An arctic researcher’s camp got overrun by some scavenging wolves when a food cache that should have been buried was left out in the open. Now she says it is unlikely they can ever go back because the wolves ate human bacon and sausage.
What exactly is she saying with this phrase? “If you feed the wolves you will destroy them”. I imagine they rather enjoyed the bacon.
The problem is that it’s a lot easier to bring down a box of sausages than a caribou, so the wolves may become more inclined to look for other humans they can scavenge from than for animals to hunt, and they will end up less afraid of humans if they connect them with easy meals. Now, I don’t know how likely it is to occur from one isolated incident, but in the past this has become an issue with bears in national parks that see a lot of tourists.
It probably means that these wolves (being extremely smart about food and how to get it, as all wolves are) will henceforth associate people with food (bacon!). This pretty well guarantees confrontations with anyone who shows up in that area, and such confrontations are likely to end badly for the wolves.
You may have missed a part of the article, or you’ve read a different article than I did yesterday. These wolves, in particular, are having diarrhea all around, and are searching for more tasty human provided food, in spite of the trots. You would avoid a food source that gave you the trots, but not the wolves. So there is a definite, short term problem for this particular pack of wolves, because of this bacon.
And then there’s the usual problem with wild animals that get into human food, which others have mentioned above. Instead of hunting, they’ll just attack the next group of humans they see, for their delicious bacon. I suppose, one could argue that it’s our decision to kill off these “bad behaving” wolves, when it’s human intervention that started the whole problem, but yeah, kinda inevitable when you feed the wild animals.
I don’t think this is something wolves care much about. An unfamiliar food may produce some digestive issues, but if it’s a useful source of energy, that’s all that really matters.
Uh … yeah … and dehydration, and the definition of isotonic shock are likely not well included in “instinctive behavior” so yeah, they likely enjoyed the bacon like O.P. said, and then had obvious short term health repercussions they may not be aware of, in addition to really abstract wildlife management issues. I’m sure many of us would love some buffalo wing chicken, served slightly pink inside* … once. But not more than once.
A bit of rhetorical hyperbole, probably. Nevertheless, there’s some evidence that suggests that opportunistic predators/omnivores will get too accustomed to raiding human camps if they eat human food. This may lead to behavior that’s dangerous to humans, and a response of killing the animals.
This is well-known in American national parks such as Yosemite, where bears routinely raid camps looking for food. Over the years they’ve learned that humans = food. The lucky bears mostly stay away. The unlucky ones become nuisances, and the NPS relocates them into the wild. If they come back, game over for bear.
Unfair to the bear? Certainly. And sad. The NPS is as much to blame as anyone. In the “good ol’ days” the NPS set up bleachers next to the trash bins so that visitors could watch the bears. Now the bears are paying the price.
Do wolves eat people? Probably. Are we a staple of their diet? Probably not. Wolves are certainly territorial, so they’ll attack humans. When no food is around, they’ll probably eat anything that’s meat.
Do bears eat people. My guess is that a bear would attack a human trying to take away its food, or a human that seemed threatening. Once the human was dead, the bear might eat it. Probably a very rare occurrence.
Large predators are instinctively territorial and opportunistic. Be aware. Large omnivores (bears) eat anything; they’re machines for ingesting stuff. The ones that are bigger than humans will certainly fight a human for food.
I don’t know much about wolves, except for a very good (old) canadian movie that says they eat mice, but the bear problem is quite demonstrative, ie a bear doesn’t make much of a difference between a proferred sandwich and the arm that offers it, for instance through a car window. I do not know if it is by choice, clumsiness or taste, but bear cutlery is quite well adapted to human extremities.