Keith Lloyd B. Population dynamics of wolves. 1983 Pp. 66-77 In L.N. Carbyn (ed.) 1983. Wolves in Canada and Alaska: their status, biology and management. Can. Wildl. Serv. Rep. Ser. 45., 145 pp.

This study is used by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to justify its claims that wolf populations can still recover if human-caused mortality claims up to 30% of the wolf population. A careful reading indicates that when human-caused mortality has reached 20% or higher, wolf populations have stopped growing. The only increasing wolf population studied had a human-caused mortality rate of just 10%.



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