The pressure
commercial hunting puts on Vancouver Island wolves was brought to international attention when "
Takaya", a male wolf whose uniquely solitary life was heavily documented, including in the 2019 documentary
Takaya: Lone Wolf, was shot and killed on March 24, 2020, by a hunter. His death prompted calls from both the local and international community for changes to the law regarding the hunting of wolves in British Columbia. The B.C. Ministry of Forests strictly regulates the hunting of these wolves, with specific limits during trapping and hunting seasons to prevent the depletion of the populations. Plans have been put in place to more closely monitor the species and centralize information gathered from research, harvest reports, and observational records. A two-zone management framework has also been established. In regions where wolves are a significant cause of the decline of threatened wildlife populations, particularly endangered
mountain caribou (
Rangifer tarandus caribou), targeted removal of these wolves may be used as a last-resort conservation measure for the surrounding species. On the other hand, in areas where wolves do not pose a threat, the populations are left to exist naturally within the ecosystem, maintaining their ecological role as predators. Once extirpated from the island in the late 1960s, the wolves began reappearing in the early 1970s. During this absence public perception of the wolves had changed, resulting in more fascination of the Vancouver Island wolves. This interest has led to unintended consequences, in 2000 on Vargas Island the wolves became habituated to human activity, resulting in wolves being hand-fed by tourists.
Urbanization and
logging practices also put pressures on coastal wolf populations, with increasing encounters with humans and their pets often leading to more habituation. This can result in lethal human-wolf interactions, such as wolves approaching people or pets. Logging activities have also changed the availability of preferred prey sources for Vancouver wolves, resulting in wolves moving further inland. ==References==