JIM CUMMING/MOMENT OPEN/GETTY IMAGES
BUILT TO HUNT: Sharp vision, a keen sense of smell, and powerful jaws help these predators survive.
Last September, a small airplane landed on a remote island in Lake Superior to make a very special delivery. Workers hauled a large crate off the aircraft. Inside was a lone male wolf. Just a few days earlier, he’d been captured in the woods of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, examined by a veterinarian, and fitted with a GPS tracking collar. Then he was loaded onto the plane and flown to this island, which would become his new home.
The wolf is one of several that scientists have released in Isle Royale National Park in the past year. Historically, a pack of about 25 wolves has lived on the island. But over the past decade, their numbers have steadily declined. At the same time, the island’s moose population has skyrocketed. Before researchers began bringing new wolves to the island, only two members of the pack remained. And it takes more than two wolves to keep the ever-growing number of moose in check.
Last September, a small airplane landed on a remote island in Lake Superior. It was making a very special delivery. Workers took a large crate off the plane. A lone male wolf was inside. Just a few days earlier, he’d been captured in the woods of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. A veterinarian had examined him, and the wolf had gotten a GPS tracking collar. Then he was loaded onto the plane and flown to this island. It would become his new home.
This wolf isn’t alone. Scientists have released several wolves in Isle Royale National Park in the past year. A pack of about 25 wolves used to live on the island. But over the past decade, their numbers kept dropping. At the same time, the island’s moose population shot up. Before researchers began bringing new wolves to the island, only two members of the pack remained. That wasn’t enough to keep the growing number of moose in check.