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NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM STUDY SUGGESTS WOLVES MIGRATING EAST
Albany, New York -- 10/17/11
Museum curators Dr. Roland Kays and Dr. Robert Feranec
used a new isotope test for the first time to determine whether eight wolves
found in the Northeast over the last 27 years had been living in the wild or
had escaped from captivity. This is an important question for species, such
as wolves, that are not known to breed in New York state, but are
occasionally discovered here. Results revealed that three of the eight
wolves tested were probably natural immigrants because they had a history of
eating wild foods. One of these wild wolves was found in Saratoga County in
2001 and the other two came from Vermont in 1998 and 2006. The isotope
signatures of five others suggested they had been eating food in captivity,
and were therefore probably escaped pets or zoo animals. Kays and Feranec
documented their work in a new article published in the Northeastern
Naturalist, a peer-reviewed and edited online journal with a regional focus
on northeastern North America. The abstract is available at
http://www.eaglehill.us/NENAonline/articles/NENA-18-3/10-Kays.shtml.
Wolves have been extinct in the Northeastern U.S. since the late 1800s
but survive to the north in Ontario and Quebec, and have recently been
expanding in the Great Lakes. Although this research shows that there have
been at least three naturally immigrating wolves in the Northeast, there is
no evidence at this point to suggest that there is an established breeding
population. Rather, it is likely that these few wolves migrated to the
Northeast from the Great Lakes area or from Canada, looking for potential
mates.
Citing other studies, Kays and Feranec note that the recent
recovery of wolves throughout much of the Great Lakes region and increased
protection of wolves in Ontario make it likely that even more wolves will
migrate into the Northeastern U.S. in the near future. “There is substantial
suitable habitat in Northern New York and New England that could support a
viable population of wolves” says Kays.
If wolves were to become
established, this new top predator would probably reduce coyote populations
in the Northeast and change the behavior and densities of other prey, such
as deer.
Feranec says that the new isotope test that they used “is
based on the principle that you are what you eat” and involves measuring the
carbon isotopes of hair and bone fragments of the wolves. Animals that eat
corn-based pet food or grain-fed livestock accumulate a different carbon
isotope in their bodies than those who find their own food in the wild. The
isotopes in the hair represent the animals’ diet since its last molt, while
those in the bone represent a lifetime average of the animals’ diet.
Kays and Feranec also used this new isotope test to show that a cougar
found in Connecticut this past June had spent its life eating typical wild
prey, and was not a captive animal that had escaped or been released. The
test was requested by the Wildlife Division of the Connecticut Department of
Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP), and confirmed genetic and other
evidence showing that this was a wild cougar from South Dakota that migrated
through the Great Lakes and New York State, before being hit by a car in
Connecticut.
The New York State Museum is a program of the New York
State Education Department’s Office of Cultural Education. Located on
Madison Avenue in Albany, it is open Monday through Saturday from 9:30 a.m.
to 5 p.m. It is closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day.
Further information about programs and events can be obtained by calling
(518) 474-5877 or visiting the museum website at www.nysm.nysed.gov.
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