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George Wuerthner is an ecologist and former hunting guide with a degree in wildlife biology and writes the following:

“I recently attended the wolf hearings held by the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks Commission in Helena.

The commission is considering initiation of a trapping season, as well as eliminating quotas on the number of wolves that may be killed. The goal is to significantly reduce the state’s wolf population which currently numbers somewhere in the vicinity of 600 animals.

The commission will make a final decision on the matter by July.

At the hearing I felt like I was witnessing a modern day version of Harper Lee’s famous book To Kill a Mockingbird. In that novel the mockingbird is symbolic of innocence animals and by extension, innocence citizens destroyed by thoughtless and ignorant people.

In Lee’s novel the main character, lawyer Atticus Finch, is one of the few residents of the southern community of Maycomb committed to racial equality and fairness. He agrees to defend a black man (a mockingbird in human society) wrongly accused of raping a poor southern girl. For his efforts both Atticus and his children suffer abuse and ridicule from the community. Worse, in the end, Atticus is unable to overcome the racial prejudice of his community members and win acquittal for the black man who was convicted by public opinion rather than facts.

Even the otherwise descent people of that community were unable to put aside the cultural biases they had grown up with.

In a similar way I believe the wolf has become a symbolic scapegoat for many otherwise descent Montanans who, for whatever reason, cannot overcome the cultural biases against wolves.

I do not want to overstate this analogy. Wolves can and do kill elk and deer as well as livestock. They can sometimes even depress elk and deer populations. Yet for many who testified at the commission hearings, it is clear that killing wolves symbolizes more than just a predator that may occasionally create conflicts with human goals. When one can’t lash out at the real and/or imaginary forces that are creating fear or anger, someone or something else is punished. What was termed in my college animal behavior classes as “displaced” aggression.

In Montana there is displaced aggression being heaped upon the wolf. For some with the most extreme opinions in Montana, the wolf actually represents the distance federal government or worse a UN global plot to subjugate rural America that they fear is controlling their lives. When they kill wolves, they are lashing out at these institutions they fear.

And like the mythical towns people in Maycomb Alabama whose racial prejudice and lynch mob mentally convicted the black man Tom Robinson of imagined crimes based on dubious evidence, the wolf has been convicted and sentenced in the court of public opinion—at least the portion of the public I observed at the hearings.

There is no other way to explain the depth of hatred and fear I witnessed. Any rational examination of the evidence against the wolf would not justify the death penalty that I fear will be imposed by the Commission.

Over and over again I heard many of the same old inaccurate and often exaggerated justifications for wolf reductions. Among them is the assertion that wolves are decimating the state’s elk and deer herds and destroying hunter opportunity.

Yet in 1992 when the state completed its elk management plan, and three years before wolves were reintroduced, there were an estimated 89,000 elk in Montana. By 2007 an article in Montana Outdoors proclaimed there may be as many as 150,000 elk in the state. And a recent communication I had with Fish, Wildlife and Parks biologist put the current number at around 140,000 animals.

Even as I write this commentary, the headlines in today’s papers proclaimed “FWP: Surveys Show Big Game Populations Bouncing Back.”

Any reasonable person looking at those numbers would conclude that the presence of wolves is not a threat to hunting opportunities. Indeed, if I wanted to be as irrational as many of the hunters I heard at the hearing, I could suggest a correlation where the presence of wolves appears to increase elk numbers and hunting opportunities across a state.

Similarly, accusations that wolves are a threat to the state’s livestock industry are equally as dubious. Last year according to the Montana Dept of Livestock, more than 140,000 cattle and sheep died from various causes including poisonous plants, disease, and other factors. Out of these 140,000 animals, wolves were responsible for less than a hundred deaths.

This is not to suggest that the loss of any livestock is not an economic blow to the individual rancher, but can anyone seriously argue that wolves are a universal threat to the livestock industry that justifies state-wide persecution?

And there are many positive benefits to the presence of a large wolf population that were rarely mentioned or acknowledged at the hearing. For instance, temporary or even sustained decrease in elk numbers can lead to a reduction in browsing on riparian vegetation like willows and cottonwood along streams. Healthy riparian areas create more food for beaver. Beaver ponds improve water storage and stream flow, reducing floods—which may be a huge net economic benefit to society.

Healthy and functioning streams also equal more trout and other fish, improving fishing opportunities and of course the bottom line for businesses that depend on serving the fishing public.

Predation by wolves can also reduce the occurrence of diseases that are a potential threat to both livestock and wildlife. For instance, the spread of disease like chronic wasting disease and brucellosis can have economic consequences to the livestock industry as well as elk and deer hunting. Wolves by their presence tend to reduce disease across a herd by dispersing elk and deer as well as by preying on sick animals.

Collectively these positive economic benefits to society and even to the livestock industry may far outnumber any negative costs associated with wolf livestock losses. If we are going to manage wolves so they full fill their ecological function as top predators, one can’t kill the majority of wolves off and expect to maintain these positive ecological benefits.

Even more troubling to me is that Montanans seem to want to use brute force instead of their brains to deal with wolf conflicts. A great deal of recent science on the social ecology of wolves as well as the positive benefits of predators on ecosystems is largely ignored by current management policies.

There is a growing body research that suggests increased persecution of predators is likely to increase, not decrease, human conflicts. Even if you lower the wolf population, you may actually increase the human conflicts.

Widespread and aggressive indiscriminate killing of wolves or any other predator may have unintended consequences. Hunting and trapping tends to skew predator populations towards younger age classes; Younger animals are less skillful hunters. They are the very animals most likely to wander into the backyards of people’s homes or come into a ranch yard to nab a young calf or lamb. Due to their inexperience and lack of hunting skill, younger animals are more inclined to seek out livestock as prey.

In addition, a wolf population suffering from heavy mortality leads to break up of packs where breeding is usually limited to the dominant male and female. Fragmenting the population into many smaller packs can result in more breeding females and often results in a higher survival of pups. In a very short time the population rebounds, prompting endless calls for more persecution.

Predator control can even potentially lead to greater kill of elk and deer. Smaller packs with many pups to feed are unable to guard their kills against other scavengers. When an adult kills an elk or deer, by the time it can carry meat back to the den and return, much of the carcass may be stripped of any remaining meat, leaving that animal no choice but to kill another elk or deer. Smaller packs may in the end also produce more pups—and like teenagers everywhere—the greater food demands of growing pups may lead to the killing of more prey and/or livestock.

And since many wolves co-exist with livestock, the indiscriminate and random removal of wolves by hunting and trapping can actually create a void that may be filled by other wolves that may be more inclined to prey on livestock.

There are definitely conflicts that sometimes arise between wolves and people. However, the intelligent way to respond is through the surgical removal of individual animals or packs and adoption of non-lethal animal husbandry practices.

For instance, after California passed a state-wide ban on use of traps and poison to control predators, Marin County Commissioners voted to replace lethal measures with non-lethal methods. The tax payer funds that previously went to lethal control were used instead to build fences, purchase guard dogs and lambing sheds. In the end there was a reduction in predator losses while at the same time, the county spent less funds than what it had previously spent on lethal predator control. A similar effort in Montana’s own Blackfoot Valley where dead carcasses which serve as an attractant for predators are promptly removed has also lead to a reduction in livestock /predator conflicts.

Such changes in policies demonstrate what is possible when people use their brains instead of their guns.

In the novel to Kill a Mockingbird, the indiscriminate killing of mockingbirds represented the unnecessary and thoughtless destruction of animals and humans based on old biases. The sad truth is that in Montana we are still killing symbolic mockingbirds by our archaic and irrational attitudes towards predators like the wolf.

George Wuerthner is a hunter, former Montana hunting guide and ecologist living in Helena, Montana.”

**Special thanks to http://www.thewildlifenews.com/2012/05/15/to-kill-a-mockingbird-2/ for providing this information!

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Posted: Sunday, May 13, 2012 12:15 am JODI HAUSEN, Chronicle Staff Writer

“Dissatisfied with state and federal agencies’ wolf management policies, Montana politicians are taking steps to ensure they have a say in those practices. Madison County commissioners recently passed a law placing a $100 bounty on any legally killed wolf. Jefferson and Ravalli counties passed resolutions obliging wildlife agencies to notify commissioners when considering changes to predator management policies in or near their jurisdictions. And now Gallatin County commissioners may follow suit. Some county residents, particularly livestock producers and hunting-related business owners, say they are losing money because of increased wolf populations preying on stock and game animals. Others argue that tourists come to Montana to see the wolves, benefiting the state economically, and that the predators control an elk population whose foraging has nearly depleted some riparian habitats. Caught in the middle are managers with Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, who have been criticized for not keeping wolves at bay. Gallatin County Commissioner Joe Skinner decided to explore the issue after hearing years of complaints about livestock depredation and reduced elk, deer and moose numbers. He insists the public meetings he’s leading in Gallatin County are designed to inform commissioners and are not a “witch hunt” for wolves or an attack on the state wildlife agency. “It’s not about challenging FWP,” Skinner said last week. “It’s about finding balance between predator and prey and predator and livestock producer. I think we can have both — some wolves on the landscape and hunting at the same time. But it doesn’t look like that’s happening the way it’s being managed right now.”

LOCAL LAWS

 The drive to pass local predator resolutions began after Montana legislators amended predator management laws in 2011. Republican State Sen. Debby Barrett, a rancher from Dillon, introduced the amendment that ensures state and federal agencies consult local governments in areas with large predators before making policy decisions. Though the National Environmental Policy Act and the Montana State Constitution already provide local governments with that opportunity, Barrett said her intent was to bring the issue to the forefront. “I wanted no doubt that the federal agencies that manage wildlife need to consult with” local authorities, she said. NEPA grants state and local governments “coordinating agency status” with federal agencies after local officials define their own management policies. Additionally, state agencies must take public comment when making policy decisions. “This just gives county government more input than just public comment,” Barrett said last week of her amendment. “It puts counties in front of agencies to listen to them so they can make meaningful decisions. When they make a decision, they will know how it will impact the county’s citizens.” Skinner admits the opportunity to coordinate with wildlife agencies has always existed and that the county has never done so. “But they’ve never sat down with us and explained to us what they were doing,” he added.

TOO MANY WOLVES 

After gray wolves were delisted in 2008, FWP was tasked with managing an annual hunt. “Montana agreed to 150 wolves or 15 breeding pairs, and we were supposed to write a wolf-management plan for when they were delisted,” Barrett said. “But before we could write it, the wolf population grew beyond the management amount.” Montana lawmakers say the state agency’s nascent management program has not done enough to cull canine predator numbers. “Granted FWP has only been at this a couple of years,” Skinner said. “But in a lot of people’s minds, they’re not being aggressive enough.” To address those concerns, FWP on Thursday tentatively approved a no-quota wolf-hunting season that will also permit trapping. Public comment on the proposal is being accepted until June 25. “It’s not an easy issue,” FWP wildlife manager Howard Burt said after the well-attended FWP commission hearing last Thursday. “It’s a situation where it’s really hard for anybody to be patient to see how this is going to play out,” he said. “This is a fairly new creature in our generation on the landscape again. How that animal is going to impact elk, moose and deer and how we’re going to manage that, we don’t have all the answers yet.”

NEWER THINKING

Meanwhile, one Idaho county is attempting to reduce wolf-livestock interactions with non-lethal methods. A full 82 percent of Blaine County falls under federal jurisdiction, and local County Commissioner Lawrence Schoen said his commission has been coordinating with federal wildlife agencies for years. However, when federal wildlife managers reintroduced wolves in 1995, they did so without notifying local governments, he said, perhaps because they knew how fierce the opposition would be. Schoen has been working with federal authorities and environmental groups to teach ranchers new ways to raise livestock while coexisting with wolves. Guard and herding animals, radio collaring with alarms, electric fencing, lights and cracker shots are being employed in Blaine County with the help of grants from Defenders of Wildlife and federal coffers. “When the tools are deployed properly, depredation is avoided,” Schoen said. But stock producers don’t exactly embrace the new methods, which cost money. Schoen counters that — like the adoption of GPS for farming — ranching practices change over time. And prevention is cheaper than losing cattle. “Ranchers’ first reactions are if the wolves weren’t here, we wouldn’t be having this conversation,” he said. “It’s already a bad situation if you have a loss. Why wait until you have a loss” to use a lethal deterrent when other wolves will just take that wolf’s place? Defenders of Wildlife Rocky Mountain regional director Mike Leahy said the feds should have a more significant role in helping ranchers, not county governments. “I think the federal government has a greater responsibility to help livestock producers to learn to live with large predators,” he said. “Because they have many years without wolves and grizzly bears on the landscape, and this is a transition period.”

STRANGLING A GOLDEN GOOSE 

Leahy believes Montana’s county commissioners are off track. “The commissioners are sending the wrong message to wildlife lovers,” he said. “Commissioners are threatening to strangle one of the golden gooses of this economy. “I don’t think the county needs the (county) government to protect us from large predators,” Leahy continued. “If they want to get involved in wildlife management, they should do it in a constructive way and work with county residents to reduce conflicts with wildlife.” But county commissioners, buoyed by Barrett’s legislative amendment, continue their efforts to have a say. Madison County Commissioner Dan Happel said he’s been working with other county commissioners and the Montana Association of Counties to create a statewide wolf management policy. “We’re doing it because we’re trying to show solidarity with Jefferson County and others that are trying to pass those sorts of policies,” he said. Barrett, who spoke of her ranching grandfather shooting wolves that were killing his horses, said FWP isn’t “keeping up with their end of the bargain.” “I believe our ancestors killed wolves for a reason,” she said. But even Barrett believes there’s a place for wolves in the West. “I don’t believe in a world without wolves,” she said. “You just need them in the right places at the right times. Montana is a huge state. There are places in Montana where we can have wolves and there won’t be conflicts. That’s what we agreed to.” Skinner said he’s trying to achieve a level of equilibrium, though it’s complicated. “I admit that isn’t just an environmental balance,” he said. “It’s also a political balance – what the people here are willing to put up with.”

*Special thanks to Bozeman Daily Chronicle for providing this information!

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THIS PHOTO IS OF JOSH BRANSFORD, PLEASED WITH THE SCENE GOING ON BEHIND HIM. Feel free to contact him at 23 HC 1 #23 Elk City, ID 83525, 208-842-2925, jbransford@fs.fed.us (however, do not threaten him, as we don’t want to stoop that low).

“Photos of dead and maimed wolves recently posted online have started a firestorm of controversy over renewed hunting and trapping of the once federally protected animals.
 
Environmental Action, a national environmental organization founded in 1970 that helped push for passage of the Endangered Species Act decades ago, has been leading an online campaign to build support for protecting wolves again. But this week they took their campaign, including grisly photos of bloodied and trapped wolves, to the streets of Washington, D.C., to provoke a response from politicians and regulators.
 
“Letting wolves be hunted and killed again was a political decision made by shallow political interests,” explained Director Drew Hudson. “We need to confront shallow politics with the real, gut-wrenching photos of what this policy means—that an iconic American species important to our ecosystems and our vision of the west  is being brutally hunted to extinction, again. Anyone who can look at these photos and do nothing is a coward, or worse a politician.”
 
The advertisement was funded by dozens of small donors who chipped in online after signing a petition to the President and Congress asking them to re-list the wolf as an endangered species.”

*Special thanks to Environmental Action for providing the text in this posting!

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Written by By Tom Robertson Minnesota Public Radio,

“Some Ojibwe in Minnesota are worried about the fate of the state’s wolf population as state lawmakers consider a hunting and trapping season for the animals.
Wolves were removed from the federal endangered species list last year, and that upsets some tribal members. For many Ojibwe, wolves are important to traditional culture. Some believe wolves are sacred, and they want to see protections continue.
A painting of two wolves hangs prominently on the living room wall in Mary Favorite’s home in Wauben on the White Earth Indian Reservation.
Favorite is a tribal elder and a member of the wolf clan. That means many in her large, extended family associate themselves very closely with the animal. Favorite considers wolves among her relatives.
“It’s very special to me. When I read that in the paper that they were thinking about… passing a law about killing the wolves,” Favorite said. “It broke my heart.”
Favorite remembers decades ago when gray wolves nearly disappeared. Now there are an estimated 3,000 gray wolves in Minnesota.
The Department of Natural resources proposes to let hunters and trappers kill 400 wolves this fall. Favorite hates the idea.
“I thought, ‘Oh my God,'” she said. “It’s like they want to come in here and they want to shoot my brothers and my sisters.”
It’s not just members of the wolf clan who are upset about a possible wolf hunting season. Favorite’s husband, Andy, is a historian and retired tribal college teacher. For traditional Ojibwe across the upper Midwest, wolves are sacred, Andy Favorite said.
“In our creation stories and a lot of our other legends, the wolf is very prominent. A lot of our spirits come in the form of these creatures, so it’s a very spiritual thing,” he said. “If the tribes have the spiritual moxie, they will step in and do something to protect the wolves.”
Some Minnesota tribes have already done that. In 2010, the Red Lake Band of Ojibwe was the first to adopt a wolf management plan. They designated the band’s 843,000 acres of land as a wolf sanctuary.

Red Lake is unique because it’s considered a closed reservation. That means most of the land is owned and controlled by the tribe.
In most of Minnesota’s other reservations, regulating hunting is more complicated because there’s a checkerboard of land ownership. Those tribes regulate what happens on tribal land, but the state regulates hunting licenses for state land or land owned by non-American Indians.
In February, tribal officials at White Earth passed a resolution banning hunting and trapping on tribal lands. The tribe will only allow a wolf hunt for specific ceremonial purposes, or if wolves are causing problems with livestock or humans. Tribal natural resource managers said it’s unclear how many wolves are on the reservation, but there are only a few known packs.
Other Minnesota tribes are drafting their own wolf policies.
Tribal activist Bob Shimek has been involved in the politics of wolves since the 1980s. He said many Ojibwe people believe there is a strong historic parallel between wolves and Indians that has been foretold in tribal legends‚ “what happens to one, happens to the other.” He compares bounties on wolves to government policies of the past that tried to exterminate American Indians.
“Indians and wolves have always been a political sore point here in America,” he said. “It has always been about clearing the howling wilderness of those savages and those wolves and making it safe for pilgrims and settlers.”
Shimek and others are unhappy the state has not consulted with the tribes about managing wolves.
DNR officials say they plan to talk with the tribes once the Legislature establishes a framework for a hunting season. Dan Stark, a large carnivore specialist for the DNR, said the goal is to balance wide-ranging interests in wolves. Farmers and ranchers who lose livestock to wolves support keeping the wolf population in check. In 2011, there were more than 100 verified complaints of wolves attacking livestock or pets.
There are also sporting groups that want a chance to hunt or trap wolves for recreation, Stark said.
“It’s a pretty emotional topic for a lot of people,” Stark said. “But I think that the wolf population in Minnesota is secure and we’re going to make sure that however this develops, that we have wolves in the state and that wolves continue to thrive.”
For Shimek, convincing the state to scrap plans for wolf hunting and trapping is an uphill battle.
“I honestly believe that a thousand Indians could show up in St. Paul to testify against this wolf legislation and it would not matter one single bit in terms of the outcome,” Shimek said. “That’s just the nature of politics.”
In March, Shimek and others at White Earth began a series of public education “wolf talks” on the reservation, although opposition to a wolf hunting season has not seemed to slow the bills that are advancing through the Legislature.”

*Special thanks to “The Circle Native American News and Arts” for providing this information!

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By On May 7, 2012

“The Wildlife News has finally obtained all of the records of documented mortality for wolves from April 1, 2011 up to April 1, 2012. This information tells a grim story about what the toll of handing over management to the State of Idaho has been on the Idaho wolf population. All told, based on some estimates made using the data, under state management, 721 wolves, or 59% of the wolves, were killed in the year running from April, 2011 – April, 2012. Even if you use only documented mortality, without estimating additional, unreported illegal take or other causes of mortality, then 492 wolves, or 48% of the wolves, in Idaho were killed.

I have made previous, and very similar posts based on preliminary information but this post is based on all of the wolf mortality information that the Idaho Fish and Game has for the period of time. The information contains critical information about the number of wolves killed which had radio collars. Using the official estimate of 746 on December 31, 2011 as a benchmark I was able to make some educated guesses about the full extent of undocumented mortality.

Using only the documented mortality it appears that, at the beginning of April, 2011 when pups were born, there were 1030 wolves and by the same time this year, before pups were born, there were 539 wolves in Idaho.

Undoubtedly there was more undocumented mortality than what is reported here. Using numbers estimated by comparing the proportion of wolves killed in the hunt that were wearing radio collars to the number of wolves killed wearing radio collars, I estimate that, rather than the 16 wolves reported to have been illegally killed, there were actually 100 wolves killed illegally because 6 of those were wearing radio collars. The number of wolves that died (9) from unknown causes contained 5 radio collared wolves which, using the same ratio, would have resulted in an additional 80 wolves. The number of wolves that died from natural causes (5) consisted of 4 collared wolves, which, using the same ratio, would have resulted in an additional 66 wolves. Under this estimate it appears that, at the beginning of April, 2011 when pups were born, there were 1217 wolves and by the same time this year, before pups were born, there were 496 wolves in Idaho.

The wolves killed under the “Control by Government” (75) label included those killed by IDFG (20), USDA Wildlife Services (48), and by Idaho County Deputies (7).

Meanwhile, Idaho Fish and Game Commission Chairman, Tony McDermott still has not retracted his claim that there are 1,200 – 1,600 wolves in Idaho and the Commission set more liberal hunting rules for the upcoming year. Rocky Barker also weighed in criticizing Defenders of Wildlife for complaining about the toll that Idaho’s management has had on wolves. He seems not to understand the meaning of the word “decimate”.”

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

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By
Published: March 12, 2012

“Once again, science, religion and politics have become entwined in a thorny public policy debate. This time, however, the discussion is not about abortion, birth control or health insurance mandates.

It’s about wolves.

Specifically, a bill in the Wisconsin Legislature to authorize a hunting season on wolves. The State Senate has approved it, and the Assembly is set to consider the bill on Tuesday.

Hunters approve of the season, and Republicans are all for it, as are some Democrats. Wildlife biologists have a number of criticisms and suggestions about the bill involving how, when and how many wolves should be killed.

But the Great Lakes Indian Fish and Game Commission, which represents 11 tribes of the Ojibwe (also known as the Chippewa, or Anishinaabe) in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan, opposes the hunt on the basis of religious principle and tradition.

In written testimony presented to both legislative houses, James Zorn, the executive administrator of the commission, said, “In the Anishinaabe creation story we are taught that Ma’iingan (wolf) is a brother to Original man.” He continued, “The health and survival of the Anishinaabe people is tied to that of Ma’iingan.” For that reason the tribes are opposed to a public hunt.

Joe Rose Sr., a professor emeritus of Native American studies at Northland College in Ashland, Wis., and an elder of the Bad River Band, said in an interview that he saw a collision of world views. “We don’t have stories like Little Red Riding Hood, or the Three Little Pigs, or the werewolves of Transylvania,” he said. Wolf, or Ma’iingan, is a sacred creature, and so even keeping the population of wolves to minimum levels runs counter to traditional beliefs.

The opposition of the Ojibwe to the hunt may not swing a vote, but it is not a small matter. The Ojibwe have significant rights in lands that were once theirs, lands that, in Wisconsin, amount to about the northern third of the state. That, of course, is where most of Wisconsin’s wolves live.

Peter David, a conservation biologist with the Indian Fish and Game Commission, said that court settlements on treaty rights mean that the tribes must be consulted about decisions like the wolf hunt, and they were not. Also, he said, “the tribes can legally lay claim to half of the biological harvest.” What that could mean for a wolf hunt that the tribes oppose is not clear.

What is clear is that the opposition of the Ojibwe is more like objections to funding for abortions or birth control than it is the calculations of scientists, not in political tone, but in its essence.

All the other arguments center on numbers, practicality and consequences. How much damage do wolves do to livestock? How effective is this kind of hunt in reducing those depredations? How many wolves should be killed?

The original goal, set once it was clear that wolves were coming back in the state, on their own, was 350 wolves. With protection, the wolf population has grown to about 800. Adrian Treves, an associate professor of environmental studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, says that the carrying capacity of the state is probably about 1,000.

Dr. Treves has also testified about the bill. He would like to see fixes — for instance, ruling out hunting with dogs. But he sees the issue as one of wildlife management.

Mr. Zorn said in his testimony that for the Ojibwe, “wolf recovery does not hinge primarily upon some minimum number of animals comprising the current wolf population.” Rather, he said, the goal is “the healthiest and most abundant future for our brother and ourselves.”

Mr. Rose put it this way: “We see the wolf as a predictor of our future. And what happens to wolf happens to Anishinaabe.” And, he said, “whether other people see it or not, the same will happen to them.”

**Special thanks to The New York Times http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/13/science/science-faith-and-politics-clash-over-wolves-in-wisconsin.html?src=tp&smid=fb-share for providing this information!

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Posted on May 1, 2012 by Bob Berwyn

Feds nearly ready to accept state management plan

By Summit Voice SUMMIT COUNTY

 “Wyoming officials are pressing ahead with their plan to kill most wolves living outside Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks. The state recently passed legislation and an amendment to its wolf management plan that’s close to gaining approval from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, triggering the final removal of Endangered Species Act protection for the predators. The new law and plan would take effect later this year when wolves are removed from the federal endangered species list. The state wants to increase the area where wolves would be designated as predators and could be killed without limit; they also keep in place a trophy game management area, where hunting will be allowed to dramatically reduce wolf populations. What federal officials are acquiescing to is to confine wolves to the northwest corner of the state … They’re presenting to the public the new plan as a fait accompli,” said wolf advocate Michael Robinson, with the Center for Biological Diversity. Robinson said Wyoming’s wolf-management plan is “a recipe for wolf slaughter that will only serve to incite more of the prejudice against wolves that led to their destruction in the first place.” He said the federal government is not living up to the Endangered Species Act requirements that call for species to be recovered across significant portions of their former range. Instead of piece-mealing the delisting and recovery effort, Robinson said the federal government should look at wolf populations holistically and develop a national recovery plan that lives up to the letter and spirit of the Endangered Species Act. “Removal of federal protections for wolves has been a disaster in Idaho and Montana and will be even worse in Wyoming,” he said. While wolves would remain fully protected within Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks, elsewhere in Wyoming they would be subject to shooting, trapping and snaring. Wyoming proposes designating wolves as predators across 83 percent of the state, where there would no limits on their killing. The remaining portion of the state would be considered a “trophy game management area,” where killing wolves would be permitted, with the goal of reducing the population from approximately 29 packs to around 10. “Along with the killing of wolves in Idaho and Montana, which had their protection taken away last year through a back-door congressional rider, this planned persecution of wolves in Wyoming could be devastating to the beautiful animals’ survival in the northern Rocky Mountains,” said Robinson. “Killing most of Wyoming’s wolves will hurt wolves in Colorado, too, where they’re only starting to return by way of Wyoming.” Since wolf hunting and trapping seasons opened last fall, 378 wolves have been killed in Idaho, which has no cap on killing and several ongoing open seasons. An additional 166 wolves were killed in Montana, which has now closed its season. Contrary to promises, hunting and trapping have appeared to inflame anti-wolf sentiment, with comments and pictures appearing on the Internet that boast of wolf killing and call for more slaughter. The Fish and Wildlife Service has reopened a two-week comment period, during which feedback is sought from the public before the agency finalizes the delisting rule. Background In October 2011 the Obama administration announced finalization of an agreement between the Fish and Wildlife Service and Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead whereby the agency would remove wolves in Wyoming from the federal endangered species list and the state would only be required to keep alive 100 wolves or 10 breeding pairs outside Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks (which together provide habitat for a few dozen wolves that would remain protected while in the parks). After pups are born within the next few weeks, it is likely that more than 500 wolves will live outside the national parks in Wyoming. The state plan will allow their unregulated killing throughout most of the state.”

**Special thanks to http://summitcountyvoice.com/2012/05/01/wyoming-plans-to-kill-most-wolves-outside-yellowstone/ for providing this information!

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Special thanks to Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com, for proving the following information:

“The gray wolf, soon to be off the endangered species list in Wyoming, will have a new official title in 86 percent of the state: predator. That means anyone may shoot a wolf on sight, no permit required.

Safe havens do remain in the northwestern corner of the state — no hunting will be allowed in Yellowstone or Grand Teton national parks — but now conservationists worry that sportsmen will be allowed to take aim at wolves traveling through the John D. Rockefeller Jr. Memorial Parkway, a 24,000-acre area that connects the two larger parks.

The state of Wyoming wants hunting; the National Park Service does not.


“We want to preserve wildlife for viewing and for conservation,” said Bert Frost, associate director for Natural Resource Stewardship and Science for the National Park Service. “We would prefer not to have them shooting wolves on the parkway.”

But here’s the catch: The parkway, managed by the National Park Service, has allowed elk hunts to reduce their population. Legislators in Wyoming say that means wolves are also fair game.

Most agree this is a somewhat symbolic argument, as only one or two wolf packs use the parkway. But for many, the gray wolf has come to embody the symbol of the federal government meddling in state affairs.

Poll: Should wolves be hunted on National Parks land in Wyoming?

Among the comments submitted to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which oversees the Endangered Species Act, was one from Earl Crawford, a Cheyenne resident, who said, according to the Casper Star-Tribune, “wolves kill to just kill.”

Crawford continued: “Let the state game & fish control and manage the wolf population along with the other game animals of the state. Most bureaucrats back East haven’t the foggiest idea of how life is out west.”

1995: Wolves return to the Rockies
In the early 1900s, bounties were paid on more than 20,000 wolves, viewed then as killers of livestock. Twenty years later, the gray wolf became extinct in the Northern Rockies.

In 1995, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service arranged for 66 gray wolves from Canada to be released in Yellowstone and Idaho. The wolves, to the delight of conservationists, repopulated as quickly as they disappeared. Now about 1,650 roam the Rockies.

“The big picture of the whole thing is that the recovery of the gray wolf is one of the most amazing success stories of the Endangered Species Act,” said Derek Goldman of the Endangered Species Coalition.

The plan was so successful that in 2009 the gray wolf was removed from the endangered species list in Montana and Idaho. Wyoming, however, refused to produce a wolf-friendly plan.

“Basically, Wyoming flipped the middle finger to the federal government,” Goldman said.

Despite government promises to repay ranchers for livestock losses, pressure mounted.

Data show that domestic dogs kill more cattle than wolves; weather kills cattle at 25 times the rate of wolves. Mike Jimenez of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said that wolves were just one more variable eating at an already small profit margin.

“You have to understand that the ranchers are raising animals by the pound,” said Jimenez, the coordinator for wolf management for the Rocky Mountains. “If they run around, they abort, or they lose weight. The profit margin is not huge to begin with.”

Although wolves were delisted in Montana and Idaho without as much political wrangling, wolf hunting in those two states is as controversial.

In February, U.S. Fish and Wildlife agents killed 14 wolves from an aircraft in Idaho, heeding a request from that state, according to the Missoulian newspaper.

And the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, an organization founded by hunters to promote elk habitat to “be hunted or otherwise enjoyed,” announced it would give $50,000 to help government agencies afford killing wolves that chase after livestock, the Missoulian reported. David Allen, the president of the foundation, said he wants fewer black bears, mountain lions and wolves.

“We can’t have all these predators with little aggressive management and expect to have ample game herds,” Allen told the Missoulian.

Wolves delisted
Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead signed a new version of the wolf management plan into law last month. This one demands that Wyoming manage 10 breeding pairs outside of Yellowstone. An area in the northwestern part of the state would protect wolves from Oct. 15 to March 1, so they may breed with wolves from other states and avoid inbreeding.

Whether hunters will be able to take aim at wolves in the parkway is unclear. Hunting is allowed in Alaska national parks, and culling of elk has been allowed in the parkway and Theodore Roosevelt National Park in North Dakota.

Back in Washington, D.C., Bert Frost said the National Parks Service has plans to work with the state of Wyoming. He hopes those conversations won’t become politicized.

“I hope nothing gets resolved in Washington,” Frost said. “There are the biologists on the ground, and they know the situation better than anyone else.”

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  Nez Perce National Forest employee Josh Bransford poses with a wolf trapped in north Idaho

“Footloose Montana,” a grassroots, non-profit organization that promotes trap-free public lands for people, pets and wildlife, received death threats for releasing this photo.  Humans have the ability to show compassion towards animals, yet Josh Bransford chooses to inflict unnessesary amounts of pain on this animal.  Just look at the enormous amounts of blood in the snow and he appears very proud of it. 

“Less than a year after Congress took gray wolves off the endangered species list, a Forest Service employee has come under fire for trapping a wolf in Idaho and snapping a photo of the wounded animal before killing it.

Josh Bransford posted a photo on the website www.trapperman.com last month of himself smiling as the wolf he trapped — which was still alive — limped on the bloodied snow behind him. The photo has since been taken down (It can be viewed here, but warning, the images are graphic).

The incident, which came shortly before the end of Idaho’s first-ever wolf trapping season, drew protests from environmentalists. Gray wolves in the northern Rockies were taken off the endangered species list on April 2, 2009, a decision that was reversed in federal district court in August 2010. Congress took them off again as part of last year’s budget deal on April 14, 2011, and the Fish and Wildlife Service formally delisted the wolves on May 4.

Both the Forest Service and the Idaho Department of Fish and Game have described the incident as unfortunate, but not illegal.

“The Forest Service does not condone animal cruelty in any circumstance and holds employees to represent agency standards both on and off the job,” wrote Forest Service spokesman Larry Chambers in an e-mail. “While the Forest Service continues to review the case, it has been determined that the employee in question was on his personal time on private land. The Idaho Department of Fish and Game has jurisdiction on such cases.”

In an interview, Idaho Department of Fish and Game spokesman Mike Keckler said the agency’s conservation officers determined that Bransford “had all of the necessary licenses and permissions to trap wolves,” and had undergone a trapper education course.

“According to the conservation officers he did nothing illegal, but we would have preferred that he had dispatched it himself before photographing himself with it,” Keckler said. “We ask that animals be dispatched humanely and immediately.”

Bransford could not be reached for comment.

Michael Robinson, conservation advocate with the group Center for Biological Diversity, said state officials had only done a cursory review and needed to examine the matter further.

“If this is what passes as compliance with the Department of Fish and Game’s rules, there’s a serious problem with the adequacy of state regulation,” Robinson said. “Idaho Department of Fish and Game or the state’s attorney general need to take a harder look. Trapping a wolf where it can be shot at by others, shooting at the wolf, and then letting the injured animal suffer while posing for pictures all constitute animal cruelty and reflect the free-for-all mentality on wolves prevailing in Idaho in the absence of Endangered Species Act protection.”

Wolf hunting and trapping season is almost over in Idaho. The trapping season began Nov. 15 and ended March 31, while the hunting season started Aug. 30, 2011 and ended in all but two areas by the Montana border on March 31.

The wolf population in Idaho was estimated at roughly 1000 before the hunting season began. The state fish and game department website showed 377 had been hunted, trapped or snared as of Thursday.

Keckler said the state had issued more than 40,000 “wolf tags” that allow wolves to be taken by hunters. The large number came because deer hunters and others obtained the tags in case they encountered wolves while hunting other game.

“Wolves are very difficult to hunt,” he said.”

**Special thanks to Juliet Eilperin for The Washington Post for providing this information.

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“Wolf Park is pleased to announce that Dharma, of the park’s main pack, has given birth to puppies on April 6, 2012. (Dharma is blocking our view of them at the moment – we will know how many there are when Dharma leaves the den!) The pups’ lineage traces back to Wolf Park’s first female wolf, Cassie. With their birth the Wolf Park wolves’ bloodline has added a new generation. Like all our pups, these will be socialized to humans as well as to wolves; visitors will have opportunities to watch them grow up and become acquainted with their world this summer at Wolf Park. Puppies at Wolf Park are taken out of the den when they are around 10 days old to undergo the socialization process. In order to fully socialize the puppies to humans, the pups have contact with humans 24 hours a day for the first 5 months or so of their lives, for a total of over 2,000 contact hours. For this reason, we have Puppy Mothers that live onsite to help raise the puppies. They work in shifts to provide 24-hour a day human contact. The puppies will also get to spend time socializing with wolves once they about 6 weeks old, so they learn how to be part of a pack as well. Sponsor a Puppy! Click here to adopt one of our newest arrivals! [link sentence to gift shop puppy adoption page] Puppy sponsors will be able to visit their adopted puppy in person! When you schedule your appointment, we will let you know when the puppies tend to be most active, but we cannot guarantee that they will be awake. (Please note that we have very strict guidelines for puppy visits. We do not wake up sleeping puppies, so be aware that your visit may only include you watching your puppy sleep! Your visit may also have to be cut short based on the needs of the puppies or if we are conducting research.) Puppy Sponsors receive all of the benefits of wolf sponsorship, including a yearlong subscription to our newsletter and updates on your sponsored animal.

Puppy Photo Shoots!

Monty Sloan, our world-renowned staff photographer, leads all of our puppy photo shoots. Click here to see examples of his puppy shots. Photo shoots run from 6 pm until either dark or the puppies get tired. Typically shoots last around 2 hours. Please note that we may need to cancel a puppy photo shoot if the puppies are not feeling well. Digestive issues are very common, and are the most frequent reason for having to cancel a shoot.

Availability for these special photography sessions is very limited. The cost of these shoots is $150 per person, with a 2-3 person maximum. To sign up, please call our administrative office at (765)567-2265.

Donate to the Puppies!

Puppies need a lot of care. Help us raise the puppies by purchasing items that they need in our online gift shop or by making a general donation towards their care today!

Name the Puppies!

You can help Wolf Park name the puppies! Send an email with your suggestions (maximum of 5 names per person, please) to puppynames@wolfpark.org. The top names will be chosen by our staff. The final vote will be up to you! The names with the most votes will win and become the names of the new puppies. In May, the public will be invited to vote for the top names, so check back soon!”

**Special thanks to Wolf Park, http://www.wolfpark.org/index.html, for providing this information!

 

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