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Yellowstone Wolves: A Chronicle of the Animal, the People, and the Politics [Paperback]

Cat Urbigkit (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 15, 2008
Yellowstone Wolves provides a unique perspective on what is one of the most visible and contentious wildlife management experiments taking place in the American West today. It is a review of the discovery, persecution, and possible survival of the native wolves of the northern Rocky Mountains of the United States; it is a detailed chronicle of the debate over the legality and propriety of introducing wolves from Canada into Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho during the mid-1990s; and it is an account of the spread of the released Canadian wolves from Yellowstone and central Idaho into surrounding areas and the tensions created by these movements. Most of all, Yellowstone Wolves is a passionate and fact-filled illustration of the raging interplay that can develop among the many diverse interests that vest in experiments of this type. Insights gained from Yellowstone Wolves will be of value for dealing with innumerable other issues, environmental and beyond, where multiple perspectives converge, conflict, and demand and deserve sober, intelligent, and candid resolution.

Cat Urbigkit, an advocate for the conservation of what were presumed to be remaining populations of wolves native to the Yellowstone area, a newspaper reporter who covered the debate over wolf reintroduction to Yellowstone and central Idaho during and after the mid-1990s, and one of the litigants who sued the US Fish and Wildlife Service to prevent the introduction of Canadian wolves into the region, is uniquely qualified to provide an intensely personal perspective on, and detailed record about, the debate over the Canadian wolf release and the circumstances that subsequently developed.

The Foreword by Ronald M. Nowak provides authoritative context for understanding the broader significance of endangered species management and the record, and trends, of the United States in managing the nation s biological diversity and adhering to the mandates of the Endangered Species Act.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"The Foreword, by Ronald M. Nowak, beautifully sets the stage for the book itself. The Foreword is substantive and subtly presented, and it should be re-read once the book's main text is completed.
Yellowstone Wolves is a lively and carefully documented account of the use and abuse of science, multiple levels of politics, interpretations of the law, administration of justice, rural sociology, media, and unbridled propaganda as provided from all sides of a hideously complex subject. This book is a chronologically based, practical documentation, and the author's personal commitment to the issues is profound.
Although eminently readable by almost any interested person, the book should be required as case-study reading for students and professionals in the various fields of conservation biology. It also should give pause to all of us who write to decision-makers in support of viewpoints, as based upon passionate advice from disparate environmental or occupational organizations, before we personally have firm factual grasp on the involved motivations.
Particularly interesting is the book's unflinching insistence that agencies of the federal government represent the most important impediments to application of 'best available science' within specific issues of conservation biology. Although probably not a specific intention of its author, I suggest this book gives powerful testament in support of the conceptual strength and practical necessity of stricter enforcement of the Endangered Species Act of 1973." --Jason A. Lillegraven, Professor Emeritus, Departments of Geology/Geophysics and Zoology/Physiology, The University of Wyoming, 1/11/09

Cat Urbigkit . . . a newspaper photojournalist, rancher, and litigant against the Fisheries and Wildlife Service shares a unique inside-and-outside perspective on the decline and resurrection of the gray wolf in Yellowstone Wolves: A Chronicle of the Animal, the People, and the Politics. The protection of endangered species is most controversial when it comes to saving predatory animals, and nowhere has conflict been more intense than in and around Wyoming's Yellowstone National Park. . . . Urbigkit's undeniably thorough treatment of the subject, featuring impressive historical documentation, makes this book one that no serious conservationist should overlook. --Foreword Magazine - Reviews of Good Books Independently Published, Jan/Feb. 2009

Cat Urbigkit's explication of the reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone National Park . . . dramatizes the socio-political forces that define the changing landscape of the new West. --Laurie Latta, President of the Wyoming Council for the Humanities 2006

Cat [has] shown us the unimaginable interplay of biology, politics, factionalism, economics, and emotion that may revolve around the recognition, management, and political manipulation of an endangered species. . . . She has demonstrated the complexity and anguish of wolf conservation and provided a unique perspective on a fascinating story. --Ronald M. Nowak, Zoologist

Yellowstone Wolves provides a wonderful example of how wilderness management issues such as the reintroduction of a predator quickly become 'wicked' problems, involving multiple truths, conflicting science, bureaucratic and political pressures, special interest groups, concerned members of the public, and the legal system. On the wolf issue in Yellowstone, Urbigkit notes the government agencies have their own agenda, and change their policies and procedures to ensure this agenda is met. ...Urbigkit provides a valuable service by highlighting the political nature of decision making and the troubling self-selection of science to serve bureaucratic and political ends in wilderness, park, and wildlife management. -- John Shultis, IJW book editor, August 2009, International Journal of Wilderness.

…Highly recommended. All undergraduate, graduate, and public libraries with collections on ecology, mammalogy, and wildlife management.'-- H.N. Cunningham Jr., emeritus, Pennsylvania State Erie, Behrend College. CHOICE, May 2009, Vol. 46 No. 09

Anyone who wants the insight on problems with the Endangered Species Act, the politics in the US Fish and Wildlife Service and Park Service, and details about wolves in Yellowstone Park, both native and introduced, will find this an educational read that provides plenty of food for thought. -- Rebecca Colnar, Director of Media Relation, Montana Farm Bureau Spokesman, Spring 2009

'This book is an invaluable and unique addition to the story of wolves in the greater Yellowstone area.' -- Elaine Jones Hayes, Laramie County Library System, from Wyoming Library Roundup, Fall/Winter 2009, page 21

About the Author

Cat Urbigkit was born in southern Indiana and, while a young girl, moved with her family to Pinedale, Wyoming. A few years after graduating from high school, she married Jim Urbigkit. She eventually went into journalism, becoming a feature writer for a local newspaper and, more recently, a founding co-owner of a community newspaper, the Sublette Examiner. The Urbigkits presently own and operate a sheep ranch near Pinedale, but Cat remains active in journalism as a photographer, a writer for numerous regional newspapers, and an author and illustrator of children s books.

Cat and Jim became interested in the idea of wolf reintroduction to the Yellowstone area during the mid-1980s. As the debate evolved, the Urbigkits emerged as leading advocates against the introduction of Canadian wolves into a region that appeared to already harbor populations of the native Northern Rocky Mountain wolf. Despite their passionate and exhaustive efforts to protect the native wolf, they finally lost their legal battle to do so in 2000 and, subsequently, entered the ranching business. Soon thereafter, in 2003, some of the rapidly growing populations of Canadian wolves expanded their range far enough away from Yellowstone to find the Urbigkits and their sheep near Pinedale.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 300 pages
  • Publisher: McDonald and Woodward Publishing Company; 1st edition (October 15, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 093992370X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0939923700
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,169,221 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Cat Urbigkit has been a full-time writer since 1996. She is a correspondent for a variety of newspapers in the western region, freelances for several magazines, and is the author of a web-based news site for information about Rocky Mountain wolves, and a contributor to a nature blog.

Cat writes and photographs non-fiction books for children. She is also the author of an adult non-fiction book on the history of wolves in Wyoming.

In 2001, Cat expanded her activities to include photography, focusing her efforts on documenting western Wyoming's migratory sheep industry and the animals involved in this primitive method of agriculture. Her photographs capture sheep, guardian dogs and horses, as well as Nepalese and Mexican herders, Basque ranch owners, quiet camps and vast landscapes. Other topics Cat has included in developing her photography portfolio of more than 25,000 images include western cattle ranching, the natural gas industry, high desert cushion plants, domestic animals, Rocky Mountain wildlife and Indian relay racing. She traveled to western Mongolia in 2008 to photograph the men who use golden eagles to hunt furbearers.

Cat has won numerous awards for her journalism, her books, and her photography. She lives on a working sheep and cattle ranch in western Wyoming with her family and her livestock guardian animals, including sheep guard dogs and wild burros.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An intriguing look at how conservation battles with politics, February 6, 2009
This review is from: Yellowstone Wolves: A Chronicle of the Animal, the People, and the Politics (Paperback)
Wolves are a creature that has divided people, one person's precious creature is another's violent, carnivorous nuisance. "Yellowstone Wolves: A Chronicle of the Animal, the People, and the Politics" is a look at the Yellowstone Wolf in particular and its long running story of going into near extinction and back again. Once numerous hundreds of years ago, it was hunted to near extinction, and was kept alive only in captivity. Now they are being reintroduced with much success - but there are those who don't think this is an entirely good thing. "Yellowstone Wolves" is an intriguing look at how conservation battles with politics.
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7 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Intelligent and balanced, December 10, 2008
By 
Stephen J. Bodio (Magdalena New Mexico) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Yellowstone Wolves: A Chronicle of the Animal, the People, and the Politics (Paperback)
It would be nice if the one- star reviewer bothered to read the book.

Cat Urbigkit brings a unique perspective, as she is both a sheepherder and a naturalist- observer, one who can appreciate big carnivores but doesn't want them killing her sheep or her livelihood.

Her history is also unique. Before she was a shepherd she and her husband joined an unlikely coalition of stockmen and environmentalists who sued to protest the introduction of the Canadian wolf subspecies, arguing that there was a small and harmless population of the nearly extinct native subspecies already existing in the Yellowstone ecosystem. I admit that this was the most difficult argument for me to accept going in, but her careful documentation has made me a believer. Probably they nearly disappeared when the horrific poison 1080 was in use, and were gradually building their numbers. These wolves were smaller and probably would have been more fearful of humans, which emeritus large- mammal biologist Valerius Geist argues is probably a good thing-- more below.

She next documents the long drawn out legal battles, culminating in the "re" introduction of the big Canadian subspecies, and going on to document how they finally arrived in her sagebrush plains, in one case approaching her 12 year old son as he herded sheep.

There is a LOT more here, documented without editorial comment-- of the wedge the issue has driven between the government and stockmen (even worse down here in NM due to a program where the wolves are constantly handled, moved around and habituated); on the environmentalist side, the decision to sacrifice a unique subspecies without studying it to see if it was recoverable without intervention; on the utter uselessness of the compensation program, which demands an impossible standard of proof; even dark humor. When a hunter shoots a pre- intro wolf (?) he thinks is a coyote, he is held in legal limbo for more than a month. As the Jackson Hole Guide editorialized. "How is it that the Fish and Wildlife service-- our federal wildlife experts--can expect Kysar to have known he had shot a wolf when they have already spent six weeks in their laboratories trying to figure it out, and still don't know what it is they're dealing with?"

There are other issues in play than endangered species or embattled ranchers. As Cat reports, elk were eating the park, and there was no other politically acceptable way to reduce their numbers. As we are increasingly coming to know, big predators seem to control the whole ecosystem-- see William Stolzenburg's new book Where the Wild Things Were.

And there is one more issue, only hinted at in Cat's book: the increasing probability that wolves that become too habituated will also become dangerous. Dr. Valerius Geist, now retired, is the dean of North American big mammal studies, and author of too many books to cite, though I am particularly partial to the magisterial Deer of the World. He was one of the scientists called on to testify in the notorious Kenton Carnegie case in northern Ontario, where a young intern was killed and partially eaten by dump- habituated wolves (there was a ludicrous attempt to blame the killing on black bears, but anyone who has looked at the entire testimony of both on- the- spot observers and the scientists would be convinced, as was the jury, that wolves were responsible).

Geist is both a serious biologist and a serious backwoodsman, a rare combination in his youth and one that is getting rarer today. He used to believe that wolves were as harmless as their modern image suggests, until some scary encounters with habituated wolves in his own Vancouver backwoods, papers on habituated California coyotes' behavior before attacking children, and the Carnegie case made him study the history and literature of other countries' experiences with wolves. What he found suggested our "harmless" wolves are a historical phenomenon based on a unique phenomenon: our common use of guns. Wolves killed people in the Soviet Union until after WW II, kill people today in India, and are considered dangerous by Canada's northern "First Nations".

Wolves are magnificent, efficient, sometimes deadly predators, not "spiritual healers". To keep wolves near humans benign (to the humans at least), they should best be hunted. Could a similar phenomenon be behind the rise in cougar attacks in (over?) civilized places like Boulder and California?

In several papers and articles Geist seeks to mediate between our desire for a robust, healthy wilderness, the reasonable expectation of our ranchers to make a living, and safety. He proposes large wilderness areas surrounded by mixed land where big predators are allowed but hunted, in turn ringed by farms and suburbs where they cannot be tolerated. It seems that we already are well on the way to this in the US (perhaps more than in his Canada) with parks surrounded by National forests. It will still need both some tweaking and a lot more efforts to understand, coming from predator advocates and stockmen alike. Let's try to get this one right and maybe we can start to talk about "re- wilding". Cat Urbigkit's book is an excellent place to start-- for both sides.
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5.0 out of 5 stars a must read for environmentalists, January 4, 2012
This review is from: Yellowstone Wolves: A Chronicle of the Animal, the People, and the Politics (Paperback)
i thought the book very informative. all the facts are stated and noted. interesting to see both views. highly recommend it for anybody interested in wolf issues, either pro or con.
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