| 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%.