The study this story is based on is available in ScholarsArchive@OSU: http://hdl.handle.net/1957/25603
CORVALLIS, Ore. - On the 15th anniversary of the return of wolves, a quiet but profound rebirth of life and ecosystem health is emerging at Yellowstone National Park.
For the first time in 70 years, the howl in the night is being heard and elk are afraid of wolf predation. As a result, their over-browsing of young aspen and willow trees has diminished. Trees and shrubs are recovering along streams. The habitat is improving for beaver and fish. Bears have more food. Hundreds of species of birds, mammals, fish and reptiles are once again finding their niche in a vibrant ecosystem.
The world's first national park, a global treasure, is being reborn.
"Yellowstone increasingly looks like a different place," said William Ripple, a professor in the Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society at Oregon State University, and lead author of a new study.
"These are still the early stages of recovery, and some of this may still take decades," Ripple said. "But trees and shrubs are starting to come back and beaver numbers are increasing. It's very encouraging."
The findings of this report were just published in Biological Conservation, a professional journal. They outline an ecosystem renaissance that has taken place since wolves were restored to Yellowstone after being extirpated in the 1920s.
Along four streams studied in the Lamar River basin, 100 percent of the tallest young aspen sprouts were being browsed in 1998, compared to less than 20 percent last year. Heavy browsing by elk on this favorite food had caused new aspen tree recruitment to essentially grind to a halt in the mid-to-late 1900s, when wolves were absent, but new trees are now growing again in places.
Among the observations in this report:
Evidence of improved ecosystem health following the return of wolves is "becoming increasingly persuasive," the scientists said in their report, though they also note that an increasing population of bison is continuing to impact young woody plants in the Lamar Valley.
"The wolves have made a major difference in Yellowstone," said Robert Beschta, a professor emeritus of forestry at OSU and co-author on the study.
"Whether similar recovery of plant communities can be expected in other areas, especially on public lands outside national parks, is less clear," Beschta said. "It may be necessary for wolves not only to be present but to have an ecologically effective density, and mechanisms to deal with human and wolf conflicts also need to be improved."
But at least in America's first national park, right now, the wolf is back and on the prowl. Their howls fill cold winter nights, and the power of predation has been restored. The fear is back.
And the park is returning to life.
Note: YouTube video in Yellowstone: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AGnIYrsF4bk&feature=youtu.be
William Ripple, 541-737-3056
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