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Archive for October, 2011

Trapped


Warning:  Graphic photo below but this is what will be happening……

  (Photo provided by Tim Woody)

“This is no way to see a beautiful animal. We were rambling across the Portage flats in search of a decent trail on Saturday when my friend Mark stopped at the edge of a copse of alders. A few feet into the brush, a large, healthy wolf lowered itself back to the snow, exhausted and in pain, its right front leg crushed by a steel-jawed trap. The wolf’s struggle was evident for yards around the wooden post to which the trap was anchored. Trampled snow was covered with splintered wood, chunks of ice, and blood spatters. But this once-powerful animal was done fighting. Its eyes watched us, but it was too tired to hold its head up and track our movements. Its breathing was shallow. We wondered how long it had been there facing its slow, painful death. There is no state law mandating how frequently trappers must check their traplines. We wished we had a pistol, because the scene in front of us was one of dreadful suffering. A merciful bullet would have made everyone feel better. There was nothing we could do except spare the wolf further anxiety by continuing on our way. Later, as we returned to our vehicle, we saw two men with rifles as they carried game bags full of snowshoe hares back to their truck. They agreed to follow Mark’s directions to the wolf, in hope of putting it out of its misery. The scene haunted our group of four for the rest of the day. We all hoped the hunters had found it. I’m not a big softy when it comes to animals. I don’t much care for dogs or cats, and I never met a juicy steak I didn’t like. If I put a PETA sticker on my truck, it would be the one bearing fine print that says, “People Eating Tasty Animals.” I’ve clubbed my share of salmon, and the only reason I don’t shoot a moose every fall is that it takes too much vacation time I’d rather spend doing something else. But I believe in killing humanely. And what I saw on the Portage flats was anything but humane. I briefly tried trapping while growing up in the Midwest, but stopped after finding it needlessly cruel. When my rifle killed an animal, death came quickly. But when one of my traps caught one, the animal suffered until I returned or an opportunistic coyote stepped in. Either way, it didn’t seem ethical. Trapping has a long history in this state, and many people bemoan the loss of traditions they identify with being “a real Alaskan.” Questioning the morality of trapping is a sure-fire way to incur the wrath of those who value the right to keep doing it. But we no longer live in a world where our winter survival is dependent on wrapping ourselves in the fur of other mammals. Fur trappers today kill for money that, ultimately, is paid for the sake of fashion. And fur is usually worn by people who never see the blood. Maybe it’s time to ask if the leghold trap is an anachronism. As my friends and I stood in the snow and looked at that dying wolf, none of us—not even the hunter who is a lifelong Alaskan—felt pride in an Alaska tradition. We just felt pity. And anger.”

—Special Thanks to Tim Woody, editor of Alaska magazine, for providing this information (http://www.alaskamagazine.com/blogs/trapped)

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 **Send your comments to Governor Mead at: http://governor.wy.gov/contactUs/Pages/default.aspx right away!

Fri 10/28/2011

“In a release from his office Friday, Gov. Matt Mead commented on the upcoming legislative session – specifically on the next step in the state being handed back management of wolves.

Mead says he hopes the legislature takes action in line with statutes to the Dept. of Interior agreement.

Gov. Mead was responsible for drawing up the original plan with U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service published a proposed de-listing rule for wolves in Wyoming earlier this month. Under the plan, 90% of the state would be a “predator zone” where wolves could be shot on site.

The plan requires Wyoming to maintain a population of 100 wolves and at least 10 breeding pair outside of Yellowstone National Park and the Wind River Indian Reservation. The plan also implements a flex zone for northern Sublette and Lincoln counties, as well as southern Teton County that would protect wolves in that area from October 15th until the end of the following February.

If no major changes occur and the plan receives final approval next year, the Wyoming Game and Fish would like to begin quota managed hunting in the fall of 2012.”

**Special thanks to Sheridan Media Staff, http://www.sheridanmedia.com/news/gov-mead-comments-wolf-plan-headed-2012-legislature20891, for providing this information.

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  • “You stand a better chance of being struck by lightening than being killed by a wolf.
    In general, wolves fear humans and do not approach them. In fact, very few incidents involving wolves attacking humans have occurred in North America. Those rare occurrences were reportedly caused because wolves associated humans as a source for food like garbage or scraps, or because a wolf was likely reacting to the presence of dogs (McNay 2002). To prevent conflicts with wildlife, people must act responsibly by never feeding or approaching wild animals or take other actions that cause wild animals to lose fear of humans. Learn more about coexisting with carnivores.
  • Wolves and large grazing animals lived side-by-side for tens of thousands of years before the first settlers arrived.
    Recent studies on Yellowstone elk and wolves have found that weather and hunter harvest affect elk declines more than wolf predation. In fact, wolves often enhance prey populations by culling weak and sick animals from the gene pool, leaving only the strongest animals to reproduce. Food availability and weather regulate wolf populations. When their prey is scarce, wolves suffer too. They breed less frequently, have fewer litters, and may even starve to death.
  • Wildlife tourism is a major part of the economic base of the northern Rockies.
    For instance, in the counties around Yellowstone National Park , livestock production accounts for less than 4% of personal income, while tourism-related industries account for more than 50%. Moreover the effect of wolves on the livestock industry as a whole is negligible, with wolves accounting for less than 1% of livestock losses.
  • In portions of the northern Rockies and Southwest, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) designated wolves as “experimental, nonessential” populations.
    This special designation gave landowners a limited right to kill wolves caught in the act of preying on livestock on private property and increased the ability of FWS to remove or destroy problem wolves. Since 1978, wolves, listed as threatened in Minnesota, have been managed under a special regulation that controls individuals that kill livestock and pets.
  • According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, very few land use restrictions have proven necessary to facilitate wolf recovery in Montana and Minnesota.
    The service reports that land use restrictions are necessary only if illegal mortality of wolves occurs at high levels.
  • Numerous polls taken throughout the United States consistently demonstrate that more people support wolf recovery than oppose it.
    In fact, a 2002 quantitative summary of human attitudes towards wolves found that 61% of the general population samples had positive attitudes towards wolves.”

    Works Cited: McNay, Mark E. A Case History of Wolf-Human Encounters in Alaska and Canada. 2002. Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Wildlife Technical Bulletin 13

**Special thanks to “Defenders of Wildlife” for providing this information! (http://www.defenders.org/programs_and_policy/wildlife_conservation/imperiled_species/wolves/wolf_facts/index.php)

 

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You should be angry.  You should write and petition your local politicians, newspapers, print and hand out flyers to everyone at your local libraries:  include Montana and Idaho Governor’s name and contact information so people can flood their office with outrage!  These leaders of wolf ASSASINATIONS are Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer (http://governor.mt.gov/contact/commentsform.asp) and Idaho Governor C.L. “Butch” Otter (http://gov.idaho.gov/ourgov/contact.html).  The following article is one example of such a brutal slaying, a wolf gunned down from an airplane:

“John Peavey, a former Idaho politician, and Diane Josephy Peavey, a former commentator on Boise State Public Radio, who’s Flat Top Ranch near Carey, Idaho has reportedly received payments totaling $970,139 from 1995 through 2010 according to the Environmental Working Group’s Farm Subsidy Database, has received another subsidy in the form of 3 dead wolves.

On Wednesday , USDA Wildlife Services swooped in with their airplane, which was formerly decorated with stickers commemorating each wolf it killed, and shot down 3 wolves accused of killing a calf on John and Diane’s property. The scene was witnessed by wolf activist Natalie Ertz who related the story to the Idaho Mountain Express.

The alpha female has survived three kill orders and coyote traps over the last several years and six pups from her pack were found dead in 2009.  Their cause of death was never determined but a poison such as compound 1080, which may not have been detectable after a certain period of decomposition, remains a possible cause.”

**Special thanks to “The Wildlife News,” (http://www.thewildlifenews.com/2011/09/02/wolves-killed-on-behalf-of-john-peavey-and-diane-josephy-peavey/) for providing this information!

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“Public opinion research and polling (NM, AZ) shows consistently that lobo supporters are in the majority in the southwestern United States. By translating the passion that we feel for wolves into action, we can make a real difference in turning Mexican wolf management around towards real success.

Remember, it is only because so many of us took action in the first place that Mexican wolves were brought back from extinction in the wilds of the Southwest and reintroduced in Arizona and New Mexico.

In recent years, the Mexican gray wolf’s supporters brought about significant changes using tools like those below. These include ending a destructive policy of killing or permanently removing from the wild wolves that depredated on three or more livestock a year, a ban on trapping in the wolf recovery area, and movement toward the lobo’s own listing for stronger Endangered Species Act protections!

Top predators, like Mexican gray wolves, are beautiful animals that play a vital role in keeping the balance of nature. They are also one of North America’s most imperiled creatures.

LORDS OF NATURE is the story of how science is now discovering top predators as revitalizing forces of nature, and of a society now learning tolerance for these animals.

Help protect wolves and other top predators by hosting a home screening of Lords of Nature: Life in a Land of Great Predators.” 

For more information about how to host a screening of Lords of Nature:  Life in a Land of Great Predators, please visit “Lobos of the Southwest” at http://www.mexicanwolves.org/index.php/news/493/51/You-Can-Be-A-Champion-for-Conservation/d,News2 to find out how to download your toolkit.  THIS IS A GREAT WAY TO GET INVOLVED AND MAKE A DIFFERENCE FOR WOLVES AND OTHER PREDATORS!    Please also send Lobos of the Southwest a message, thank them for providing this information!

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October 24, 2011

“LA GRANDE, Ore.—A new wolf pack is using the Snake River wildlife management unit of northeast Oregon, which borders Idaho and includes the Hells Canyon National Recreation Area and Wilderness.

ODFW surveyed the area last week, after receiving reports and trail camera photographs from hunters indicating wolves were in the area. Tracks from at least five different wolves were documented on Thursday. Though the photographs provided to ODFW indicate that at least one pup was produced in this area, the new pack will not be considered a “breeding pair” unless two or more pups are documented in December. 

ODFW encourages hunters and other outdoor enthusiasts to report wolf sightings using the online reporting system or by phone. “These public wolf reports from Oregon’s outdoor enthusiasts really help us target our survey efforts and make the best use of limited resources.” said Russ Morgan, ODFW wolf program coordinator.

The confirmation of the Snake River pack marks the fourth wolf pack confirmed in Oregon since the mid-2000s, when wolves began returning to the state from Idaho.

Last Friday, ODFW radio-collared its first wolf from the Walla Walla pack in Umatilla County (OR-10, or the tenth wolf collared in the state). This pack was first documented in January 2011 and is near the Washington border. The female pup collared weighed 48 pounds and appeared to be in excellent health. She was released unharmed.

While ODFW wolf program staff out of ODFW’s La Grande office assisted with the immobilization and radio-collaring of the wolf, district staff from the Pendleton field office were responsible for the wolf’s capture. “We’ve known about the Walla Walla pack since January and at least two pups since summer, but the collar will make it much easier to document the pack’s size and get a sense of the pack’s movements,” said Mark Kirsch, ODFW district wildlife biologist in Pendleton.

“As wolves expand their range in Oregon, more work will be handled by our district staff,” noted Russ Morgan. “Livestock producers and others are encouraged to work directly with district staff as they do for other wildlife in their area.”

In other wolf-related developments, two wolves from the Imnaha Pack of Wallowa County have dispersed to central Oregon.

OR-7 was last documented in northern Lake County. He was born in northeast Oregon (Imnaha pack) and was collared on Feb. 25, 2011. GPS collar data shows that this wolf left the Imnaha pack territory on Sept. 10, 2011. Since then he has visited six counties (Baker, Grant, Harney, Crook, Deschutes and now Lake). ODFW and USFWS will continue to monitor OR-7’s location data. At this point, it is unknown if he will continue to disperse or settle down in central Oregon.

OR-3 was also last located in central Oregon. OR-3 was born in northeast Oregon (Imnaha pack) and radio collared on Feb. 12, 2010.  He is a three-year-old male and dispersed from the pack in May.  He has a VHF radio collar which does not allow for continuous tracking. OR-3 has been monitored by ODFW and USFWS using periodic aerial flights.  He was discovered in Wheeler County in July and was later located in the Ochoco Mountains on Sept. 29.  Since that time he has not been found.  The USFWS and ODFW will continue to attempt to locate this wolf.

It is very natural for wolves to disperse away from their birth area. Counting the two wolves in central Oregon, a total of four radio-collared wolves from northeast Oregon have dispersed away from their home pack (the Imnaha). One travelled to Washington last winter and has not been located since. Another dispersed to Idaho and continues to be in that state. 

Wolves throughout Oregon are protected by the state Endangered Species Act (ESA). West of Hwys 395-78-95, they are also protected by the federal ESA. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is the lead management agency for wolves west of this boundary.”

**Special thanks to http://www.dfw.state.or.us/news/2011/october/102411.asp for providing this information!

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October 14, 2011

“The city of Calabasas, California, in Los Angeles County, prides itself on being an environmentally-conscious community. So when resident Randi Feilich Hirsch pointed out that the city’s contract with Los Angeles County to trap and kill coyotes was not only inhumane but threatened to upset the ecological balance of the area, officials took notice. City council suspended all coyote trapping to review the issue.

That was back in July. Now, three months later, Calabasas City Council has made the ban on coyote trapping permanent and adopted a model plan for coexistence.

Feilich Hirsch wasn’t alone in this battle. As the Southern California Representative for Project Coyote, she had the organization and its expertise behind her. Project Coyote, working with the Animal Welfare Institute (AWI), started a campaign on Change.org to build public support for ending the city’s coyote killing policy. By the time city council voted, the groups had more than 9,000 people backing them up.

(more…)

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Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

“A gray wolf dispersing from the Imnaha pack in Wallowa County has been confirmed in Harney County. Over the past week or so it came down from the Strawberry Mountains and through the Silvies Valley, keeping to the more forested and vegetated sections of the national forest lands. It moved in a straight, deliberate line as wolves do when they are intent on serious long-distance travel. For the past few days it has been hanging around west of Burns, mainly on private ranch land. The wolf has a GPS collar so its location information can be downloaded periodically via satellite.

OR-3, the dispersing Imnaha wolf that was located in the Ochoco Mountains last month is still believed to be in the area. At least one person has reported seeing it, but as of last week efforts by US Fish and Wildlife biologists to find it during ground searches have been unsuccessful.

Because the Ochoco wolf, which has a VHF radio collar emitting radio signals allowing it to be tracked, has been moving fairly slowly since it left its home pack and has been lingering for long periods of time in small areas before moving on, biologists are speculating that it might indicate he is traveling with another wolf or wolves. However, it must be emphasized that is only speculation at this point based on OR-3’s behavior and multiple wolves would need to be seen by a reliable observer or multiple wolf tracks found to make a confirmation.

The Imnaha wolf that dispersed into Idaho earlier this year had its radio collar signal detected north of Weiser in late July.

 The photo accompanying this post is of OR-3, currently a resident of the Ochoco Mountains. Photo by ODFW.”

*Special thanks to Oregon Wildlife News and Views for providing this information (http://sneakcat.blogspot.com/2011/10/wolf-confirmed-in-harney-county.html)

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Arizona Daily Star, October 18, 2011 (posted 10/19/11) Show support with a letter to the editor!

Tim Steller

“Mexican officials have released five wolves in the Sierra San Luis mountains of northeastern Sonora, a Mexican environmental group said in a news release.

The wolf release occurred Oct. 11, the group Naturalia said. It gave no specific information about where the release occurred, but that mountain range abuts the New Mexico and Arizona borders with Sonora and ends about 80 miles south of the international border at Douglas.

The release came after years of planning by Mexican officials and opposition by U.S. ranchers, who are worried the wolves will cross into the United States and be completely protected from capture or killing.

Environmental groups have said they hope the wolves cross into the U.S. and mix with wolves living in the White Mountains of eastern Arizona.

Please write a letter to the editor celebrating this historic accomplishment!!  
Letters can be submitted to: letters@azstarnet.com.

Tips for your letter:
* Keep it short, no more than two or three paragraphs.
* Start by thanking the paper for their story and tie your letter to the article.
* Write from your own experience, in your own words. Talk about why Mexican wolves are important to you.

* Some talking points you could include are:
* With only around 50 Mexican gray wolves in the wild, new releases are critically important to increase the size and genetic health of the wild population.
* Mexico, along with Arizona, New Mexico, and western Texas, is part of the Mexican wolf’s historic range.
* True recovery of these highly endangered wolves requires several populations that have connectivity; this release in Mexico is a critical step towards making this happen.
* The wolves reintroduced in Mexico should receive full endangered species protections and not be restricted in their movements by arbitrary boundaries.”

**Special thanks to “Lobos of the Southwest” for providing this information! Check them out at:  http://www.mexicanwolves.org/index.php/news/553/51/In-the-Press-Wolves-released-in-Mexico-mountains-near-Arizona

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“All the members of the Wolf Park community are in mourning today after the loss of the Park’s founder, Dr. Erich Klinghammer.  He passed away the morning of October 6, at  Lafayette’s  IU Health Arnett Hospital, at the age of 81.   Dr. Klinghammer had suffered from polycystic kidney disease for much of his adult life, and had been on dialysis for 12 years.

As a professor of ethology at Purdue University, Dr. Klinghammer started Wolf Park in 1972 using his own property, and his personal funds to create the 75 acre facility outside Battle Ground, Indiana. With the support of many who donated both their valuable time and money, the Park has grown and thrived.  As a 501 ( c ) 3 non-profit organization, it now maintains a Board of Directors, staff of eight, and dozens of volunteers who do the work to keep the organization strong.

Dr. Klinghammer is well known for his study of wolf behavior, contributions to the process of socializing captive wolves, and his English translation of the sixteen-volume Grzimek’s Animal Life Encyclopedia.  A native of Germany, he came to the U.S. after World War II, attended the University of Chicago, and became a professor at Purdue University in the 1960s.

The passing of Dr. Klinghammer leaves hundreds or perhaps thousands of people saddened, those whose lives he touched.  But they are also ready to carry on the Park’s mission and to carry this passion for wolf advocacy and education into the future.  This will mean that Dr. Klinghammer’s legacy will be ensured for generations to come.
A viewing and funeral service will be held on Sunday, October 9 at the
Soller Baker Funeral Home in West Lafayette, Indiana.  The viewing is
4-7 pm, and the service 7-8 pm, Eastern Daylight Time.

The Park is planning an event celebrating Dr. Klinghammer’s memory,
but the date has not been set.  It will probably be sometime in
November.”

**Special thanks to Wolf Park for providing this information (http://blog.wolfpark.org/?p=522)

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