Long post alert
Given the fact that I have a tattoo of a wolf on my left arm and a tattoo of a cougar on my right arm, one might think that I would readily favor the reintroduction of these predatory animals to the habitats that were once theirs. On a philosophical level, I like the idea, but on a pragmatic level, I think the wolf should NOT be reintroduced to the Adirondacks. I think it is a profoundly misguided idea.
The first misconception that needs to be addressed is the idea that there is an adbundant population of deer ready to provide sustinence for the gray wolf within the Adirondack Park. This is simply not true. It is a fact that the deer population in New York State is the most sparse within the Blue Line as the terrain and harsh weather are not conducive to healthy deer populations. I should state that I am not a hunter so I shouldn't be accused of trying to protect my "yearly kill." While it is true that the deer you do see in the Adirondacks are very large, this is merely a testament to the fact that only the strongest survive in this climate.
See the below link for 2003 hunter deer kills in New York which highlights that the flat rural farmland of western New York supports the greatest deer populations in New York:
http://www.dec.state.ny.us/website/dfwmr/wildlife/deer/deerfore.htm
For the very same reasons that deer populations are small in the Adirondacks so is the population of small game. This is why the Eastern Coyote can be found in far greater numbers in other parts of New York than in the Adirondacks. The coyote has not been killed off in the Adirondacks ... it has just left due to scarcity of food. As far south as Westchester County, the coyote does very well not only on deer but on small game as well.
The wolf is a larger and more aggressive predator that requires larger game than the coyote. While a first generation reintroduction of relatively small numbers would probably do well enough in the Adirondacks, the 50-100 year forecast simply cannot be predicted. The nightmare scenario in my opinion would be a 10-20 year span where the wolf did very well and saw its numbers grow and have that followed up by a few harsh winters or some sort of deer disease that destroyed its primary source of game. There is not a secondary source of large game in the Adirondacks available to wolves in the absence of deer. Bears are too big ... which leaves people.
Before you jump all over me, let me point out that the nightmare scenario has come true in parts of India. A simple google search of "man-eating wolves" will give you many, many hits of children being dragged off in parts of India, where other game is not available. Wolves are predators and will do what they need to do to survive. Like all predators, they target the smallest, weakest prey of the species they are targeting.
The population dynamics of the Adirondack Park are also deceptive. When one looks at the overall figures of 200-300,000 living within the Blue Line, it seems like there wouldn't be a great likelihood of wolf-human contact. But consider the way the Adirondack Protection Agency has managed population growth. Once you get outside the village limits of places like Lake Placid, Saranac Lake, Schroon Lake, Tupper Lake, Indian Lake and Malone, there are literally NO housing developments. The APA doesn't allow housing development type population density instead following a policy of X number of houses allowed per square mile depending on the area. The net result of this is that the relatively small population of the Adirondacks is literally spread very evenly throughout Essex, Franklin, Clinton, Hamilton and St. Lawrence counties. Try hanging a map of the Adirondack Park and firing a round of birdshot at it. That's what population distribution in the Adirondacks looks like. This type of distribution, of course, only increases the chances of people-wolf encounters, many of which will turn out to be unfortunate whether you look at it in terms of residents killing wolves or the more unlikely (but possible) chance of wolves killing people.
I'd love to be able to throw my full support behind the idea of wolf reintroduction and I think it can work in the right areas. I just don't believe the Adirondacks are that area. It's a disaster waiting to happen.
**** The above post does not reflect the views of Major League Baseball, NBC News or any other organization or agency.