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Archive for October, 2013


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George Wuerthner, Author

“WOLF KILLING MAKES MOCKERY OF NORTH AMERICAN MODEL OF WILDLIFE CONSERVATION

Many state wildlife agencies and organizations promote the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation (NAMWC) as a guiding philosophy for management.  There are seven major themes to the model. Despite the promotion of NAMWC, there are many apparent contradictions between the ideal and how wildlife is actually managed by state wildlife agencies.

SEVEN THEMES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN MODEL OF WILDLIFE CONSERVATION

  1. One of the most important ideas articulated by the NAMWC is that wildlife is a public trust and must be managed for all citizens. No one can “own” wildlife.
  2. Commercial hunting of wildlife is prohibited (but not trapping which is one of the obvious contradictions).
  3. Public participation is essential in development of wildlife management policies.
  4. The recognition that many wildlife species are of international importance, therefore, Americans have an obligation and responsibility to manage wildlife as an international heritage.
  5. Science should be used to articulate management policies.
  6. A philosophical and legal ban on wasteful and frivolous killing of wildlife.
  7. Hunting is a legitimate use of wildlife.

There are many good aspects of the NAMWC. However, just as the authors of the Declaration of Independence declared all “men are created equal”, and the United States has not fully lived up to this commendable goal, there are aspects of wildlife management policy that state wildlife agencies advocate that do not live up to the admirable goals of the NAMWC. Nowhere is this more obvious than the attitudes and policies directed towards predators like wolves.

THE INFLUENCE OF HUNTERS ON WILDLIFE POLICY

NAMWC proponents are quick to promote the idea that recreational hunters “saved” wildlife, and are the primary interest group in promoting wildlife conservation.

There is some truth to the assertion. Enlightened hunters like Theodore Roosevelt, George Bird Grinnell, Gifford Pinchot and others joined together to form the Boone and Crockett Club that among other things promoted recreational hunting to counter the destructive effects of market hunting and unrestricted subsistence hunting. They promoted the idea of the “fair chase” and the “trophy” hunt to counter unrestricted hunting. To facilitate such hunting ethics the Boone and Crockett Club promoted restrictions on how many animals could be killed, season of hunting and other changes that once implemented did result in a recovery of so called “game” species like elk and deer.

It should also be noted, however, that these early hunter/conservationists like Grinnell and Roosevelt were also some of the strongest proponents for creation of national parks and wildlife refuges that were closed to hunting. That is a position that is missing today from many hunting organizations and state wildlife agencies who almost uniformly oppose creation of new parks or other preserves if hunting is excluded.

In addition, advocates of the NAMWC argue that since hunters are the major financial supporters of wildlife management, they deserve significant voice in management policy. In fact, most state wildlife agencies, though by law are required to manage wildlife as a public trust for all citizens, tend to make their decisions  that favor species that hunters and fishers value.

Certainly hunters, through their purchase of licenses and tags are also one the major source of funding for state wildlife agencies formerly known as Fish and Game Departments. And state wildlife agencies tend to “dance with the one that brung ya.” In other words, they respond to the opinions of hunters to the exclusion of other wildlife enthusiasts.

However, all taxpayers (which includes hunters of course) in general pay for habitat acquisition, and protection of wildlife through their support of public lands where a significant majority of all wildlife resides as well as payment for programs like the Conservation Reserve Program which promotes habitat protection on private lands. Many environmental laws that ultimately protect and preserve wildlife like the Endangered Species Act, Clean Water Act, and others are supported and funded by the general public.

One of the major weaknesses of the current polities of state agencies is the bias towards huntable wildlife. Some 99% of all other wildlife is ignored and suffers benign neglect, or worse. In many instances, the active management and enhancement of huntable species comes at the expense of other wildlife that are negatively impacted by species of interest to hunters. For instance, wild boars are commonly sustained by state wildlife agencies because hunters like to pursue them. Yet these wild pigs root up vegetation, prey on native species like salamanders, and otherwise degrade native wildlife populations. For this reason the National Park Service seeks to limit or remove wild boars from its lands, all the while state wildlife agencies are thwarting their efforts by transplanting and otherwise seeking to enhance boar hunting opportunities.

STATE WILDLIFE AGENCIES VIOLATE MAIN THEMES OF NAMWC

Clearly, however, many state agencies promote activities that violate these main themes and are detrimental to wildlife in general.  For instance, prairie dogs are regularly blown away by some to see the “red mist” of their blood hanging in the sky. This killing of prairie dogs is ostensibly justified by some to rid the land of “vermin” or animals that conflict with say ranchers or farmers.  Yet numerous studies have documented the importance of prairie dogs in supporting many other wildlife species from blackfooted ferret to burrowing owls.

The stocking of streams and lakes with exotic but popular “game” fish has often harmed native fish species and other wildlife. For instance, the practice of stocking formerly fishless high elevation lakes has been shown to decimate frogs and salamanders residing in those waters.

The transplanting of exotic game species like mountain goats into ranges with no history of the goats has led to overgrazing and impoverishment of alpine flora in some cases.

These are only a few of the examples of policies commonly employed by state wildlife agencies that are detrimental to biodiversity and ecosystem function.

However, perhaps the most significant and obvious conflict between the goals of the NAMWC and actual behavior of state agencies has to do with management of predators, particularly bears, cougars, coyotes and wolves. State wildlife agencies have a financial conflict of interest that makes it impossible for them to manage predators with regards to the wider public values. In most instances, hunters perceive predators as detrimental to hunting—even though there is plenty of evidence that predators seldom depress wildlife populations across the broader landscape. As a result of the funding mechanisms whereby state agencies rely on hunter purchase of hunting tags to maintain operations, these bureaucracies are not going to promote predators in the face of opposition from hunters.

This leads to obvious conflicts with the NAMWC prohibition against the frivolous killing and waste of wildlife.

Given that few hunters actually consume coyotes, wolves, cougars, and except for a few individuals, even bears, it is obviously a “waste” of wildlife to shoot or trap these animals just for “fun.”

Worse, these policies tend to ignore the growing body of evidence that suggests a significant ecological importance for these animals in maintaining ecosystem health. For instance, in some instances, fear of predators will change the behavior of herbivores like elk and deer, forcing them to use different habitat, for instance, avoiding heavy browsing of riparian areas. This in turn has been shown to increase habitat for songbirds and improve aquatic ecosystems for fish.

There are also social effects from the killing of predators. For instance, older and dominant male cougars have large territories they patrol. They will kill young male cougars that trespass in these territories to reduce competition. Thus the death of a dominant male cougar can permit younger less experienced cougars to occupy a territory. Inexperienced cougars are more likely to attack livestock, thus leading to greater human conflicts.

Trapping of predators or other animals is obviously a commercialization of wildlife. Why should a trapper have the exclusive “right” to kill say otter or marten that the rest of society might value alive? Commercial outfitting is perilously close to commercialization of wildlife as well, especially in states where exclusive rights to kill wildlife in specific areas are granted.

Some proponents of hunting and trapping of predators like wolves or bears argue that if these animals are hunted and trapped, they will  garner greater  support among hunters for their persistence. But that is somewhat like arguing that if people could own slaves, they would have more incentive to give food and shelter to people who might otherwise be homeless if free.

DO WE NEED TO REMOVE PREDATOR MANAGEMENT FROM STATE WILDLIFE CONTROL?

One increasingly popular idea is to remove management authority for predators from state wildlife agencies. Some suggest transferring it to other state agencies with less obvious conflict of interest such as environmental or park agencies. Another idea is to change funding mechanisms for state wildlife agencies giving them more general state tax support under the theory that this would provide an incentive for state wildlife agencies to pay attention more to non-hunter concerns. A third option has been to keep management of predators under federal authority by the National Park Service which has a mandate to manage lands and wildlife for more natural conditions.

All of these ideas have their weaknesses and potential flaws. Whether any of these could ultimately alter the way predators are managed by government agencies is questionable. However, we definitely need to challenge the traditional collusion between hunters and state agencies if the NAWMC is realize its full potential for preserving and enhancing all wildlife conservation in the United States.”

**Special thanks to George Wuerthner is an ecologist and former hunting guide with a degree in wildlife biology, for providing this information (http://www.thewildlifenews.com/2013/10/14/north-american-model-of-wildlife-conservation-and-wolves/).

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Utah Wolf

Photo provided by “Standard Examiner” (http://www.standard.net/stories/2013/10/15/wolf-funding-audit-brings-out-political-divide)

By Antone Clark, Standard-Examiner correspondent

 Tue, 10/15/2013 – 1:54pm

“SALT LAKE CITY — A state audit of how funding was appropriated for a program to keep Canadian wolves out of the state raised some concerns about performance standards, but did little to solve the political divide the issue has generated.

State auditors released a seven-page review of legislative funding efforts to delist wolves in Utah on Tuesday, even as state officials claim the effort has been a success. A wildlife conservancy executive said the results have come in spite of state efforts, not because of them.

The findings of the audit, which covered four years and approximately $800,000 in state funds, were relatively minor. The audit recommended the Division of Wildlife resources amend its existing contract with Big Game Forever to include a more current plan for how the delisting effort will be carried out, replace the up-front contract payment with payments based on agreed upon performance standards and include the original requirement of maintaining accounting records available for state review.

The Legislature appropriated $300,000 on the issue in 2013, and another $300,000 is appropriated for the 2013-2014 fiscal year with BGF, a group claiming the wolf population in the northwest is growing and thinning the herds of elk and moose.

Big Game Forever is a political action group that spun off Sportsmen for Fish and Wildlife. The group’s website claims that before wolves were introduced in Idaho the population of elk was 20,000. Now that population is 1,700.

The same trend is shown in Yellowstone Park, where the population of elk was also estimated to be at approximately 20,000 before wolves were introduced in the park. It said the elk herd is now down to 6,500.

“One of the things not brought out in the audit are the results of the money we spent. It’s been unbelievably successful,” Michael Styler, executive director for the Department of Natural Resources, said of the program. “The money we have spent has been well spent. The results are far more than I dream we could have accomplished with that.”

Kirk Robinson, executive director of Western Wildlife Conservancy, has a different take on state spending to delist wolves. He said there is no evidence that BGF’s efforts or state funding has had any direct impact on keeping the wolves out of Utah. He said there is actually evidence the big game group lobbied against the effort to delist wolves, before they took the contract with the state’s Division of Wildlife Resources.

Sen. Gene Davis, D-Salt Lake, has been outspoken against the program and said the Legislature appropriated money for a cause the DWR didn’t ask to have funded. He worried the state doesn’t have enough accountability for how non-profits handle state funds.

House Speaker Rebecca Lockhart, R-Provo, asked Styler if the DWR has asked for funding and was told no and said it would have been inappropriate to push for funding, not included in the governor’s budget.

Senate President Wayne Niederhauser, R-Sandy, said the state appropriates money to non-profits all the time.

“The bottom line here is this is a political issue. A lot of people don’t want the wolves delisted and a lot of people want the wolves delisted. That’s a political discussion we need to debate,” Niederhauser said.”

**Special thanks to Antone Clark, Standard-Examiner correspondent, for providing this information!

 

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Wolves and Willows

“The top photo……from a paper by Ripple and his colleague Robert Beschta, was taken in 1991; the photo below is from 2002 and illustrates the recovery of streamside cottonwoods after just seven years of wolf presence.”…Todd Palmer and Rod Pringle

October 9, 2013

“Wolves are being slaughtered left and right but that’s not enough for the wolf haters. They still  find it necessary to visit this blog and spew their anti wolf dogma. The main talking points are centered around the sub species of wolf reintroduced in 95/96.  The story goes that Occidentalis is the big, bad Canadian wolf who replaced the sweet, loving Irremotus. That of course is BS. Yes, Occidentalis was the sub species reintroduced to Yellowstone and Central Idaho..but the myth that they are super wolves is absolutely ridiculous. Wolves are wolves, apex predators who are vital to healthy Eco-systems.

Unlike human hunters, who kill the strongest and genetically sound animals, wolves select out the weak, sick, old and yes sometimes the young, which  helps control ungulate populations. Wolves don’t hide behind AR-15′s, they go toe to toe with their prey, that’s fair chase. Human hunters use heavy firepower, traps, snares and every sneaky trick in the book to torture, abuse, maim and kill animals.  Trophy hunters have nothing to be proud of. NOTHING! They wouldn’t be such big, brave “hunters” if they were limited to using their bare hands. Fair chase my a@%.

Canus lupis Irremotus are very similar to Canis Lupus Occidentalis, who are a bit heavier but still both sub species are wolves. They live in packs, hunt cooperatively and put family above all else.

“Canis Lupus Irremotus…..This subspecies generally weighs 70–135 pounds (32–61 kg) and stands at 26–32 inches, making it one of the largest subspecies of the gray wolf in existence. It is a lighter colored animal than its southern brethren, the Southern Rocky Mountains wolf, with a coat that includes far more white and less black. In general, the subspecies favors lighter colors, with black mixing in among them”…..Wiki

Occidentalis has always lived on both sides of the Northern Rockies US/Canadian border, since wolves know no boundaries. Anyone who believes otherwise is living in a fantasy world.  The idea that Occidentalis is foreign to American soil is absurd. They’ve been crossing back and forth across that “border” for tens of thousands of years.

The burning question I have for the professors of wolfology is if Irremotus was loved so much, why the hell did their wolf hating forefathers try to wipe them out?  Of course  attempting to reason with the unreasonable is an exercise in futility, so I don’t expect a cogent response to that question.

The other favorite talking point of wolf haters is the Yellowstone elk herd. Wolves are accused of decimating the elk in Yellowstone, when in fact it was the feds who were killing Yellowstone elk for decades, in the wolf’s absence, due to the damage elk were wreaking in the park.

“Once the wolves were gone the elk began to take over. Over the next few years conditions of Yellowstone National Park declined drastically. A team of scientists visiting Yellowstone in 1929 and 1933 reported, “The range was in deplorable conditions when we first saw it, and its deterioration has been progressing steadily since then.” By this time many biologists were worried about eroding land and plants dying off. The elk were multiplying inside the park and deciduous, woody species such as aspen and cottonwood suffered from overgrazing. The park service started trapping and moving the elk and, when that was not effective, killing them. This killing continued for more than 30 years. This method helped the land quality from worsening, but didn’t improve the conditions. At times, people would mention bringing wolves back to Yellowstone to help control the elk population. The Yellowstone managers were not eager to bring back wolves, especially after having so successfully ridding the park of them, so they continued killing elk. In the late 1960s, local hunters began to complain to their congressmen that there were too few elk, and the congressmen threatened to stop funding Yellowstone. Killing elk was given up as a response, and then the population of the elk increased exponentially. With the rapid increase in the number of elk, the condition of the land again went quickly downhill. The destruction of the landscape affected many other animals. With the wolves gone, the population of coyotes increased dramatically, which led to an extreme decrease in the number of pronghorn antelope.However, the increase in the elk population caused the most profound change in the ecosystem of Yellowstone after the wolves were gone.”.…..Wiki

Elk numbers had swelled to over twenty thousand while wolves were away…a very bad thing for Yellowstone. As Aldo Leopold so eloquently states in Thinking Like A Mountain:

“I have lived to see state after state extirpate its wolves. I have watched the face of many a newly wolfless mountain, and seen the south-facing slopes wrinkle with a maze of new deer trails. I have seen every edible bush and seedling browsed, first to anaemic desuetude, and then to death. I have seen every edible tree defoliated to the height of a saddlehorn. Such a mountain looks as if someone had given God a new pruning shears, and forbidden Him all other exercise. In the end the starved bones of the hoped-for deer herd, dead of its own too-much, bleach with the bones of the dead sage, or molder under the high-lined junipers.

“I now suspect that just as a deer herd lives in mortal fear of its wolves, so does a mountain live in mortal fear of its deer. And perhaps with better cause, for while a buck pulled down by wolves can be replaced in two or three years, a range pulled down by too many deer may fail of replacement in as many decades. So also with cows. The cowman who cleans his range of wolves does not realize that he is taking over the wolf’s job of trimming the herd to fit the range. He has not learned to think like a mountain. Hence we have dust-bowls, and rivers washing the future into the sea.”

Do your homework wolf haters and stop parroting talking points drilled into your heads by the hunting and ranching cabal.”

**Special thanks to “Howling for Justice” for providing this information! (http://howlingforjustice.wordpress.com/2013/10/09/more-stupidity-from-the-fringe/)

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Wolf Zoo

(Photo Courtesy, N.C. Zoo)

“The North Carolina Zoo launches the first of several special events for the month of October on Saturday, Oct. 12, with “Howl-O-Ween,” a celebration of the zoo’s red wolves and the effort to save this highly endangered species.

Red wolf keepers will be meeting visitors and answering questions about the wolves at 1:30 p.m. at the Red Wolf Exhibit in the zoo’s North America exhibit region. In addition, demonstrations of Native American dancing, storytelling and art will be held in the park’s Junction Plaza at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.

Other events will include face painting for kids from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the North America Plaza. The mascot from Greensboro radio station WPAW 93.1 “The Wolf” will also be at the North America entrance from 10 a.m. to noon.

Later October events will include “Batology,” a special program on bats to be presented in the zoo’s Sonora Desert exhibit the weekend of Oct. 19-20 and “Boo at the Zoo” the park’s annual Halloween carnival for kids slated for the weekend of Oct. 26-27.

All special events are included in the regular zoo admission of $12 for adults, $8 for children 2-12 and $10 for senior citizens 62-plus. The zoo is located on Zoo Parkway (N.C. 159) six miles southeast of Asheboro off U.S. 64 and U.S. 220. Operating hours April through November are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. For more information visit the zoo’s website at www.nczoo.org or call toll-free at 1-800-488-0444.”

**Special thanks to “The Pilot.com” for providing this information! (http://www.thepilot.com/news/zoo-kicks-off-special-events-with-howl-o-ween-saturday/article_3f3928cc-3113-11e3-a585-0019bb30f31a.html)

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OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

IDAHO FISH AND GAME CONSERVATION OFFICERS COREY TAYLOR (LEFT) AND CRAIG MICKELSON POSE WITH AN POACHED MULE DEER BUCK SEIZED DURING OPERATION BORDER JUMPER. (Photo credit given to MATT O’CONNELL, IDFG)

By Andy Walgamott, on October 9th, 2013

(IDAHO DEPARTMENT OF FISH & GAME)

“An early start to the mule deer hunting season in the wrong state should prove costly to several Oregonians too impatient to wait for opening day or to learn some basic geography. Five individuals now face court appearances and potentially heavy fines for their respective roles in two unrelated poaching incidents.

Acting on tips from the public, Fish and Game conservation officer Craig Mickelson organized a focused enforcement effort (code name: Operation Border Jumper) in the Owyhee desert during the last weekend of September. Using “Bucky,” the stuffed, robotic deer, Mickelson and his team staked out the Succor Creek area in remote Owyhee County, just east of the Oregon/Idaho border and waited – but not for long. In the early morning hours of September 28th, a group of four Oregon “hunters” rolled up the road but failed to see the decoy deer standing just a few feet away. Later that morning, the group came back down the road and spotted the decoy. One of the party exited the truck, firing six shots at the decoy deer. When the shooting stopped, the group was interviewed and 13 citations were issued, including three citations related to an illegal 4 x 4 mule deer buck poached that morning just shortly after the group missed seeing the decoy.

The four men were charged with wildlife violations as follows:

Martine Mills (47) of Cove, Oregon was cited for attempting to take a deer during closed season, attempting to take simulated wildlife, possession/transportation of a closed season deer, hunting without a valid Idaho hunting license and hunting without a valid Idaho deer tag. He was also issued a warning for an open container of alcohol. Thomas Rager (66) of Cove, Oregon was cited for possession/transportation of a closed season deer and hunting without a valid Idaho hunting license.

Justin Cernazanu (29) of Cove, Oregon was cited for possession/transportation of a closed season deer. Eugene Mills (69) of Nyssa, Oregon was cited for hunting without a valid hunting license.

Before daylight the following morning, officers moved five miles south and set up the decoy deer along Idaho’s Palmer Creek. Around mid-morning, they watched as James Hayhurst (65) of Jordan Valley, Oregon encouraged his eight-year-old grandson to shoot at the decoy deer. While the youngster was not charged, Hayhurst was cited for hunting without a valid Idaho hunting license, hunting without a valid Idaho deer tag, attempting to take simulated wildlife and attempting to take a deer during closed season. The rifle used in the case was seized as evidence.

All five suspects will appear in Owyhee County Court in Murphy, Idaho on Monday, October 28th.

Mickelson attributes Operation Border Jumper’s success in large part to the public’s willingness to report suspicious behavior.

“We had reports last year that one or more Oregon groups were slipping into Idaho prior to the mule deer season opener and poaching deer,” Mickelson noted. “We held onto that information and used it this year to bring these individuals to justice.”

Persons with any information about suspected poaching activity are encouraged to call the Citizens against Poaching (CAP) hotline at 1-800-632-5999, twenty-four hours a day. Callers can remain anonymous and cash rewards are often paid for information leading to the successful conclusion of a case.”

**Special thanks to Andy Walgamott, Idaho Fish and Game, for providing this information! (http://nwsportsmanmag.com/headlines/operation-border-jumper-nabs-oregon-hunters-who-allegedly-poached-buck-shot-at-idaho-robodeer/)

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Bull Elk

Photo credit goes to Perry Backus, Ravalli Republic

March/2012

“DARBY – The cow elk captured and collared last year in the southern reaches of the Bitterroot Valley have done their part to create a map for researchers to study the animals’ migratory patterns.

Some of the early results have been surprising.

One elk traveled from the East Fork of the Bitterroot almost to Wise River and back in the course of the year. Others hardly moved at all.

The effort is part of an ongoing three-year Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks and University of Montana study looking at elk and predator dynamics in the area.

The 44 elk were fitted with GPS collars that recorded their location every two hours. At the end of the year, the collars were designed to fall off the animals’ necks during the second week of January.

When the collars hit the ground, they transmitted a mortality signal that allowed researchers to locate and retrieve the devices.

In some cases that retrieval proved challenging, said lead researcher Kelly Proffitt.

“We had some that dropped off at high elevations, which made it more difficult for us to retrieve them,” Proffitt said. “I was a little surprised that they were that high this time of year, but we are having a little milder winter.”

With the collars collected so far, Proffitt said the most surprising move was the cow elk that traveled to Fish Trap Creek in the Big Hole, which is almost to Wise River.

“We knew that there would be some movement between the Big Hole and (hunting district) 270, but we didn’t know for sure how far they traveled,” she said. “That was more movement than I was expecting to see.”

Most of elk captured in the East Fork that weren’t on the CB Ranch migrated south into the Lost Trail Pass area or into the Big Hole for the summer months.

Only one of the five animals captured on the CB Ranch migrated very far from that property during the summer months.

“The others stayed there pretty much year round,” Proffitt said. “We really weren’t sure what to expect. For the most part, those animals stayed put.”

So far, researchers have only been able to collect three radio collars from elk in the West Fork. None of those migrated into Idaho during any part of the year.

“It’s really hard to say much about the West Fork at this point,” Proffitt said. “Hopefully, we’ll get five or six more radios out in that area later on this year.”

Of the cow elk collared last year, only two died from predation. A mountain lion killed one and it appeared that wolves killed another. Four died from natural causes.

Researchers collared a new contingent of 40 cow elk this winter that will be tracked over the course of this year.

Proffitt said the distribution of the collars was moved a little bit in an effort to fill in some blank spots on the map from this year.

The research team is continuing to collect information about predation on elk calves.

The team captured and tagged 97 elk calves this year.

By late February, 38 of those calves were found dead. Mountain lions had killed 13. Black bear and wolves had each killed four.

There was not enough evidence for researchers to make a call at the kill site for another 11 of the calves that were found dead.

“We saw a small increase in wolf kills in the West Fork as we came into winter,” Proffitt said. “There has been steady predation by lions throughout the study period.”

**Special thanks to PERRY BACKUS – Ravalli Republic, for providing this information!  (http://missoulian.com/news/state-and-regional/results-of-bitterroot-elk-study-surprise-scientists/article_45ebd52c-7231-51c0-b301-6fbbacb5f7e3.html)

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Wolf Bite

Noah Graham, 16, of Solway, Minn., demonstrates how he reached back and fought off a wolf that had clamped down on his head at a campground near Lake Winnibigoshish. (Photo credit:  Monte Draper, Bemidji Pioneer via AP)

“Tests results show that a wolf that bit a 16-year-old boy’s head at a northern Minnesota campground had severe deformities as well as brain damage, which likely explains the reason for the “unprecedented” freak attack, wildlife specialists said Thursday.

DNA tests results also confirmed that the gray wolf that was trapped and killed two days after the late-night attack is in fact the same wolf that bit the teen. The wolf tested negative for rabies.

All of that is a relief for the family of Noah Graham, the Solway, Minn., teen who was bit last month while lying on the ground, but not inside a tent, at a Chippewa National Forest campground near Lake Winnibigoshish. “We all felt 98 percent sure that was the animal,” Noah’s father, Scott Graham, said Thursday after Department of Natural Resources officials called him with the test results. “My concern was that the wolf was diseased and Noah could contract something. But that wasn’t the case.”

The rare encounter last month was Minnesota’s first documented wild wolf attack on a human that resulted in a significant injury.

The day before the attack, the wolf had been seen in and around the campground, said Dan Stark, the DNR’s large carnivore specialist. “It bit into a tent. Punctured an air mattress. It was standing on a picnic table — things you wouldn’t expect a wild wolf to do. He was never aggressive, and he never approached anybody.

“So why did it bite somebody? Whether it actually knew what it was biting into is probably unlikely. It was biting something on the ground, and it happened to bite into somebody’s head,” Stark said.

Results from the wolf necropsy conducted by the University of Minnesota Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory show the wolf, estimated to be 1½ years old, suffered from a severe facial deformity, dental abnormalities and brain damage caused by infection. Anibal Armien, university pathologist and veterinarian, said it’s likely the wolf experienced a traumatic injury as a pup and those injuries developed into abnormalities that caused the brain damage.

Those deformities and abnormalities likely hampered its ability to effectively capture wild prey, said Michelle Carstensen, DNR wildlife health program supervisor. The wolf’s stomach contained only fish spines and scales.

The wolf’s problems also likely predisposed it to be less wary of people and human activities than what’s normally observed in healthy wild wolves, Carstensen said.

That “strongly explains” why the animal was behaving the way it was and why it was searching for food around the campground, Stark said. “It’s surprising that a wolf in this condition survived to this point given its reduced ability to survive in the wild.”

Attacking a human is “definitely abnormal and unusual,” Stark said. “Occasionally … we get nuisance complaints of wolves in people’s yards and interactions with pets, but rarely is there any aggression toward people. This kind of thing is unprecedented.”

Stark said there have been two other attacks by wolves in Minnesota but neither resulted in injury. One happened to a logger in the 1970s, and the other was to a rabbit hunter a decade later.

The Solway teen suffered multiple puncture wounds and a laceration to his head that required staples. He also received rabies shots.

“He’s pretty healed up,” his father said while walking through the woods partridge hunting with his two young daughters. “I don’t think [the attack] is going to curb any of our camping or hunting.”

But Noah Graham may find himself looking over his shoulder every now and then when he walks in the woods, his father said.

The teen often walked through the woods in the early morning darkness to his deer stand. “He never used a flashlight,” his father said. “But I don’t think he’ll do that anymore. He’ll probably use a flashlight.”

** Special thanks to Mary Lynn Smith, Star Tribune, for providing this information! (http://www.startribune.com/local/225392642.html)

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Wolf-OR7-DFG-Shinn

Photo credit owned by Richard Shinn.

 

Public Hearing – California

“Our best chance to stop this reckless plan from going through will be by showing up in droves at these public hearings and speaking out on behalf of wolves! Even if you would prefer not to testify, your presence will make a huge difference and will show how strongly Americans support wolves! Join us as we gather before the hearing to learn about the proposals, rally with fellow supporters and get tips on how to testify. Then we’ll head to the hearing together and ensure that FWS hears our voices loud and clear!

Wednesday, October 2nd Clarion Inn, Comstock Room 1401 Arden Way Sacramento, CA 95815 Pre-hearing event starts at 3:30 pm

RSVP for the Pre-Hearing Event >

Need a ride to the event? Use the password “defenders” to log in to the event at eRideShare.

Want help writing your testimony? Check out our talking points to get the basics on the flaws in this proposal to delist gray wolves across most of the U.S. Talking Points on the Gray Wolf Delisting Proposal >

Learn more about how public hearings work and what these events are usually like. What to Expect at the Hearing >
Training Call Monday, September 30th 7:30 to 8:30 pm PT Join Defenders’ staff and fellow wolf supporters for a brief training session in preparation for the hearing. Learn about the ins and outs of a Fish and Wildlife Service public hearing, and how to prepare effective written and oral testimony to present to key decision makers.  During the call participants will:

  • Learn how to craft a compelling and personal testimony;
  • Learn about the rules and details of the hearing;
  • Find out about the activities we have planned for the hearings; and
  • Be able to ask questions about the hearing”

**Special thanks to “Defenders of Wildlife” for providing this information!

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My first tattoo; the howling wolf!

Public Hearing – New Mexico

“This is the ONLY public hearing that will also address the Fish and Wildlife Service’s woefully inadequate proposed rule changes for critically endangered Mexican gray wolves, a subspecies of the gray wolf. Please be sure to study both sets of talking points so that we can better ensure a future for both types of America’s wolves.

Our best chance to secure a future for Mexican gray wolves and stop the reckless delisting of gray wolves will be by showing up in droves at these public hearings and speaking out on behalf of wolves! Even if you would prefer not to testify, your presence will make a huge difference and will show how strongly Americans support wolves! Join us as we gather before the hearing to learn about the proposals, rally with fellow supporters and get tips on how to testify. Then we’ll head to the hearing together and ensure that FWS hears our voices loud and clear!

When:  Friday, October 4th

Where: Embassy Suites, Sierra Ballroom 1000 Woodward Place NE Albuquerque, NM 87102

Pre-hearing event starts at 3:30 pm

RSVP for the Pre-Hearing Event >

Need a ride? Use the password “defenders” to log in to the event at eRideShare.

Want help with your testimony? Check out the talking points below Talking Points on the Gray Wolf Delisting Proposal > Talking Points on the Mexican Gray Wolf Recovery Proposal >

Learn more about how public hearings work and what these events are usually like >

 

Training Call Tuesday, October 1st 7:30 – 8:30 pm MT Join Defenders staff and fellow wolf supporters for a brief training session in preparation for the hearing. Learn about the ins and outs of a Fish and Wildlife Service public hearing, and how to prepare effective written and oral testimony to present to key decision makers.  During the call participants will:

  • Learn how to craft a compelling and personal testimony;
  • Learn about the rules and details of the hearing;
  • Find out about the activities we have planned for the hearings; and
  • Be able to ask questions about the hearing”

**Special thanks to “Defenders of Wildlife” https://www.defenders.org/national-wolf-emergency/public-hearing-new-mexico, for providing this information!

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