From the moment ODFW issued the “shoot to kill” order, the days were numbered for those two wolves in Northeast Oregon.
In this hunt, the humans had all the advantages. One of the wolves had been radio collared, allowing the pair to be tracked by airplane. Some time Saturday morning, officials with the USDA Wildlife services were in the right place, at the right time, and took the shots that brought down the two wolves.

The radio collared wolf, shortly after being released this May by wildlife officials. Courtesy ODFW.
As sad as the news may be, it’s worth noting that ODFW didn’t authorize the shootings until after the pair attacked two Baker County ranches a total of five times, killing 29 livestock. The ranchers worked throughout the spring and summer with state and federal wildlife officials, plus Defenders of Wildlife, on non-lethal methods to keep the wolves away.
Knowing that state officials are willing to kill so-called “problem wolves” may help Oregon’s Wolf Management Plan gain wider acceptance among ranchers and other rural residents of the state. It provides a good argument against giving ranchers more authority to shoot wolves on their property, or to hunt them down once the wolves have gone away. If ODFW will step up and take care of wolves involved in multiple attacks on livestock, then hopefully ranchers will feel better about tolerating the return of these predators to Oregon.
In its press release, ODFW says the two wolves were yearlings and never bred. They were on their own at a young age, and lacking the skills to hunt their wild prey, turned to killing livestock instead.
However, not all the wolf news from this weekend is grim. ODFW says this summer a pack of wolves, with two pups, was spotted in Wallowa County. It’s the second confirmed case of successful wolf reproduction in Oregon since the 1940′s. In 2008, ODFW agents made audio contact with another pack of two adults and at least two cubs, during a howling survey in Union County.






