L. David Mech

He has researched wolves since 1958 in locations including northern Minnesota, Isle Royale, Alaska, Yellowstone National Park, Ellesmere Island, and Italy.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.[3][4] From 1958 to 1962, Mech was a graduate student at Purdue, studying the wolves of Isle Royale, on Lake Superior,[5][4] beginning in 1958.[6] His first book was The Wolves of Isle Royale, published in 1966 by the Department of the Interior, having evolved from his doctoral thesis.The Denali work involved studying the interactions between wolves and caribou, moose, and Dall sheep.[10] An avid mushroom hunter and fur trapper, Mech has continued to support fishing, hunting, and trapping, which has led to criticism from animal protectionists.After more than 45 years of population recovery, in 2020, the US Fish and Wildlife Service removed the gray wolf from the list of endangered species.The International Wolf Center lists approximately 140 articles written by Mech, published from 1987 to the present, primarily in scientific journals.
1966 photo by David Mech: Wolves holding moose at bay at Isle Royale
David Mech studying Arctic wolves
David Mech with a wolf tranquilized in order to fit a GPS tracking device
Auburn, New YorkCornell UniversityPurdue UniversitybehaviorBiologyecologyUniversity of MinnesotaU.S. Geological SurveybiologistwolvesMinnesotaIsle RoyaleAlaskaYellowstone National ParkEllesmere IslandInternational Wolf CenterNational Outdoor Book AwardSyracuseDepartment of the InteriorSuperior National ForesttundraEurekamuskoxenJim Brandenburgarctic harescanine parvovirusDenali National ParkDall sheepUnited States Geological SurveyBiological Conservationgray wolvesUS Fish and Wildlife ServiceMexicanRed wolveskilledLuigi BoitaniNational GeographicBibcodeProject GutenbergInternet Archive