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MI: Are wolves fish friends or foes?

By KARRUN FARMAHA

Capital News Service

LANSING — Should Upper Peninsula fish fear wolves? Or thank them?

A clue may be in Yellowstone National Park studies that show fish populations are rising there since the gray wolf population boomed. Meanwhile, other scientists are studying how wolves catch and eat fish in Minnesota and considering how they might behave in Northern Michigan. .

In 1995, 31 gray wolves were relocated from Canada to Yellowstone National Park after their absence for around seven decades, according to an Oregon State University study reported in the Forest Ecology and Management Journal.

Gray wolves prey primarily  on ungulates – hoofed mammals like elk and deer. The ungulates of Yellowstone National already feared top predators like grizzly bears, black bears, mountain lions and coyotes, according to Yellowstone National Park experts.

The addition of the gray wolves that successfully repopulated in Yellowstone added another top predator for the ungulates to fear, causing their grazing habits to change, said Brendan Nee, a fisheries researcher for the U.S. Geological Survey. Instead of grazing in the open and eating the vegetation that gave them cover, ungulates began to graze less of it.

“It’s called the ecology of fear,” Nee said. “You have a top predator that influences and affects the behavior of prey. When predators are not present, prey feel more comfortable and their options on where to graze are more open – like ungulates may graze their cover. But when predators are present, they are more restricted and won’t graze their cover.”

As fewer trees and cover are grazed, they become denser, according to the Oregon State University study. That provides more cover over the water, which affects multiple factors for the fish.

Extra cover causes streams to cool. It also provides more nutrients to streams – creating a better habitat for fish to thrive in. The cover also protects the stream banks from erosion – allowing more space for more fish.

More cover also give fish a place to hide from predators, according to Canadian research in the Environmental Review Journal. More shade from cover causes water oxygen levels to increase and nitrogen levels and algae levels to decrease – resulting in better habitat.

Deer and elk in Michigan’s northern Lower Peninsula and the Upper Peninsula may show the same behavior as the deer and elk in Yellowstone, Nee said. U.P. deer and elk already fear coyotes, black bears, cougars and bobcats.

Now with a recovered population of wolves for deer and elk to fear, that may allow vegetation to grow better and improve habitat for fish, Nee said.

Apex predators — those at the top of the food chain — like wolves could affect northern Michigan white-tailed deer and elk behavior and the entire ecosystem, said Dean Beyer, a wildlife research biologist at the Department of Natural Resources. Such impacts are called trophic cascades, a theory advanced by the famous naturalist Aldo Leopold, according to an article in the scientific journal Bioscience.

In 1910, the U.P.’s wolf population was eliminated. In the 1980s and 1990s it recovered.  And nothing has changed yet in U.P. fisheries, Beyer said.

“It’s possible, but I wouldn’t expect a giant change in fisheries, not as large as the impact in Yellowstone,” Beyer said. “Wolves were able to recover, and habitats recovered, but nothing that extreme should happen in northern Michigan.”

That’s because the northern Lower Peninsula has a lot of agriculture that needs protection, Beyer said. If necessary, farmers would be given conflict management techniques to protect their farms and livestock from wolves. Such techniques could include educating them about threats, guard dogs, traps and even lethal force, depending on whether wolves remain on the federal list of protected species.

There’s ongoing debate about wolf impacts on ecosystems, said Thomas Gable, a doctoral student at the University of Minnesota,  who studies wolf predator-prey dynamics.

“Even in Yellowstone, I don’t think everyone necessarily agrees that wolves have the profound impact that people have said they do,” said Gable, of Midland, Michigan.

“I do think it is unknown what role wolves are actually having there, and even [in] places like Minnesota and Michigan,” Gable said. “It is a really difficult question to get after – how a top predator is impacting their ecosystem.”

This doesn’t mean that wolves don’t affect fish.

In Voyageurs National Park in northern Minnesota, Gable’s research team found wolves that hunted and killed freshwater fish like northern pike and white suckers.

It’s not unusual for wolves to hunt salmon in coastal areas, as they are big, easy to catch and predictable, Gable said.

That said, Voyageurs is one of only a few documented areas were wolves have been found hunting freshwater fish, he said.

“Wolves are highly adaptable animals, and they are really good at figuring out ways to take advantage of foods sources,” he said.

Nee said that with a large population of wolves and abundance of fresh water, wolves might start hunting fish in the U.P. at wella.

Gable is unsure, however.

“It’s very possible they might, and it’s very possible they might not,” he said.

Even if wolves fish, they may not have a huge direct impact on fisheries. Gable said he hopes to find that out by continuing to study wolf behavior in northern Minnesota, and soon in Wisconsin and Michigan.

“We found that wolves are eating suckers here in northern Minnesota, but we don’t think that’s having any impact on the sucker population,” Gable said. “They are eating them for a short period of time, while the fish are spawning.”

Karrun Farmaha is a reporter for Great Lakes Echo

Source: http://news.jrn.msu.edu/2019/06/are-wolves-fish-friends-or-foes/