After decades of bitter legal feuds and culture war skirmishes over the fate of wild wolves in the United States, the Trump administration has tried to put a point at the end of the sentence. In stripping gray wolves of their Endangered Species Act protection across the country, the responsible federal agency went against both science and public opinion, and declared the species "biologically recovered."
This delisting rule won't stand up to scrutiny. More wolves will die as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service squares off, once again, in court against conservationists with strong arguments that there's no evidence on which to base the agency's claim that wolves will be just fine.
This issue presents President-elect Joe Biden an opportunity to break from the mold cast by his predecessors. Before this latest effort by the Trump administration, President Barack Obama allowed a previous delisting effort to move forward.
In his first weeks as president, Biden should take decisive action and direct federal wildlife agencies to embrace a science-backed, full recovery of the wolf in the Lower 48 states — which would hinge on restoring federal protections under the Endangered Species Act and keeping them in place.
If Biden chooses instead to allow delisting to stand, well, we've seen that movie before.
In 2012, wolves were removed from the federal endangered species list in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota. A federal judge restored protection in 2014, and an appeals court upheld this ruling in 2017.
In the two-and-a-half years that wolf hunting and trapping were allowed, more than a third of the region's entire wolf population was killed. A repeat of the same fiasco would result in the same leap backward on a nationwide scale.
If allowed to proceed unchecked, federal delisting will trigger a cascade of state management decisions that will bring more state-sanctioned wolf slaughters and doom the species' recovery.