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L. David Mech

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L. David Mech
L. David Mech wearing an unzipped coat over a checkered shirt, and a khaki-colored cap with a Yellowstone logo, smiling and looking just left of camera
Mech in 2017
Born (1937-01-18) January 18, 1937 (age 87)
Alma materCornell University,
Purdue University
Known forWolf ecology and behavior research
Scientific career
FieldsBiology, ecology
InstitutionsUniversity of Minnesota,
U.S. Geological Survey
WebsiteBusiness website: http://www.davemech.org Personal website: http://www.davemech.com

Lucyan David Mech (/m/;[2] born January 18, 1937), also known as Dave Mech, is an American biologist specializing in the study of wolves. He is a senior research scientist for the U.S. Geological Survey and an adjunct professor at the University of Minnesota. He has researched wolves since 1958 in locations including northern Minnesota, Isle Royale, Alaska, Yellowstone National Park, Ellesmere Island, and Italy.

Mech is the founder of the International Wolf Center and the vice-chair of its board of directors. The project to create the facility, which he started in 1985, was an outgrowth of his wolf research as well as his ambition to educate people about the nature of wolves, so that they may come to respect the creature through understanding.

He has published eleven books about wolves and other wildlife, including The Wolf: The Ecology and Behavior of an Endangered Species (1970) and Wolves: Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation, which he co-edited with Luigi Boitani (2003). His 1997 book The Arctic Wolf: Ten Years with the Pack received an honorable mention by the National Outdoor Book Award (Nature and the Environment category). His latest book, with Doug Smith and Dan MacNulty, is Wolves on the Hunt: the Behavior of Wolves Hunting Wild Prey.

Early years

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Mech was born in Auburn, New York, on January 18, 1937, and raised in Syracuse.[3]

Career and research

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1966 photo by David Mech: Wolves holding moose at bay at Isle Royale

From 1958 to 1962, he was a graduate student at Purdue, studying the wolves of Isle Royale on Lake Superior.[4][5] His first book was The Wolves of Isle Royale, published in 1966 by the Department of the Interior, having evolved from his doctoral thesis.[4] In 1966, he studied wolves in the Superior National Forest in Minnesota.[4][5]

David Mech studying Arctic wolves

"Beginning in 1986, the legendary biologist L. David Mech spent 25 summers observing wolves..."[6] on Ellesmere Island. He said that his research on the wolves there was different, because it is one of the few places where they are not afraid of people, making that experience one of the best in his life.[7] In addition, there were no trees or bushes to hide wolves from view in the tundra. In the summer, Mech found a den near the military and weather base at Eureka. He witnessed wolf interactions within a family unit and watched them hunting muskoxen; this type of research had not been done before. In an interview, Mech said, "The kind of stuff I got here was not just the objective behavioral stuff, but the kind of thing you get from living with a pet of some sort. You get an insight into the thing. You get to know the animal."[4] Mech and photographer Jim Brandenburg together produced several articles and a film for National Geographic.[4] The Ellesmere research concentrated on observing the interactions of pack members with each other and with pups around a den. The study also encompassed wolf interactions with musk-oxen and arctic hares and wold movements throughout the year using GPS collars.[5][8]

His research involves monitoring wolf-deer relations in the Superior National Forest of Minnesota, determining manner and degree of these populations on each other as well as the effects of snow conditions and canine parvovirus on that system.[5] He has also conducted research in Denali National Park, Alaska; Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canada; and in Yellowstone National Park. The Denali work involved studying the interactions between wolves and caribou, moose, and Dall sheep. The Yellowstone National Park studies concentrate primarily on wolf interactions with prey, including mortality and survival studies of elk.[8]}}

Positions on hunting, fishing, and trapping, and wolf management

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An avid mushroom hunter and fur trapper, Mech has continued to support fishing, hunting, and trapping, which has led to criticism from animal protectionists.[5] He believes that states can manage wolves sustainably and that states where wolves are no longer on the endangered list should determine how the animal should be managed.[9][10] On his website, he lists mink trapping as one of his interests.[11] He closed the abstract to "Is science in danger of sanctifying the wolf?", published in the January 2012 issue of Biological Conservation, with "The wolf is neither a saint nor a sinner except to those who want to make it so."[12]

Dave Mech was actively involved in the reintroduction of wolves to areas from which they had disappeared through human activities. After more than 45 years of wolf population recovery, the US Department of Wildlife Protection removed the wolf from the list of endangered species after the species had reached a favorable conservation status.[13] Only the subspecies Mexican wolf and Red wolf are excluded from this and remains on the list.[14] [15]

More recent publications by David Mech deal with wolf management through regulation. He writes that every year a certain percentage of a wolf population must be killed by humans (in addition to natural mortality) to keep a wolf population stable. According to his findings, about 50% of young wolves over 5 to 10 months old must be killed each year to bring a wolf population under control.[16][17][18] In a 2017 publication, he describes, among other things, the livestock-depredation control in America.[19] Mech declines to express an opinion on whether wolves should be hunted or trapped for their pelts, saying that his opinion is no better than that of anybody else on that.[5]

Publications

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David Mech with a wolf tranquilized in order to fit a GPS tracking device

Mech has published approximately 380 scientific papers and 100 popular articles about wolves and other wildlife. He has written eleven books.[20] These include The Wolf: The Ecology and Behavior of an Endangered Species (1970), Wolves: Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation, which he co-edited with Luigi Boitani (2003), and Wolves on the Hunt: The Behavior of Wolves Hunting Wild Prey (2015), with Doug Smith and Dan MacNulty. His 1997 book, The Arctic Wolf: Ten Years with the Pack, received an honorable mention by the National Outdoor Book Award (Nature and the Environment category). The International Wolf Center lists approximately 140 articles written by Mech, published from 1987 to the present, primarily in scientific journals.[21]

Education & Awards

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Mech obtained a B.S. degree in conservation from Cornell University in 1958[3] and a Ph.D. in wildlife ecology from Purdue University in 1962.[3][5]

When conferring him an additional honorary degree in 2005 Purdue University described his work as: "Mech’s long-term studies of the wolf and other wild vertebrates have resulted in nearly 400 scientific, semi-technical and popular publications or articles. His scholarly contributions have expanded the understanding of wolf ecology more than any other individual. No one has written about, spoken of or debated the status and future of the wolf more than him. He has contributed to virtually every wolf conservation effort that the planet has seen in recent decades. In recognition of his accomplishments, Mech was awarded the Wildlife Society’s highest honor in 1993, the Aldo Leopold Award. Purdue previously honored him as recipient of the Distinguished Agricultural Alumni Award in 1995 and the Distinguished Undergraduate Research Award in 2000."[3]

References

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  1. ^ "L. David Mech CURRICULUM VITAE" (PDF). davemech.org.
  2. ^ Mech, L. David. "Dave Mech". Retrieved July 14, 2020. pronounced 'Meech'
  3. ^ a b c d "2005 Honorary degree". Purdue University. 2005. Archived from the original on May 27, 2005. Retrieved July 3, 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d e Breining, Greg (January–February 2004). "The Far Reach: The lifework of a Minnesota biologist circles the world". Minnesota Department of Resources Conservation Volunteer Magazine: 32–41.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Keeping the Wolf from Death's Door- Saving a Species by learning it's secrets by Peter Gorner, photos by Frank Hanes Chicago Tribune Magazine, April 9, 1989 Pages: Cover, 10-13, 15-17, 20
  6. ^ Shea, Neil (September 2019). "Alone with wolves". National Geographic: 117–133.
  7. ^ Dave Mech. Conservation Minnesota. January 26, 2009 – via YouTube.
  8. ^ a b University of Minnesota information page on David Mech Retrieved March 4, 2017
  9. ^ Mech, David (June 13, 2018). "Mech View of Wolf Management". davemech.com.
  10. ^ Nock, Ban (February 16, 2013). ""Science is self correcting" – on Wolves". Daily Kos. Retrieved February 16, 2017.
  11. ^ "Personal Interests". davemech.com.
  12. ^ Mech, L. David (January 2012). "Is science in danger of sanctifying the wolf?" (PDF). Biological Conservation. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 16, 2017. Retrieved February 16, 2017.
  13. ^ US Department of the Interior: Administration Returns Management and Protection of Gray Wolves to States and Tribes Following Successful Recovery Efforts
  14. ^ U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service: Gray Wolf (Canis lupus)
  15. ^ https://endangeredlist.org/animal/red-wolf/
  16. ^ L. David Mech: Managing Minnesota's recovered wolfes
  17. ^ Todd K. Fuller, L. David Mech, Jean Fitts Cochrane: Wolf Population Dynamics Seite 184
  18. ^ Scott Creel, Jay J. Rotella: Meta-Analysis of Relationships between Human Offtake, Total Mortality and Population Dynamics of Gray Wolves (Canis lupus)
  19. ^ L. David Mech: Where can wolves live and how can we live with them?
  20. ^ "Books". davemech.org.
  21. ^ "Articles by David Mech". Wolf Center. August 2013. Retrieved February 15, 2017.
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