Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) Death by Stick Impalement

Similar documents
Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) Dyad Monthly Association Rates by Demographic Group

A Helping Hand. We all need a helping hand once in a while

ODFW LIVESTOCK DEPREDATION INVESTIGATION REPORTS June - August 2018

Wolf Dens 101: Location, Location, Location PA G E 4 Native Americans and the Wolf A Different Story PA G E Watching and Learning PA G E 1 1

ASSESSING THE EFFECTS OF A HARVESTING BAN ON THE DYNAMICS OF WOLVES IN ALGONQUIN PARK, ONTARIO AN UPDATE

ODFW LIVESTOCK DEPREDATION INVESTIGATION REPORTS January - March 2019

ODFW LIVESTOCK DEPREDATION INVESTIGATION REPORTS June - September 2018

Diet of Arctic Wolves on Banks and Northwest Victoria Islands,

Limits to Plasticity in Gray Wolf, Canis lupus, Pack Structure: Conservation Implications for Recovering Populations

Scavenging. Predation or Scavenging? Bears, wolves, cougars and coyotes can be scavengers as well as predators. Evidence of Scavenging

The Canadian Field-Naturalist

Shoot, shovel and shut up: cryptic poaching slows restoration of a large

HUMAN-COYOTE INCIDENT REPORT CHICAGO, IL. April 2014

Lab 8 Order Carnivora: Families Canidae, Felidae, and Ursidae Need to know Terms: carnassials, digitigrade, reproductive suppression, Jacobson s organ

Differential wolf-pack-size persistence and the role of risk when hunting dangerous prey

ODFW LIVESTOCK DEPREDATION INVESTIGATION REPORTS June - October 2018

Coyote (Canis latrans)

Oregon Wolf Conservation and Management 2014 Annual Report

8 Fall 2014

The usefulness of GPS telemetry to study wolf circadian and social activity

PROGRESS REPORT OF WOLF POPULATION MONITORING IN WISCONSIN FOR THE PERIOD April-June 2000

Oregon Wolf Conservation and Management 2012 Annual Report

Chapter 2: Long-Term Research on Wolves in the Superior National Forest

Problems with studying wolf predation on small prey in summer via global positioning system collars

Mexican Gray Wolf Reintroduction

Pack Size of Wolves, Canis lupus, on Caribou, Rangifer tarandus, Winter Ranges in Westcentral Alberta

Island Fox Update 2011

Trends in Fisher Predation in California A focus on the SNAMP fisher project

Loss of wildlands could increase wolf-human conflicts, PA G E 4 A conversation about red wolf recovery, PA G E 8

Any Animal. Section G. General Conditions (many different animals) Sicknesses seen on the outside of the animal. Injuries.

Behavioral interactions between coyotes, Canis latrans, and wolves, Canis lupus, at ungulate carcasses in southwestern Montana

A California Education Project of Felidae Conservation Fund by Jeanne Wetzel Chinn 12/3/2012

ODFW LIVESTOCK DEPREDATION INVESTIGATION REPORTS June - November 2018

ODFW LIVESTOCK DEPREDATION INVESTIGATION REPORTS June - November November 18, 2018 Jackson County (Boundary Butte area)

Lack of Impact of Den Interference on Neonatal Red Wolves

PEREGRINE FALCON HABITAT MANAGEMENT GUIDELINES ONTARIO MINISTRY OF NATURAL RESOURCES

ODFW LIVESTOCK DEPREDATION INVESTIGATION REPORTS June - December December 23, 2018 Jackson County (Boundary Butte area)

Agriculture Canada C212 P (1982 print) c.2 PUBLICATION 1263

Who Am I? What are some things you can do to help protect my home? Track: Ohio Department of Natural Resources Photo: Cottonwood Canyons Foundation

THE WOLF WATCHERS. Endangered gray wolves return to the American West

Mexican Wolves and Infectious Diseases

NORTHWEST TERRITORIES

Assessment and Opinion of Health and Welfare of Animals at Spring River Park and Zoo Christine Capaldo, DVM March 9, 2017

MAINTENANCE OF MOOSE COLLARS TO SUPPORT THE NORTHEAST BC MOOSE RESEARCH PROJECT

Impacts of breeder loss on social structure, reproduction and population growth in a social canid

VANCOUVER ISLAND MARMOT

Lynx Update May 25, 2009 INTRODUCTION

Coyote. Canis latrans. Other common names. Introduction. Physical Description and Anatomy. Eastern Coyote

Grey Fox. Urocyon cinereoargenteus

Wolf (Wildlife Of North America Series) By Michael Dahl READ ONLINE

MAINTENANCE OF MOOSE COLLARS TO SUPPORT UNBC RESEARCH PROJECT

Summary of the Superior National Forest s 2017 Canada lynx (Lynx canadensis) DNA database October 12, 2017

Food Habits of Wolves in Relation to Livestock Depredations in Northwestern Minnesota

How Hot is Too Hot? Live-Trapped Gray Wolf Rectal Temperatures and 1-year Survival

Brent Patterson & Lucy Brown Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources Wildlife Research & Development Section

Alberta Conservation Association 2009/10 Project Summary Report

Global Wildlife Resources, Inc. Wildlife Veterinary Resources, Inc. Glacier ational Park Yosemite ational Park Isle Royale ational Park

NORTHWEST TERRITORIES

Our Neighbors the Coyotes. Presented by: First Landing State Park

Care For Us Arc$c Wolf (Canis lupus arctos)

Northwoods Wildlife Rescue, Inc. Julie Dickie 28 Feb HC COLA Meeting

What is the taxonomic identity of Minnesota wolves?

Washington State University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee

SPECIAL ISSUE: PREDATION

Kori Bustard Husbandry. Sara Hallager, Biologist, Smithsonian National Zoological Park

Shannon Martinson, BSc, DVM, MVSc, DACVP Department of Pathology and Microbiology Atlantic Veterinary College, University of Prince Edward Island

DEMOGRAPHIC AND HEALTH SURVEYS ACCIDENT AND INJURY MODULE MODEL HOUSEHOLD QUESTIONNAIRE IDENTIFICATION (1)

of Nebraska - Lincoln

Beaver. Mammal Rodent

Wolves & Coyotes. Literacy Centers For 2 nd & 3 rd Grades. FREE from The Curriculum Corner

NECROPSY FORM STRAND LOCATION: FLOATING IN VAQUITA REFUGE BY MX TIME: 10 AM

DEMOGRAPHIC EFFECTS OF CANINE PARVOVIRUS ON A FREE-RANGING WOLF POPULATION OVER 30 YEARS

Figure 4.4. Opposite page: The red fox (Vulpes vulpes) can climb trees. (Foto: F. Labhardt)

Introduction to Our Class Case Study Isle Royale

Threatened & Endangered Species Tour Post Visit Activity Packet

YS 24-1 Motherhood of the Wolf

Food Item Use by Coyote Pups at Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge, Illinois

Yellowstone Wolf Project Annual Report

Mexican Wolf Blue Range Reintroduction Project Interagency Field Team Annual Report Reporting Period: January 1 December 31, 2005

BOREAL CARIBOU HABITAT STUDY IN NORTHEASTERN BRITISH COLUMBIA

Frog Dissection Information Manuel

Panther Habitat. Welcome to the. Who Are Florida Panthers? Panther Classification

Wild Fur Identification. an identification aid for Lynx species fur

Y Use of adaptive management to mitigate risk of predation for woodland caribou in north-central British Columbia

A few more stories about the animals whose lives you helped save

2. What is the difference between a basic necropsy and a forensic necropsy?

Introduction. Background. Reggie Horel Field Research 1st and 2nd hour June 3rd, Red Fox Telemetry

Rocky Mountain Wolf Recovery 2010 Interagency Annual Report

Field necropsy techniques in mammal and poultry

Effectiveness of GPS-based Telemetry to Determine Temporal Changes in Habitat Use and Home-range Sizes of Red Wolves

How do dogs make trouble for wildlife in the Andes?

Roslyn Watts Southern Biological

CAT DISSECTION A LABORATORY GUIDE

Third Annual Conference on Animals and the Law

LEAST TERN AND PIPING PLOVER NEST MONITORING FINAL REPORT 2012

Long Foraging Movement of a Denning Tundra Wolf

Y E L L O W S T O N E

PROGRESS REPORT OF WOLF POPULATION MONITORING IN WISCONSIN FOR THE PERIOD October 1999-March 2000

Porcupine. Erethizon dorsatum. North American porcupine, Canadian porcupine, common porcupine.

Red-Tailed Hawk Buteo jamaicensis

Transcription:

University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln USGS Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center Wildlife Damage Management, Internet Center for 2017 Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) Death by Stick Impalement Shannon M. Barber-Meyer USGS Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center, Jamestown, ND, sbarber-meyer@usgs.gov Lori J. Schmidt International Wolf Center, Ely, MN L. David Mech USGS Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center, david_mech@usgs.gov Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/usgsnpwrc Barber-Meyer, Shannon M.; Schmidt, Lori J.; and Mech, L. David, "Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) Death by Stick Impalement" (2017). USGS Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center. 309. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/usgsnpwrc/309 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Wildlife Damage Management, Internet Center for at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in USGS Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln.

Notes of the S.M. Northeastern Barber-Meyer, L. Naturalist, Schmidt, and L.D. Issue Mech 24/2, 2017 Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) Death by Stick Impalement Shannon M. Barber-Meyer 1,2,*, Lori J. Schmidt 3, and L. David Mech 1,4 Abstract - Although Canis lupus L. (Gray Wolf) individuals are sometimes impaled by sticks, we could find no documentation of natural impalement by sticks as a cause of death for wild Wolves. Here we report on a wild Gray Wolf from northeastern Minnesota that died due to stick puncture of its thorax and abdomen. Canis lupus L. (Gray Wolf or Wolf) impalement or puncture is often associated with Erethizon dorsatum (L.) (North American Porcupine) quills (Weiler et al. 1995, Wobeser 1992, Wydeven et al. 2003). Whereas humans have used sharpened sticks to kill Wolves (e.g., in pitfall traps, see Cluff and Murray [1995] for review), natural impalement by sticks has rarely been reported for wild Wolves (Wobeser 1992) and to our knowledge has not been found as a cause of death. Here we report on a wild Gray Wolf mortality caused by stick impalement that punctured the thorax and abdomen, resulting in massive hemorrhaging. Male Wolf 7249 was captured with a rubber-padded-jaw, foot-hold trap on 1 September 2015 as part of long-term research in the Superior National Forest of northeastern Minnesota (48 N, 92 W; Mech 2009). He was fitted with a global positioning system (GPS), mortality-sensing radio collar equipped with an accelerometer that measured activity. The collar was programmed to email a mortality report after 12 hours of insufficient activity. The collar was scheduled to acquire a GPS location every 4 hr. The Wolf was estimated by tooth wear at capture to be 2 years old (Gipson et al. 2000). He weighed 27.7 kg (within the range of 2-yr-old males in northeastern Minnesota but below the mean [Mech 2006]) and appeared in generally good, but thin condition. Following the release of Wolf 7429, the first author verified his VHF beacon approximately weekly via aerial radio-telemetry, and GPS locations were reported every few days. We never confirmed whether he was with another Wolf, but we suspect he was alone given he traveled widely (was not territorial), making extensive use of roads (S.M. Barber-Meyer and L.D. Mech, unpubl. data). On 13 November 2016 at 08:12, we received a mortality report for 7249. Trained technicians conducted an in-field necropsy on 15 November at 14:00. The Wolf was found prone less than 10 m from a nearby walking path (Fig. 1). No disturbance to leaves, no sign of struggle, and no evidence of other mammal activity were found in the immediate area. No external signs of Wolf aggression were found (e.g., no bite wounds) and no external trauma except an oval-shaped entry wound (~3¼ cm x 1 cm) apparently made by a stick penetrating the left side of the ribcage (Fig. 2). The stick was embedded in the Wolf and did not exit the hide elsewhere. The Wolf s coat was in good condition, and there was no evidence of mange. There were no signs of injury due to traps or other human influences (e.g., no bullet wounds). The Wolf s eyes appeared normal and clear. The stick was fairly flat (maximum height ~1 cm) and dagger-shaped (26¼ cm long, 2½ cm wide at external end, 1¼ cm wide at internal end, 3¼ cm greatest width at 6½ cm 1 US Geological Survey, Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center, 8711 37th Street, SE, Jamestown, ND 58401-7317. 2 Current address - US Geological Survey, 1393 Hwy 169, Ely, MN 55731. 3 International Wolf Center, 1396 Hwy 169, Ely, MN 55731. 4 Current address - US Geological Survey, The Raptor Center, University of Minnesota, 1920 Fitch Ave., St. Paul, MN 55108. * Corresponding author - sbarber-meyer@usgs.gov. Manuscript Editor: Daniel M. Keppie N11

2017 Northeastern Naturalist Notes from external end). The stick penetrated inter-costally and did not appear to break any ribs. It punctured the left lung, diaphragm, and stomach, as if having entered from the left side and driven posteriorly. There was significant hemorrhaging in the thoracic and abdominal cavities. Kidney and back fat were detected, and a sample from the left femur indicated the Figure 1. Wolf 7249 s position on the forest floor, found on 15 November 2016. Photograph Blake Bornholdt, Vermilion Community College. Figure 2. Penetration of the stick through the rib cage. The position of the stick has shifted from its original position in the body cavity because we opened the thorax and abdomen for examination. Ventral view of the Wolf with the penetrating end of the stick to the left. Photograph Blake Bornholdt, Vermilion Community College. N12

marrow fat was not exhausted. Thorough examination of organs was hindered due to significant internal bleeding. There were no apparent broken bones, and no other abnormalities. Comparing tooth wear with that in Gipson et al. (2000), the first author later determined the age of the Wolf skull to be 5-yr old. Thus, Wolf 7249 was probably older than the 2-yr estimate at his capture in late summer 2015. We suspect this Wolf became impaled while chasing Odocoileus virginianus (Zimmerman) (White-tailed deer), the primary prey in this part of our study area (Mech 2009). The last movement recorded by the collar s accelerometer was at 20:05 on 12 November 2016. The Wolf was located ~275 m southwest of his mortality site at 17:01 on 12 November on a winding 1-track dirt road where only slow travel by vehicle is possible. Vehicle traffic on the dirt road was blocked by boulders about 100 m southwest before the mortality site. His movements prior to the location cluster at the mortality site did not appear different from those of the previous 90 days, which included long movements along roads punctuated with periods of shorter movements in a more concentrated area. Given his movements and the extent of injury from the stick, the Wolf probably did not live long after impalement. It is also a possibility that he was impaled while potentially fleeing from an approaching vehicle on the 1-track dirt road where he was located ~3 hours before death. In this scenario, he would have had to travel a minimum of about 100 m after impalement due to the boulders blocking vehicle traffic on that section of road. We could find no published record of Wolves killed by stick impalement. A Puma concolor (L.) (Cougar) skull was discovered with a stick penetrating its brain cavity, and it was suspected that the stick penetrated during a violent action such as attacking prey (Gashwiler and Robinette 1957:126), similar to how we suspect Wolf 7249 was penetrated by the stick. Wobeser (1992) necropsied 241 Gray Wolves and noted that two (<1%) had a stick embedded in them (one encapsulated by fibrous tissue, showing no active inflammation, in the frenulum of the tongue through to the pharynx, and the other in fibrous tissue ventral to the sternum). He stated, Both these injuries likely resulted from running onto sticks but neither appeared to have caused serious debilitation (Wobeser 1992:272). Thus, it appears that accidental death of Gray Wolves by stick impalement is rare, and ours may be the only reported case. Stick impalement is one of a number of potential natural habitat hazards that predators face when foraging (e.g., falling off a cliff, avalanche, drowning, etc.; Mech et al. 1998, Murphy and Ruth 2010). Acknowledgments. This study was part of a long-term study by the US Geological Survey (USGS). We thank the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources for supplying the GPS collar, USGS volunteer technicians for live-trapping and processing the Wolf, and Vermilion Community College students Kevin Brown, Blake Bornholdt, and Nicholas Peterson for necropsying it. We are thankful for reviews by Aaron Morris and an anonymous referee. Literature Cited Cluff, H.D., and D.L. Murray. 1995. Review of Wolf-control methods in North America. Pp. 491 607, In L.N. Carbyn, S.H. Fritts, and D.R. Seip, (Eds.). Ecology and Conservation of Wolves in a Changing World. Vol. 35. Occasional Publication Series / Canadian Circumpolar Institute. University of Alberta Press, Edmonton, AB, Canada. Gashwiler, J.S., and W.L. Robinette. 1957. Accidental fatalities of the Utah Cougar. Journal of Mammalogy 38:123 126. Gipson, P.S., W.B. Ballard, R.M. Nowak, and L.D. Mech. 2000. Accuracy and precision of estimating age of Gray Wolves by tooth wear. Journal of Wildlife Management 64:752 758. Mech, L.D. 2006. Age-related body mass and reproductive measurements of Gray Wolves in Minnesota. Journal of Mammalogy 87:80 84. N13

Mech, L.D. 2009. Long-term research on Wolves in the Superior National Forest. Pp.15 34, In A.P. Wydeven, T.R. VanDeelen, and E.J. Heske (Eds.). Recovery of Gray Wolf in the Great Lakes Region of the United States: An Endangered Species Success Story. Springer, New York, NY. Mech, L.D., L.G. Adams, T.J. Meier, J.W. Burch, and B.W. Dale. 1998. The Wolves of Denali. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, MN. Murphy, K., and T.K. Ruth. 2010. Diet and prey selection of a perfect predator. Pp. 118 137, In M.G. Hornocker and S. Negri (Eds.). Cougar: Ecology and Conservation. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL. Weiler, G.J., G.W. Garner, and D.G. Ritter. 1995. Occurrence of rabies in a Wolf population in northeastern Alaska. Journal of Wildlife Diseases 31:79 82. Wobeser, G. 1992. Traumatic, degenerative, and developmental lesions in Wolves and Coyotes from Saskatchewan. Journal of Wildlife Diseases 28:268 275. Wydeven, A.P., S.R. Boles, R.N. Schultz, and T. Doolittle. 2003. Death of Gray Wolves, Canis lupus, in Porcupine, Erethizon dorsatum, dens in Wisconsin. Canadian Field-Naturalist 117:469 471. N14