Current:Home > NewsWarm weather forces park officials to suspend Isle Royale wolf count for first time in decades -WealthTrack
Warm weather forces park officials to suspend Isle Royale wolf count for first time in decades
View
Date:2025-04-16 11:52:26
A stretch of unusually warm weather has forced federal officials to suspend researchers’ annual wolf-moose count in Isle Royale National Park for the first time in more than six decades.
Isle Royale is a 134,000-acre (54,200-hectare) island situated in far western Lake Superior between Grand Marais, Minnesota, and Thunder Bay, Canada. The park is a wildlife biologist’s dream - it offers a rare opportunity to observe wolves and moose acting naturally without human influence. Researchers have conducted an annual survey of the park’s wolf and moose population since 1958. It’s been going on every year except for 2021, when the COVID-19 pandemic forced scientists to cancel it.
Scientists from Michigan Tech University returned to the island this past Jan. 19, planning to survey the wolf and moose populations from the air through March, said Sarah Hoy, a Michigan Tech research assistant professor who leads the project alongside John Vucetich, a Michigan Tech forestry professor, and Rolf Peterson, a retired Michigan Tech ecology professor.
Hoy said that the National Park Services suspended the survey on Tuesday and ordered everyone off the island. She said warm temperatures have left the ice around the island unsafe for the scientists’ ski-planes to land.
“The ice on the harbor was starting to deteriorate, I guess,” Hoy said. “We lost some ice depth and a few holes and cracks were starting to appear. ... Everybody had to leave. So the island’s now only occupied by wolves and moose and a bunch of critters. We’re incredibly disappointed that we’re not able to continue our work.”
Temperatures in the region have hovered above freezing since Jan. 24, about 20 degrees above average, according to the National Weather Service. The mercury hit 47 degrees Fahrenheit (8 degrees Celsius) in the area on Wednesday.
Hoy said helicopters aren’t an option because they’re expensive to rent and so loud they’ll disturb the wildlife, she said. The team may return to the park if temperatures drop and the ice firms up enough to support ski-planes again, she said. It’s too far to fly from the mainland to the island, complete survey circles and fly back, she said.
The team may return to the park in spring by boat, but trying to conduct the survey then will be far more difficult, Hoy said. The snow and bare branches makes tracking easy in the winter, but once the trees bloom, spotting the wolves and moose will be much more difficult, she said.
The scientist’s 2022-23 survey put the number of wolves on the island at 31, up from 28 wolves the prior year, and the number of moose at 967, down 28% from 1,346. The team attributed the decline to lower survival rates for calves, starvation and wolf predation. The scientists estimated a wolf killed 0.52 moose every month last year.
veryGood! (26)
Related
- Sam Taylor
- UK police say they’re ‘overjoyed’ that British teen missing for 6 years has been found in France
- Tori Spelling Reveals 16-Year-Old Liam Suffered Fall Down the Stairs Before Surgery
- Cowboys star Micah Parsons goes off on NFL officiating again: ‘They don’t care’
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- What is wrong with Draymond Green? Warriors big man needs to harness control on court
- This week on Sunday Morning (December 17)
- Serbia’s Vucic seeks to reassert populist dominance in elections this weekend
- Sam Taylor
- Billy Miller's Young and the Restless Costar Peter Bergman Reflects on His Heartbreaking Death
Ranking
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Army helicopter flying through Alaska mountain pass hit another in fatal April crash, report says
- New York Giants star partners with tech platform to promote small-business software
- Early morning blast injures 1 and badly damages a Pennsylvania home
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- NFL finally gets something right with officiating: first all-Black on field and replay crew
- Argentine President Javier Milei raffles off his last salary as lawmaker
- Court revives lawsuit over Connecticut rule allowing trans girls to compete in school sports
Recommendation
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
The Best Gifts for Fourth Wing Fans That Are Obsessed with the Book as Much as We Are
Why Emily Blunt Was Asked to Wear Something More Stylish for Her Devil Wears Prada Audition
Donald Trump says LIV Golf is headed back to his Doral course in April
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Chargers still believe in Staley after historic 63-21 loss to rival Raiders
Her 6-year-old son shot his teacher, now a Virginia woman faces sentencing for child neglect
Mexico’s president inaugurates first part of $20 billion tourist train project on Yucatan peninsula