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Posts by Dan MacNulty

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“They felt they’d been deceived.” Was Yellowstone’s celebrated wolf reintroduction all it’s cracked up to be? | Discover Wildlife It’s over 30 years since wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone but the pay-off for the park is disputed

BBC: There’s a lovely film on Youtube called How Wolves Change Rivers. It describes how wolf reintroduction to Yellowstone precipitated a series of ecological benefits…It’s a beautiful and uplifting notion but, according to some scientists, total nonsense.🧪
www.discoverwildlife.com/animal-facts...

3 days ago 40 14 1 1
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Dispatches from the Wild: Rethinking Yellowstone’s wolves | Explore Big Sky The myth of a perfect trophic cascade By Benjamin Alva Polley EBS COLUMNIST For years, Yellowstone’s wolves have been held up as the poster animals for ecological redemption. Some people say they are ...

Appreciate this thoughtful op-ed recognizing that "wolves are not magical levers that can single-handedly reset complex ecosystems."
www.explorebigsky.com/dispatches-f...

1 month ago 3 0 0 0
Grey wolf standing in Yellowstone’s Lamar Valley beside a coyote, with sagebrush grassland and large boulders in the foreground; image from BBC Wildlife Magazine March 2026 feature on wolf reintroduction.

Grey wolf standing in Yellowstone’s Lamar Valley beside a coyote, with sagebrush grassland and large boulders in the foreground; image from BBC Wildlife Magazine March 2026 feature on wolf reintroduction.

Thirty years after wolf reintroduction, has Yellowstone’s celebrated “trophic cascade” — popularized by How Wolves Change Rivers — delivered what many claim?

BBC Wildlife Magazine (March 2026) revisits the debate.

Access here (free sign-in required): 🧪 www.ziniounlimited.com/article/bbc-...

2 months ago 7 2 0 0
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A new exchange in @esajournals.bsky.social highlights a common omission in the Yellowstone trophic cascade story: >100 beavers were reintroduced, spanning years before and after wolf reintroduction. 🧪
Beschta et al (comment): doi.org/10.1002/ecm....
Hobbs et al (reply): doi.org/10.1002/ecm....

2 months ago 4 0 0 0

Yes, wolf densities in northern Yellowstone are among the highest documented for any wild wolf population. No new aspen clones have been documented. Many clones have died out since wolf reintroduction, including the ones documented in the map and photo I included in my original post.

3 months ago 1 1 1 0

Climate warming is indeed a factor, as is continued browsing by elk, moose, mule deer, and bison. Wolf density in the area has been exceptionally high for decades.

3 months ago 1 1 1 0
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New critique prompts correction of high-profile Yellowstone aspen study. Correction fixes a math error, but lack of young aspen across >50% of sampled sites complicates story of “widespread” aspen recovery after wolf reintroduction. 🧪 www.eurekalert.org/news-release...

3 months ago 4 0 1 0

No. They're mostly even-aged.

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Data from Kauffman et al. suggests many mature aspen trees in northern Yellowstone are at or near their maximum lifespan.

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
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There is a reasonably large body of evidence that implicates elk browsing as the principle reasons for the gap. Much of this evidence comes from exclosure studies. For example: Fig 2B in Kauffman et al. 2010; doi.org/10.1890/09-1...

3 months ago 0 0 1 0

In LiveScience, Ripple defends his willow paper by saying “the basic scientific logic of the paper is solid.” Yet the analysis relies on a tautology: re-expressing height as “volume” and treating it as new evidence. That is circular reasoning, not solid logic. 🧪 www.livescience.com/animals/land...

3 months ago 10 3 0 0

Painter et al.’s reply fixes the math but sidesteps the bigger problem: mean-based effect sizes from zero-inflated, non-equilibrium data are misleading indicators of trophic cascade strength. The claim of a strong & ecologically significant aspen cascade remains overstated. 🧪 doi.org/10.1016/j.fo...

3 months ago 7 1 0 0

Please elaborate if u wish

3 months ago 0 0 1 0

They did not.

3 months ago 1 0 1 0

Our critique is now published in Forest Ecology & Management. We show why the corrected 17.5× increase in average sapling density still overstates aspen recovery: mean-based metrics are driven by a small minority of plots, while most showed little or no change.
🧪 authors.elsevier.com/a/1mMLU1L%7E...

3 months ago 12 3 0 2
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Painter et al. have issued a corrigendum conceding that the headline 152× increase in aspen sapling density was an error (now 17.5×), consistent with our critique. But the revised result still relies on averages that mask how most aspen stands showed little or no change. 🧪 doi.org/10.1016/j.fo...

3 months ago 14 6 1 2
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Have Wolves Saved Yellowstone’s Aspens? - Mountain Journal Claims that wolves have rescued Yellowstone National Park aspen trees through a ‘trophic cascade’ oversimplify a complex story

“The narrative that wolves are a kind of silver bullet that saved the aspen in Northern Yellowstone is oversimplified” - Nick Bergeron, USU researcher🧪 mountainjournal.org/have-wolves-...

4 months ago 4 2 0 0

IFLScience reports that Ripple et al. “stand by their original assessment” and “have prepared a detailed reply explaining why [MacNulty et al.’s] criticisms are inaccurate.” Their reply “is set to be published as soon as possible.”🧪
www.iflscience.com/yellowstones...

4 months ago 14 6 0 2

"For readers, the lesson is plain. Big claims deserve clear tests that do not stack the deck or skip steps."🧪

5 months ago 10 0 0 0
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The story of Wolf 1329M provides a textbook example of the source-sink dynamic that limits the spread of Yellowstone wolves beyond the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. 🧪
wyofile.com/what-happens...

5 months ago 6 0 0 2
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Drilling lease slated 2 miles from world’s largest sage grouse lek, center punching planet’s longest mule deer migration - WyoFile Parcel 0712 is part of a complex of oil and gas leases in ecologically valuable sagebrush-steppe that the Bureau of Land Management has proposed for auction in June.

World’s largest sage grouse lek and longest mule deer migration threatened by oil & gas lease sale in western Wyoming. wyofile.com/drilling-lea...
Public comments due Monday, 17Nov.
eplanning.blm.gov/eplanning-ui...

5 months ago 4 5 0 0

🧪Now that the flaws in Ripple et al. (2025) are on record, it’ll be an interesting test of scientific integrity to see if and how that paper is used. This Science letter, for instance, cites Ripple et al. (2025) in calling for strict wolf protection across Europe. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...

5 months ago 13 4 0 0
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Line chart showing Yellowstone aspen sapling density from 2007–2021. Median and 75th-percentile lines stay near zero, while only the upper percentiles (90th and 95th) rise sharply—indicating gains in just a few plots.

Line chart showing Yellowstone aspen sapling density from 2007–2021. Median and 75th-percentile lines stay near zero, while only the upper percentiles (90th and 95th) rise sharply—indicating gains in just a few plots.

Even 17.5× is inflated—it reflects average sapling density driven by a minority of plots. Most aspen plots (green = median) stayed flat—half had no saplings, and only a small fraction (purple, pink) increased.
doi.org/10.32942/X2W...

5 months ago 18 2 0 0
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🧪About that “152×” Yellowstone aspen claim (see WaPo headline). In a new preprint we show it’s a math error that inflated the effect by 768%. Corrected: 17.5×. Preprint: doi.org/10.32942/X2W...

5 months ago 790 136 13 3
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Could Colorado see widespread ecosystem changes from wolf restoration? In Yellowstone National Park — where gray wolves were reintroduced starting in 1995 — researchers have gone back and forth on whether the restoration of wolves has impacted the ecosystem.

Claims about “wolves reshaping ecosystems” are powerful—but only if they’re accurate. This Aspen Times article on Colorado’s wolf reintroduction shows why getting the Yellowstone trophic cascade story right matters for public understanding and policy:
www.aspentimes.com/news/colorad...

5 months ago 8 1 0 0

🧪 phys.org/news/2025-10...

5 months ago 3 0 0 0
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🧪You may have heard that large-carnivore recovery in Yellowstone National Park triggered one of the world’s strongest trophic cascades. Our new open-access article explains why that story doesn’t hold up: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...

6 months ago 21 6 0 4
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Feedgrounds grow elk herds? Wolves, grizzlies might mop up benefits, study finds. - WyoFile U.S. Geological Survey analysis using demographic data from 13 Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem elk herds suggests few overall benefits from feeding, including for hunting.

wyofile.com/feedgrounds-...

8 months ago 5 1 0 0
Flawed analysis invalidates claim of a strong Yellowstone trophic cascade after wolf reintroduction: A comment on Ripple et al. (2025)

🧪 New preprint

We critically evaluate claims of a strong trophic cascade in Yellowstone following wolf recovery, identifying major methodological flaws that undermine this conclusion.

Read the full analysis here (open access): doi.org/10.32942/X2Q...

#Ecology #Yellowstone #TrophicCascades

8 months ago 20 5 2 0
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Mountain lion ‘eradication bill’ backed up a tree by overwhelming opposition - WyoFile Environmental groups, outfitters, hunters, houndsmen testified by the dozen against a measure that would have stripped cougars of any protections, and wildlife professionals of management authority.

A bill that threatened to decimate Wyoming's mountain lion populations fell spectacularly flat on Tuesday.

Environmental groups, hunting orgs, houndsmen and citizens testified by the dozen encouraging lawmakers to kill a La Barge representative’s proposal to do away with science-based management.

1 year ago 24 9 1 1