numbers to their current low levels, and the Fish and Wildlife Service
now faces the difficult decision of where else to reintroduce the red wolf within
its historic range.
This Masters Project is an attempt to analyze the current landscape of the Southeast
from both an ecological and sociological perspective to determine the best possible
places for red wolves to successfully establish a new population. I first conducted
a literature review to identify key variables that affect the suitability of an area
and found five such factors: available habitat, available prey, concentrations of
livestock, recreational hunters, and the age of local residents. The reintroduction
effort has to begin on federally owned and protected land, and so I next set out to
select a suite of potential sites for the reintroduction to take place, establishing
a list of 21 such locations.
The relationship between all of the variables I considered is complex, so to properly
weight them against each other I surveyed 14 experts in red wolf biology and management.
I received responses from 10 of the experts and used this information to construct
models in ArcGIS to determine the overall suitability of a site. After assembling
a Weighted Sum model based on available data and calculating descriptive statistics,
the sites all received a suitability score. The highest-scoring sites were Croatan
National Forest in North Carolina and Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge in Georgia.
Fish and Wildlife should focus future reintroduction efforts on these locations, which
strike the best available balance between suitable ecology and low chances of human-wolf
conflict.
Type
Master's projectPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/16521Citation
O'Neal, Shane (2018). A Comprehensive Assessment of Red Wolf Reintroduction Sites. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/16521.Collections
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