@Shawn, interesting comments if indeed they were factual. I'll leave wolves out of this for now, since most of your comments were about grizzly bears. You state that you "see...grizzly in this area quite frequently" and I'm assuming you mean the Washington state area since that's where you're from. You must be a lucky guy indeed, as grizzly bears are listed as endangered in Washington and there is a resident population of just 20 individuals in the Cascades with the potential for a few more in the Selkirks in the northeast part of the state (a population estimated to be 40-50 bears in an area that is primarily in BC and Idaho). Don't believe me? Check this out:
http://www.fws.gov/mountain-prairie/species/mammals/grizzly/index.htm I'd say that qualifies as not only "endangered," but "rare," too.
Contrary to your statements, grizzly bears do not respond to low population levels by having multiple young, their number of young is directly tied to their food supply. And that reproduction rate is based on the abundance of berries and salmon in August and September (so in Washington state where grizzlies exist, that means it's solely reliant on the abundance of berries -- after a poor berry year, female grizzlies will often not have any cubs). Grizzly bears do almost no hunting of mammals at this critical time of year in terms of reproduction (for the vast majority of mountain grizzlies, meat makes up less than 15% of their diet, with the majority of that meat being scavenged from wolf and cougar kills), and in fact, many mountain grizzlies rarely hunt mammals at all (that's not to say there aren't exceptions, but the vast majority of Selkirk and Cascade grizzlies don't hunt mammals beyond getting the odd calf or fawn in spring).
Your second-to-last statement is almost comical in how incorrect it is (it would be funny if the truth wasn't so sad). If grizzly bears did indeed bounce back "fairly quickly", then they wouldn't be an endangered species in the lower 48, they wouldn't be extirpated from the Canadian prairies, and they wouldn't be a threatened species in Alberta. They have one of the lowest reproductive rates of any mammal on earth: an average of two cubs every four years, with a survival rate of less than 50% for each of those two cubs.
As for the rest of your comments, yes, mountain/woodland caribou are indeed about as threatened as can be right now. There are five key factors that have been identified in this population collapse, one of which involves predator levels. Any guesses as to what the other four factors are? I'll give you a hint, it sounds kind of like 'humans' and 'roads' and 'development' and 'logging of old-growth habitat'.