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Archive for November, 2011


“A local politician in northern Sweden, openly opposed to excessive wolf hunting, was hospitalized on Tuesday night after being knocked out by a rock thrown through his bedroom window.

“I only had time to think that there had been an explosion,” Green Party member Arne Johansson from Ånge, in north western Sweden, told the Aftonbladet newspaper from the hospital bed.

“Then I woke up and found out it was a rock about ten centimetres wide.”

The blow had knocked Johansson unconscious. About two hours later he came to, and was able to call for help.

Johansson feels deep respect for the wild northern predator, and he has openly expressed his feelings on the eradication of wolves.

But after repeated threats and attacks, this might be the last straw, he told Afonbladet.

The same day as the attack, Johansson had also discovered the bolts to his car wheels were unscrewed, and that someone had carved a cross in the paint of the vehicle.

He has also previously received death threats in the mail.

It hasn’t been confirmed that it is his stance on wolf hunting that is the root of all his problems, but Johansson told the paper he had been informed by police that it is a clear possibility.

Earlier this year, Johansson had debated the wolf issue with a group of hunters, which made him realize just what he was up against.

“It was then I understood how fanatical they are. Not only did they want to wipe out the Swedish pack, but also the Russian,” he told Aftonbladet.

“Not a single wolf should exist on the planet. That’s crossing the line. I spoke my mind.”

Ann Dahlerus with the Predatory Animal Association (Svenska Rovdjursföreningen), which is against licenced killing of wolves, told Aftonbladet that it is quite common for their members to receive threats.

“Especially in areas with a lot of wolves it might be difficult socially to publicly be positive about wolves,” she said.

“In county Dalarna we tried getting members to speak up for the wolves in an interview with Sveriges Television but none of the 15 members we called felt that they dared.”

Marcus Kalén, 41, lives in a village not far from where Johansson was attacked. He’s an avid hunter, and among those who feel wolves need to be restricted to zoos.

“It’s hard for people from the cities to understand. Hunting and fishing are the only hobbies we have out here. If the wolves stay these become impossible. We don’t even dare release our dogs,” he told the Aftonbladet newspaper.

Kalén doesn’t think that the wolf debate was behind the assault of Johansson, explaining to the paper that there’s no pressing wolf issue in the area right now.

But there are indications that violence and threats against politicians in Sweden have increased, and the National council for crime prevention (Brottsförebyggande rådet, BRÅ) initiated a study to investigate just how comprehensive these crimes are, on the behest of the government.

According to the head of the unit for statistical surveys at BRÅ, Erik Grevholm, this is a common strategy used by the state when a problem is detected; to gather a comprehensive knowledge base about the problem.

“And it has become a problem in Sweden, one can easily establish that by just reading the newspapers,” Grevholm told The Local.”

**Special thanks to The Local Sweden’s News for providing this information (
http://www.thelocal.se/37138/20111103/#)

 

 

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“Recent incidents of household pets getting caught in leg-hold traps intended to snare bobcats, coyotes and a variety of foxes and other fur-bearing animals have spurred heated debate in the Silver State.

Opponents say trapping wild animals is a barbaric practice that threatens domestic pets.

Trappers — who get about $500 for each bobcat pelt and $40 to $50 for a coyote pelt — say the predators they catch and kill for their pelts are responsible for far more pet deaths in Nevada.

State wildlife officials are in the unenviable position of trying to please both groups.

To that end commissioners with the Nevada Department of Wildlife and Chief Game Warden Rob Buonamici met with trappers and animal rights activists in Las Vegas on Monday and will meet in Washoe County this week to discuss possible rule revisions on where traps can be set, what type of trap can be used, and how many hours a trapper can leave one unchecked.

On Monday, Wildlife Department Commissioner David McNinch said existing rules that bar trapping within 1,000 feet of homes and popular hiking trails “seemed reasonable” for a number of years until a feral cat was injured after being ensnared in a leg-hold trap at a Northern Nevada park in August 2010.

Last year, a family dog was caught in a leg-hold trap on Mount Charleston, but there were conflicting reports on whether the animal was injured.

A bill seeking to change the rules was introduced in the 2011 Legislature. Lawmakers did not take action other than to order wildlife officials to hear from both sides before implementing “reasonable” revisions, said McNinch.

McNinch noted the situation is much different in Southern Nevada than in the north, where a greater variety and higher number of fur-bearing animals roam the range.

Trappers are barred from trapping within 1,000 feet of homes and many of the state’s more popular hiking trails. Trappers want the current rules in effect to remain while Trailsafe and other animal welfare groups seek a 1,000-yard limit — and they want it to apply to hiking trails as well as homes.

Both sides agree private property owners should be exempt.

Animal advocates also seek to ban the leg-hold traps commonly used and instead want trappers to use box or cage traps that don’t injure animals, whether they are wild animals or domestic pets.

They also want to shorten the length of time trappers must check their traps, from 96 hours to 24 hours, and they want those traps to bear identification to enhance enforcement.

But trappers say their traps are often stolen and they fear putting their names on them would enable someone to set a trap either in a prohibited location or by using unlawful baiting techniques to set them up.

Karen Lane, president of the Las Vegas Valley Humane Society, acknowledged the problem is more severe in Northern Nevada, “But we’ve had our fair share,” she said, “particularly on Mount Charleston.”

Indeed, it is in the mountains where most Southern Nevada trappers work. She advocates outlawing trapping in areas where it is already illegal to hunt.

Gina Greisen of Nevada Voters for Animals supports forcing trappers to put their identities on the traps they set, but both trappers and wildlife officials disagree.

“It’s like a license plate,” said Buonamici, a 32-year game warden. “When you have a bank robbery you can get the (plate) number but it’s probably a stolen car.”

Trailsafe on its website claims about 100 pet dogs become trapped in leg-holds each year. Buonamici said he gets between six and 12 calls a year in Southern Nevada, most of them in the Mount Charleston area.

McNinch said any revisions to trapping laws would not be discussed until February or March.

Contact reporter Doug McMurdo at dmcmurdo@reviewjournal.com or  702-224-5512″      

**Special thanks to Doug McMurdo, Las Vegas Review-Journal for providing this information (http://www.lvrj.com/news/wildlife-officials-meet-with-trappers-animal-rights-activists-133410043.html)

 

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 Wolf Preservation wants to hear your feedback on the Colvilles comments below!

Updated 08:25 a.m., Friday, November 4, 2011

“AIRWAY HEIGHTS, Wash. (AP) — The Colville Indian Tribes are worried that the state’s proposed wolf management plan may hurt subsistence hunting by its members.

The tribes told members of the Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission on Thursday that a plan to restore at least five breeding pairs of wolves in Eastern Washington has the potential to reduce herds of elk, deer and moose on its reservation.

Tribal members harvest up to 1,000 deer, 400 elk and 50 moose each year, and worry a large increase in the number of wolves will increase competition for the animals.

“We have 60 percent unemployment on our reservation,” Joe Peone of the Colville Tribes Fish and Wildlife Department told the commission. “To be able to rely on subsistence hunting is critical.”

The comments came as the commission held the final public meeting on its proposed plan in the Spokane suburb of Airway Heights. The commission is expected to take final action on the wolf plan at its December meeting.

Three of the state’s five known breeding packs are located in the northeast, where the tribe’s reservation is located, Peone said.

The tribe wants to ensure the state wolf management plan provides a balance between the needs of wolves and hunters, Peone said.

The state plan, released this summer after several years of work, calls for the return of 15 successful breeding pairs in the state for three consecutive years before removing endangered species protections from the animals.

Farmers and ranchers have criticized the plan in previous meetings as putting their livestock and livelihoods at risk. Conservations want more breeding pairs established before hunting is allowed.

Gray wolves were eliminated as a breeding species in Washington by the 1930s. They have never been reintroduced to Washington but numerous sightings over the years suggested that the animals had crossed into Washington from neighboring states and British Columbia.

Gray wolves are listed as an endangered species statewide under Washington law, and in the western two-thirds of the state under federal law. There currently are five confirmed resident wolf packs.

Under the agency’s original plan for delisting, five breeding pairs would be required in Eastern Washington, four in the North Cascades and six in the South Cascades or Northwest Coast. But the agency is also considering reducing that to four pairs in each region, plus three more anywhere in the state.

Two of the state’s confirmed wolf packs reside in north-central Washington’s Methow Valley and the Teanaway Valley of Kittitas County, with the other three in the northeast corner.

Efforts to save wolves have been controversial throughout western states in recent years. Earlier this year, Congress stripped federal endangered species protections from wolves in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming and the eastern one-third of Washington and Oregon. Wolves are still under federal endangered species protections in the western two-thirds of those two states.

The goal of the management plan is to eventually make wolves a game animal, said Nate Pamplin of the state Department of Fish and Wildlife.

Phil Anderson, director of the department, acknowledged that the effort to create a wolf management plan has been filled with conflict.

“Thousands of hours have been devoted to this in the last four years,” he said. “This is one of the biggest challenges we’ve faced as an agency.”

**Special thanks to NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS, Associated Press, for providing this information! Read more: http://www.seattlepi.com/news/article/Colvilles-worry-that-wolves-will-hurt-hunting-2250962.php#ixzz1cw7oGCXM

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 Photo provided by

Rich Addicks for The New York Times, pro wolf rally in Montana.

“JACKSON, Mont. —  As a fourth-generation rancher, Dean B. Peterson has a complicated relationship with wolves.

In the 1880s, they preyed on his family’s livestock after his great-grandparents arrived as homesteaders along the Big Hole River. By the 1930s, wolves were nearly extinct as a result of traps and poisons. By the time Mr. Peterson was born in the 1960s, the traps had given way to nostalgic tales about how clever the wolves had been.

Growing up, he thrilled to the sight of any wolf and to the sound of an occasional nighttime howl. But as an adult, witnessing a rebound in the gray wolf population, he did not hesitate to shoot one when it passed behind his sons’ jungle gym and headed for the cattle pen.

“I do not dislike or hate the animal,” said Mr. Peterson, who calls wolves “an unreal species that God created.”

Instead, he resents the conservationists who pressed the federal government to reintroduce the gray wolf to the Northern Rockies in the mid-1990s. That decision was shoved “down our throat with a plunger,” he said.

Yet the dynamic between ranchers and conservationists has begun to change, and Mr. Peterson is surprised to find himself acting as a grudging mediator.

The turning point came early this year as lawmakers from some Western states were demanding that the government remove the gray wolf from the endangered species list, and cede control of the animal in Montana and Idaho to state governments. In April, they succeeded by attaching a rider to a budget bill.

Aghast, some environmental groups had a moment of reckoning. Had they gone too far in using the Endangered Species Act as a cudgel instead of forging compromises with ranchers?

So a handful began reaching out to ranchers, offering them money and tools to fend off wolves without killing them. And some ranchers, mindful that tough federal restrictions could be reimposed if wolf numbers dwindle again, have been listening. Tentative partnerships are cropping up, and a few that already existed are looking to expand.

Working through Mr. Peterson, People and Carnivores, a new nonprofit group that promotes “co-existence,” has built a five-mile, $15,000 electric fence adorned with flags to protect calves on a neighbor’s property. This summer, it helped pay for a mounted rider to patrol 20 square miles of grazing land shared by three ranches near Mr. Peterson’s as a deterrent.

“A lot of my neighbors think I am wet behind the ears to take money from these people,” said Mr. Peterson, who has not yet accepted aid for himself. “But the wolf is here to stay now, and my feeling is that those people who want it here should share the costs.”

The conflict dates back generations, but tensions soared in 1995 and 1996, when the government reintroduced 66 gray wolves in Idaho and in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming. The goal was to restore balance to the regional ecosystem: after the wolves died out, elk and coyote populations had increased alarmingly. Elk herds were destroying large tracts of vegetation, and coyotes had reduced second-tier predators like badgers.

The federal Fish and Wildlife Service set a minimum population goal of some 150 wolves, plus 15 breeding pairs, in Idaho, Wyoming and Montana. To their surprise, the wolves hit those targets in just seven years and spread beyond the wilderness areas.

Livestock kills began to climb, and the ranchers grew angry. They even blamed the wolves for cows’ weight loss. “They come off the pasture on average about 100 pounds lighter than before there were wolves in the area,” Mr. Peterson said. “They spend so much time looking around, they don’t have time to eat.”

By 2007, the total number of wolves in the three states was 1,513. Surveying the evidence, the Fish and Wildlife Service sought that year to have the animal “delisted” under the Endangered Species Act. But conservationists sued to block that move, saying Wyoming lacked an adequate management plan. A federal court in Missoula, Mont., agreed.

In 2009, the Fish and Wildlife Service tried again to remove wolves from federal protection in all areas except in Wyoming. The court would not allow it, setting the stage for a revolt by lawmakers and this year’s unusual Congressional vote. The Interior Department then brokered a similar compromise in Wyoming.

Wolf hunts began in Idaho and Montana at the end of the summer. Montana set a quota of 220 wolves to be killed, or 25 percent of the state’s total population; the hunting tags sold swiftly, which some attributed to pent-up rage among the ranchers.

The backlash led some environmentalists to question their approach. “I personally look back and say there were a number of things that conservationists did that were not effective and which blew up on us,” said Lisa Upson, executive director of Keystone Conservation, a Montana-based nonprofit group that offers ranchers help with nonlethal control measures. “Now we have to live with this horrible precedent.”

So her group and others are pouring energy into training mounted riders to fend off wolves. They are promoting husbandry techniques that allow calves to grow stronger in penned areas before grazing on the range. Drawing on a folk wisdom that dates from medieval times, they have hung lines of red flags along pastures to deter wolves from approaching.

Most acknowledge that such measures are not a panacea. Michael D. Jimenez, the wolf recovery coordinator for the Fish and Wildlife Service outside Jackson, Wyo., says federal and state agencies have tried guard dogs, noise aversion (cannons or sirens set off by motion detectors) and “scent aversion,” or placing wolf urine and scat on trees, for years. “Each works in some circumstances,” Mr. Jimenez said, “but are not necessarily a match for a robust wolf population.”

And ranchers may not embrace such tactics. Once, after Ms. Upson thought she had talked some ranchers in the Upper Ruby Valley in Montana into sharing half the cost of a mounted summer rider, she found that they had used the money to pay for fuel for helicopters dispatched for wolf shootings.

Tensions between conservationists and ranchers in the Big Hole area have run especially high. Two summers ago, wolves took about a dozen calves from Mr. Peterson’s herd as it grazed in the mountains. He complained to the Department of Agriculture’s Wildlife Services agency, which responded by shooting only one wolf.

In Mr. Peterson’s view, that was hardly a solution. He says the government’s response has been hampered by too many rules and too little money. Ranchers are often asked by wolf hunters to pay up to $350 an hour for the helicopter fuel, he said.

If wolves are going to be part of the landscape,Mr. Peterson decided, he wants ranchers to get their share of the money “the people in Los Angeles and New York send” to conservationists to find solutions.

So he will continue to work with environmentalists and try to persuade his neighbors to do the same.“I think I should be able to shoot on sight on my land, no questions asked,” he said, but “I am willing to do my part to try and adapt.”

**Special thanks to “The New York Times” for providing this information!  (http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/05/science/earth/conflict-over-wolves-yields-new-dynamic-between-ranchers-and-conservationists.html?_r=2)

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By On November 2, 2011
 
According to Senator Max Baucus drone aircraft could potentially be used to kill predators.

“Our troops rely on this type of technology every day and there is enormous future potential in border security, agriculture, and wildlife and predator management” – Senator Max Baucus (D-MT) (BY THE WAY, MAX CAN BE REACHED AT http://baucus.senate.gov/?p=contact!!)

The developers of the drone say that they can sense the difference between a wolf and a coyote and that they could be used to determine how many wolves are in an area. We already know that they can be used to kill people and destroy buildings.”

First drone made in Montana tested south of Columbia Falls
by KARL PUCKETT – Great Falls Tribune

**Special thanks to “The Wildlife News” for providing this information.

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