Does It Really Make Sense for 6,000 People to Kill 600 Wolves?

http://www.care2.com/causes/wolf-hunter-gets-it-all-wrong-in-interview-but-hes-on-the-winning-side.html

Does It Really Make Sense for 6,000 People to Kill 600 Wolves?

In a short video recently released, the Center for Biological  Diversity asks if you would pay $19 to kill a wolf. You probably wouldn’t, but  6,000 people in Montana just did.

Montana has an estimated 625 wolves left. Sadly, new changes to the hunting  season, which started in September, could prove to be a disaster for those  remaining wolves. It was extended to run for six months during which time  hunters will now be allowed to take five wolves each, and they’ll be able to use  traps, bait and electronic calls. The extra long season could also put pregnant  and nursing females in the crosshairs because they’ll be allowed to continue  through the spring. As an added bonus for hunters, out of state hunting fees  have been reduced from $350 to $50.

In an attempt to get the other side of the story, the Digital Journal’s  Justin King interviewed Montana hunter Jason Maxwell, who runs a pro-wolf hunting Facebook page.  According to him, no one wants wolves in the state, and they “should be hunted  24/7 just like the coyote.” He also believes they were never actually endangered  because there are thousands in Canada and Alaska and that people who don’t live  in wolf states shouldn’t get to have an opinion.

While he sounds almost reasonable in the interview, he spews vitriol in the  comments section and elsewhere on the Internet, proving that, at least for some,  wolf hunting is about nothing more than hate, arrogance, intolerance and  sometimes petty revenge. While he cites numbers from  the state, trying to get a straight answer from  wildlife officials about where the science is and how they came up with them in  the first place is apparently as easy as trying to herd cats.

Last year, Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks reported that 225 wolves were  killed – 128 by hunters, 97 by trappers –  during the 2012-2013 season.  This was an increase from the previous year, with more than half of the wolves  being killed on public lands. Another 104 were killed by the state throughout  the year.

Conservationists fear the consequences of such policies if hunting is allowed  to continue at this rate under state management. This year, Wyoming wants to  reduce numbers by 60 percent, which will leave only abut 100 wolves. Since they  lost ESA protection in the Great Lakes and Northern Rockies, more than 1,700  have been brutally killed.

When asked whether the government or environmentalists have hunters’  interests at heart, Maxwell responded that the “pro wolf side is fighting for  the preservation of one animal while hunters and sportsmen are fighting for the  preservation of all wildlife. The introduction is not just about the wolf it is  also about maintaining the wildlife the wolf preys on.”

If that were true, predators would have dibs on prey, and if anything still  needed to be “managed” then maybe human interference could be justified. In  Montana’s case, indiscriminate killing with the sole intent to reduce the number  of wolves to appease special interest groups isn’t management; It’s just a  bloodbath.

Also, for conservationists, fighting to protect an apex predator and keystone  species has beneficial cascading effects on other species, including plants, in  the environments they’re present in. For some areas, they’re also a popular  tourist draw which helps support local economies.

When it comes to wolf management, the very agencies charged with keeping  track of numbers and deciding their fate have a serious conflict of interest due  to the facts that hunting licenses generate revenue and there are no  consequences for poor management policies or ignoring science unless the wolf  population drops below the number required by the federal government, at which  point they would lose management authority.

The Feds Still Want Them Off the Endangered Species List

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) is still defending its proposal to  remove Endangered Species Act (ESA) protections for all wolves in the lower 48,  with the exception of Mexican gray wolves, despite how terrible state management  has proven to be.

As of September, there were 18,000 public comments opposing the delisting.  There were also three public hearings scheduled; While one hearing in Washington  D.C. took place, the other two in California and New Mexico were canceled thanks  to the shutdown. However, organizations are still calling for more public  hearings in states where wolves live or may appear so the public can actually  have an opportunity to weigh in.

An independent peer review is also required to remove a species from the ESA.  However, at the end of the summer the process was put on hold when three  scientists were kicked off the peer review because they had added their names to  a letter that was sent to the Department of the Interior questioning the science  behind the proposal to delist wolves.

According to the Center for Biological  Diversity, this is the first time the FWS has put restrictions on scientists who  may have an “affiliation with an advocacy position.” In this case the scientists  in question didn’t necessarily have a stance as wolf advocates, they just did  exactly what they were supposed to do. They looked at the available data and  formed an opinion. Their opinions just didn’t match the objectives of the FWS,  so they got blacklisted.

The FWS should continue to do its job, which is to ensure wolves are not  subjected to out of control hunting policies and intolerance or the special  interests of very vocal hunting and ag groups who continue to call for more to  die.

Keeping ESA protection for wolves in the lower 48 won’t impact decisions in  the northern Rocky Mountains or western Great Lakes, where wolves are present,  but it will keep protections for the rest who are venturing into their historic  range in other parts of the U.S. where there is suitable habitat in Pacific  Northwest, southern Rocky Mountains, Northeast and California. Their continued  survival depends on their ability to expand, instead of being confined by  arbitrary lines they’ll never understand.

TAKE ACTION!

There’s still time to speak up on behalf of wolves. Since the peer review  debacle, the FWS has extended the comment period until October 28. Please submit a comment asking that wolves remain  protected under the ESA.

As for Maxwell, yes there is a petition calling on Facebook to  shut down his page for promoting violence towards animals if you care to sign  it.

Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/wolf-hunter-gets-it-all-wrong-in-interview-but-hes-on-the-winning-side.html#ixzz2hIH0SZo4

Would You Pay $19 to Kill a Wolf?

Gray wolf

 Alert from the Center for Biological Diversity
Breaking news: The anti-wolf zealots are losing ground.

After weeks of intense pressure from the Center for Biological Diversity and other groups, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service just admitted to excluding key wolf experts from the scientific analysis of its infamous, nationwide wolf-delisting plan. The Service has dissolved its hand-picked panel and turned over the entire review process to an independent research institute. Now the nation’s top wolf scientists –once improperly disqualified for questioning the Service’s proposal to delist wolves — will be reconsidered as candidates for the review panel.

This is a victory in our fight to keep federal protections for gray wolves — but another battle is raging in the northern Rockies and Great Lakes. The wolf-killing season is starting, and hunters and trappers are lining up by the thousands.

In case you missed my last email, the Center urgently needs 6,000 wolf heroes to counter 6,000 wolf killers in Montana. Will you help now by giving to our Wolf Defense Fund and become a hero for these beleaguered animals?

In Montana 6,000 people just paid $19 to kill a wolf. Selling cheap $19 wolf tags to 6,000 people is an atrocity, because  Montana only has 625 wolves left after last year’s killing season. Not satisfied with the massacre, the state has lined up 10 times as many rifles as there are wolves to finish the job.

I’m writing today because the Center for Biological Diversity needs help balancing the odds. We need 6,000 wolf heroes to donate to our Wolf Defense Fund to ensure that federal protections are not stripped from all wolves across the country.

By donating, you’ll help stop the killing and send Montana a powerful message that a wolf’s life is worth far more than $19.

We can’t let these extermination practices spread nationwide. Wolf haters are putting up money to wipe out wolves. Wolf supporters need to do the same if we’re going to stop the killing.

Wolf season starts this week; Three “harvests” made on first day of the hunt

http://county10.com/2013/10/02/wolf-season-starts-week-three-harvests-made-first-day-hunt/

by                                                                                                 October 2, 2013                                     

grey_wolf_1

(Jackson, Wyo.) –  Many fall hunting seasons have begun across the state of Wyoming, including wolf hunting seasons in the northwest part of the state. Hunting seasons in each wolf hunt area begin October 1 and end December 31, 2013, except for Hunt Area 12 south of Jackson, which opens October 15 and closes December 31.

As with other Trophy Game species, wolves in these areas are managed under a mortality quota system. The hunting season in each specific wolf area will remain open until the quota for the area is reached, or until December 31, whichever occurs first. All hunters must call the wolf hotline daily (1-800-264-1280) to ensure the quota for wolves in each specific area has not been reached. Wolf Hunt Area 10, southeast of Jackson, which has a quota of one wolf, has been filled.

The total quota for trophy hunt areas across this state is 26. As of Tuesday morning, three had been harvested.

Hunters harvesting wolves in areas where wolves are classified as Trophy Game Animals are required to report the kill within 24 hours by calling the hotline at 1-800-264-1280. Within five days, they are required to present the skull and pelt to a game warden, biologist, or other personnel at a WGFD regional office for registration.

In all other areas of the state where wolves are designated as Predatory Animals, no license is required to take a wolf, and there are no closed seasons or bag limits. Anyone who takes a wolf in areas of the state where wolves are designated as Predatory Animals is required to report the kill to a game warden, biologist, other personnel at a WGFD regional office, or by phone (1-800-264-1280 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 1-800-264-1280 FREE  end_of_the_skype_highlighting) within 10 days. Anyone who takes a wolf in this area of the state is not required to present the skull or pelt, but the WGFD is encouraging them to do so to aid in department efforts to monitor wolf populations and genetic interchange throughout the state.

Hunters with questions about hunting seasons or regulations should pick up a copy of the current hunting regulations for the species they are interested in at any license selling vendor or call the Game and Fish office nearest the area they intend to hunt.

In other Wolf News:

Controversial Proposal for Wolf Conservation Gets a Reboot

Gray Wolf Killed in WA:http://www.therepublic.com/view/story/ecfdd3ddf08542cbb102934e8039533f/WA–Gray-Wolf-Killed

 

Jessica Lange to Governon: Halt wolf hunting in Minnesota

http://www.startribune.com/politics/statelocal/225371722.html

by Paul Walsh  September 26, 2013

The actress urges the governor to suspend the next wolf hunting season in the state; he said he can’t.

Jessica Lange

Hollywood actress and “Minnesota daughter” Jessica Lange is urging Gov. Mark Dayton to suspend the next wolf hunting season in Minnesota.

Lange cites the sharp drop in the state’s wolf population following the first of the newly reinstituted hunts last year and adds that hunters do this for no more than sport, fun or trophies.

“Nearly all Minnesotans believe the wolf is an asset that should be protected for future generations,” wrote Lange, who grew up in Cloquet, lived for a time in Stillwater and now counts a place in the woods near where she was raised as one of her homes.

In the letter released Wednesday by the Twin Cities-based advocacy group Howling for Wolves, Lange said the state’s reauthorization to resume the hunting of wolves was rushed by the Legislature and the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) “to cater to particular groups, who for years had been clamoring for the chance to kill wolves.”

Dayton responded in a written statement, pointing out that he does not have the power to halt the hunt.

“Since Ms. Lange no longer lives in Minnesota, it is understandable that she is not familiar with all of the considerations in the Legislature’s decision to establish a wolf hunting season in Minnesota,” the statement began. “That decision was written into law; thus only the Legislature can change its terms.”

Maureen Hackett, founder and president of Howling for Wolves, said that Lange “contacted us and asked what she could do … to be of help to the wolf.”

Hackett said having Lange’s support for her group’s effort to halt the hunt is beneficial because “she’s a Minnesota daughter, so to speak … and lives in wolf country.”

The number of wolves that hunters can kill in Minnesota this fall will be slashed nearly in half, from 413 a year ago to 220. Also, only 3,300 hunters and trappers will be given permits this year to kill wolves, down from 6,000. The early season runs from Nov. 9 to Nov. 24.

The licensing reductions follow a survey last winter that estimated the state’s wolf population at 2,211 — a 24 percent decline from 2008, but a figure that didn’t include this year’s surviving pups.

In that first season since wolf hunting resumed in Minnesota, Lange contended that more than half of the wolves killed were less than 2 years old and almost a third were less than a year old.

“They were not problem wolves,” her letter said. “They were not in conflicts with people, livestock, or domestic animals. They were just wolves living wild and free in our North Woods.”

The state’s recent announcement of a nearly 25 percent drop in Minnesota’s wolf population “should compel action,” she said. “We haven’t had this few wolves in our state since 1988.”

Lange, whose Minnesota property is within one of the wolf hunting zones, also went after the “cruel methods” used to hunt and trap wolves, referring to “metal leg-hold traps that crush limbs, wire choke snares that cause painful brain bleeding, and bait like food and the calls of wolf pups in distress that lure adult protectors to their death.”

Near sellout: Licenses for Michigan’s first wolf hunt move briskly on first day of sale

Wolf photo.jpg
                    Once endangered, Michigan has an estimated 658 gray wolves. A Nov. 15 hunt in the Upper Peninsula will target 43 wolves total in three separate areas. Critics say it is unnecessary.
(photo Scott Flaherty/National Park Service)
By John Barnes on September 28, 2013 

Licenses for Michigan’s first managed wolf hunt sold briskly today, with 900 of the 1,200 available snatched up in 30 minutes.

As of 5 p.m. Saturday, only about 100 of the 1,200 licenses were still available, said Ed Golder, public information officer for the Michigan Department of Natural Resources. Licenses cost $100 for residents, $500 for non-residents.

“It went excellently,” said Golder of the first-come first-served sale that began at noon. The effort had been delayed to ensure proper procedures were in place to handle high demand online and at 1,400 retail outlets.

Even if there is a sellout, he urged hunters to check back as licenses may be returned if the buyer is ineligible, there are payment issues or cancellations.

While the Nov. 15 hunt will target just 43 wolves total in three Upper Peninsula locations, it has become highly controversial. Those on both sides of the issue accuse each other of spreading misinformation and half-truths.

Wolf photo trail.jpgGenerally there are about five wolves in a pack dominated by an alpha male, though packs can be larger. Douglas Smith/National Park Service

The state says the hunt is a necessary tool to reduce wolves in areas where they have entered communities and to manage wolf numbers in areas where cattle and dogs have been killed.

There have been 155 such predation reports from 2010 through this week, some involving more than one animal. That’s about the same number as for the previous 14 years.

Critics say those numbers are grossly exaggerated, particularly by one farmer’s actions and his failure to properly use state-provided deterrents. They say the effort is little more than a trophy hunt, and that lethal and non-lethal means already exist to manage wolves.

“The facts speak for themselves and it just shows this is all politically motivated and has nothing to do with science,” said Nancy Warren, a resident of the western Upper Peninsula town of Ewen and the Great Lakes regional director for the preservationist National Wolfwatcher Coalition.

DNR wildlife biologist Brian Roell, a wolf specialist in Marquette, says critics “cherry pick facts and leave out facts.”

“This is another control for minimizing wolf conflicts, a very conservative approach for taking away 43 animals,” Roell said.

Gray wolves essentially disappeared from Michigan by the time they received endangered species status in 1978.

It would be a decade before the state counted just three wolves in 1988-89. Their numbers grew exponentially, peaking at 687 in 2010-11. The current census puts their number at 658.

The resurgence here and in Minnesota and Wisconsin led the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to lift protections for the gray wolf in January 2012.

Minnesota and Wisconsin allowed hunts last year. This will be the first controlled hunt in Michigan.

Critics hope it will be the last.

The ballot group Keep Michigan Wolves Protected is gathering signatures to put a referendum on next year’s ballot. The effort seeks to throw out a law that allowed the Natural Resources Commission this summer to designate wolves as a game animal.

The Legislature shifted that authority to the commission, essentially to get around a successful petition drive by the group that would have stopped this year’s hunt.

The group hopes to have enough signatures by March to support the new ballot measure.

The upcoming hunt will be limited to three areas in the Upper Peninsula. The areas and the number of wolves that can be killed are:

Zone A: A portion of Gogebic County including the city of Ironwood, 16.

Zone B: Portions of Baraga, Houghton, Ontonagon and Gogebic counties, 19.

Zone C: Portions of Luce and Mackinac counties, 8.

The hunt will run from Nov. 15 until Dec. 31, or until the target harvest for each area is reached.

Hunters will be required to report any wolf kills by phone on the day it occurs. Once the target number of wolves are killed in a specific hunting area, that unit will be closed to hunting. License holders will be required to check daily by phone or online to determine whether any zones have been closed.

Murder a Michigan Wolf = “harvest a nice prize”

Wolf licenses go on sale

Controversial wolf hunt set to begin

Licenses go on sale today in bid to thin packs in 3 areas of UP Detroit News Lansing Bureau

When licenses go on sale at noon today for the state’s first wolf hunting in more than four decades, Lester Livermore plans to be among those in line.

“It’s a real opportunity to harvest a nice prize,” said Livermore, 45, of Naubinway. The $100 resident license fee puts a “premium on the species” that “makes sure that individuals value that wildlife,” he said.

The state Department of Natural Resources wants hunters to cull 43 of an estimated 658 wolves in three areas of the Upper Peninsula. License sales will be limited to 1,200 and will cost nonresidents $500. The licenses could go quickly; no one knows what to expect.

A clerk at the Gander Mountain outlet in Marquette, the U.P.’s biggest city, said there hasn’t been much talk about the licenses. In Big Bay, Cram’s General Store clerk Shawn Chaperon said a few people have inquired about wolf hunting licenses.

“There are probably going to be 10 or 15 people show up” today to buy them, Chaperon predicted.

The season is Nov. 15 to Dec. 31, but will end whenever 43 wolves have been bagged. Successful hunters are required to report to area DNR stations within 72 hours.

Rules prohibit some techniques used for deer and bear, such as baiting, and wolves are tougher to hunt, said Department of Natural Resources spokesman Ed Golder.

“The experience from other states has shown that a lot of … effort goes into hunting wolves,” Golder said.

The hunt aims to modestly reduce growing wolf populations in three areas — or management units — where they’ve been preying on domestic animals.

“It’s structured around areas of wolf-related conflict where the problem is not addressed by other means,” Golder said.

At his U.P. farm in Greenland, Duane Kolpack said he has shot eight wolves, lost as many as 70 animals to them and favors the state’s upcoming wolf hunt.

Kolpack and his wife, Julie, are in Wolf Management Unit B, where the DNR wants hunters to take 19 wolves. The plan is to eliminate 16 in Unit A, the far western U.P., and eight in Unit C surrounding Engadine and Gould City in the southeastern U.P.

Yoopers who support the hunt are skeptical of the quotas. “I think (killing) 43 is kind of a joke,” Kolpack said. “I think there are 2,000-plus wolves in the U.P., and every pack is going to grow by five or six a year.”

Caught in middle

The Kolpacks and their four children are in the middle of the conflict. About three years ago, wolves began attacking the easier targets among their 700 cattle, sheep, goats and hogs.

“My wife chased one out of the barn,” Kolpack said. “It took a goat, and she chased it about half a mile down the road, but it never let go of the goat.”

Officially, the family has reported losing 50 animals to wolf predation. Duane Kolpack said he believes the real number is closer to 70; he’s not sure how many calves were dragged off into the woods.

While wolves were listed as endangered, the DNR supplied the Kolpacks with firecracker shells and mules to keep them at bay. After wolves were taken off the endangered list two years ago, Duane was free to use firearms to defend his herds.

The wolves have since become more cautious. But he said he recently was awakened at 3 a.m. when wolves went after his calves — and he chased them away by speeding across a dark field in his pickup.

Kolpack said he doesn’t think he’s made a big dent in the pack or packs living nearby.

Just west of Baraga, Bill Delene, his wife and two young daughters see wolves almost daily.

“My neighbor called just this Monday and said: Watch your kids, two big wolves just crossed your driveway,” he said. “The only concern I have personally is for my kids; I tell them, ‘If you see a wolf, run in the house.’ ”

Delene, a shift supervisor at the Baraga state prison, has captured thousands of wolf photos on cameras he places along trails. He also has accidently snared them in his coyote traps — as many as five in one day.

“Wolves have been increasing because our social, caring capacity has allowed it,” Delene said. “They’ve got to be wisely managed because if they’re not, at some point people are going to say enough is enough and take care of it themselves.”

Hunt sparks opposition

Jill Fritz, the Lansing-based state director of the Humane Society of the United States, called the hunt “unnecessary” and said existing measures — letting folks like Kolpack defend their animals against wolf attacks — are working fine.

A Humane Society-backed group, Keep Michigan Wolves Protected, is circulating petitions to outlaw wolf hunting. If successful, two proposals voiding state laws will be on the November 2014 ballot. The latest petition effort is being received with enthusiasm, Fritz said.

“While they’re signing, they’re sharing with us important aspects of the campaign … (including) how the Legislature did an end-around of the first petition,” she said.

Keep Wolves Protected says most wolf attacks on livestock forming the DNR’s justification for the hunt came from one farm near Matchwood.

That farm owner, John Koski, failed to follow through on DNR-recommended measures to protect his livestock and left animal carcasses in his fields — a natural draw for more wolves, the organization claims.

State Sen. Tom Casperson, the Escanaba Republican who spearheaded the legislative effort to legalize wolf hunting, described in a Senate speech the Kolpack family’s problems to blunt opponents’ criticism. He also mentioned an August incident when wolves killed nine beagles that an Ohio man and some friends were training in woods outside Rudyard.

Casperson said people living downstate, especially wolf hunt opponents, don’t sufficiently understand the challenges U.P. residents face.

“Those pushing hard that we shouldn’t have the hunt, I tell them: ‘How about I bring some down to you?’ ” Casperson said. “They say, ‘sure’ — but it doesn’t sound like they’re really sure about that.”

Wolf hunt rules

License cost: $100 for residents, $500 for nonresidents Wolf kill limits: Wolf Management Unit A (far western U.P.), 16; Unit B, 19; Unit C (southeastern U.P.), 8. One bagged wolf per person per season. Kill report rules: Successful hunters must report it by phone the same day and bring the carcass to a DNR check station within 72 hours. The DNR “seals” the wolf pelt and collects one tooth to learn the animal’s age and for genetic testing. The seal has to stay on the pelt until the hunter has it processed or tanned. Hunting season: Nov. 15 to Dec. 31 (same as deer season) or shorter. Hunting is prohibited when the limit is reached.
Source: Michigan Department of Natural Resources

From The Detroit News: http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20130928/METRO06/309270130#ixzz2gD8aomy6

copyrighted Hayden wolf in lodgepoles

Seven Frequently Asked Questions about Northern Rockies Wolves

  (The following is part of a report by Wild Earth Guardians)…

1.  Which two user groups caused Northern Rockies wolves to lose their Endangered Species Act protections and why? 

  • The livestock industry and some sportsmen’s organizations, each separately opposed to wolf conservation, convinced Congress in April 2011 to delist Northern Rockies wolves from the Endangered Species Act. Their contentions about resource competition are unsupported by data, as described below.

A.  Do wolves kill vast numbers of livestock?  

  • No. This constant complaint by the livestock industry is without merit. Wolves have killed less than one percent of the cattle or sheep inventories in the Northern Rockies. Even in Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming where most wolves live (and before the commencement of wolf hunting in 2011-2012) and even using unverified livestock loss data (that is, numbers that are based upon livestock growers’ uninvestigated complaints), wolves killed less than one percent of the cattle (0.07 percent) and sheep (0.22 percent) inventories in those states. Verified livestock losses are even lower.
  • These livestock loss numbers mirror the national average where all other carnivores (i.e., coyotes, cougars, bears and domestic dogs) killed less than 0.5 percent of the (2010) cattle and (2009) sheep inventory in the entire United States. The biggest source of mortality to livestock actually comes from disease, illness, birthing problems and weather, but not from native carnivores such as wolves.

B.  Do wolves kill too many elk? 

  • No, despite the claims of some sportsmen’s organizations. Human hunters have much greater negative effects on elk populations than wolves, according to a host of biologists, who published their findings in peer-reviewed science journals.
  • In fact, the level of human off-take of elk populations is considered “super additive” – that is, humanhunting pressures on elk far exceed the levels of mortality that would otherwise occur naturally. Further, human hunters generally kill prime-age, breeding animals, whereas wolves prey upon older, non-breeding elk. Wolves do hold elk populations at levels that mediate starvation, weather, and other stochastic events.

C. Does sport hunting of wolves increase hunters’ tolerance of them?

  • No. Two peer-reviewed studies show that hunting wolves does not increase hunters’ tolerance for them, and especially in the case of wolf and bear hunters.

2. Is wolf management by Idaho and Montana sufficient to conserve the species?

  • No. These states have set hunting quotas that are too high to be sustainable and are based upon uncertain population data. Both states have estimated populations to be higher than estimates by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and Montana’s population censuses, in particular, are criticized by experts as inadequate and inaccurate. Idaho and Montana both offered overlong hunting seasons on wolves for the 2011-2012 season. In fact, Idaho’s 10-month season extends until June when wolves have dependent young.
  • Hunters and trappers killed more than 540 wolves in 2011-2012. Biologists, in peer-reviewed literature, have written that wolves in the Northern Rocky Mountains have not yet recovered and that hunting them could put their populations at risk.
  • Other researchers have warned that hunting could reduce wolves beyond their ability to recover. Killing wolves not only causes direct mortality to individuals, but also creates social disruption in wolf packs, which can cause packs to disband, leading to the loss of yearling animals and pups.

3.  To whom do Northern Rockies wolves belong?

  • The public trust doctrine, affirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court, asserts that all wildlife, including wolves, belong to all Americans. Indeed, all Americans contributed to the restoration of wolves in the Northern Rockies, spending approximately $40 million over 17 years to reintroduce wolves in the region. Unfortunately, with the assumption of management by western states (following delisting of the population under the Endangered Species Act), wolves are now primarily managed for the interests of the livestock industry and some sportsmen’s organizations. The interests of these tiny minority groups do not comport with values shared by the broad American public that supports continued recovery of wolves in the West.

4.  How has the news media influenced people’s values about wolves?

  • The news media can affect people’s values about wolves, and studies show the media is increasingly publishing negative stories about wolves. At the same time, surveys on people’s attitudes have shown that most still value wolf and habitat conservation. We note that the media often broadcasts inaccurate or exaggerated statements by the livestock industry or sportsmen’s groups about the supposed negative effects of wolves on livestock or native ungulate populations.

5.  How many wolf-hunting or trapping licenses have been sold in Idaho and Montana and how many wolves live in those states?

  • Idaho and Montana have sold over 62,000 tags for the 2011-2012 wolf-hunting/trapping season. At the end of 2010, the Fish and Wildlife Service estimated the wolf population in those states stood at 1,271 individuals. License buyers are primarily residents of Idaho and Montana, 89 percent and 99 percent, respectively. Those states sell their wolf-hunting tags at prices far below market value. The high level of resident participation might indicate that citizens in these two states are less tolerant of wolves than other Americans.

6.  Are wolves important to ecosystems?

  • Wolves and other apex carnivores contribute significantly to increased biological diversity—from beetles to birds to grizzly bears—and to greater ecosystem function (such as indirectly protecting riparian habitats for a host of fauna and flora), staving off effects from global warming by providing carrion as food sources for other species, and facilitating beaver recovery in the West.

7.  How can we both restore wolves and find ways for people to coexist with them?

  • States have shown themselves incapable of managing wolves in a manner that supports the interests of the majority of Americans who love and appreciate wolves. The majority deserves input into how wolves are managed. Instead, decision makers cater to two vocal minority user groups, who base their anxieties about wolves on false claims about resource competition. Wolves have become political animals. They need to be shielded from mercurial political processes, especially since the American public has spent tens of millions of dollars on wolf restoration and research.
  • More protected refuges should be established to support wolf restoration, such as the designation of more national parks. Refuges promote persistence of rare native carnivores such as wolves and mountain lions. Refuges also serve as source areas to other subpopulations, which maximizes natality and minimizes mortality.
  • Livestock producers can produce “risk maps” to anticipate where conflicts may occur and prevent future problems. Producers can also employ a host of non-lethal livestock protections such as keeping sick or pregnant livestock close to humans, housing livestock in buildings or pens (especially to protect small or young livestock), using guard animals and electronic scaring devices, properly disposing of livestock carcasses and more.
  • On public lands, another approach is to retire livestock grazing through voluntary grazing permit buyout. This practice allows the government or third parties to compensate ranchers to permanently retire their grazing permits on public lands, leaving the landscape to wolves and other wildlife and saving taxpayers millions of dollars in grazing subsidies over time.
  • Finally, wolf policy should privilege wildlife watchers. Wolf watchers in the Northern Rocky Mountains spend millions of dollars each year to view wolves, as compared to the $1 million dollars that hunters and trappers spent to buy wolf tags in Idaho and Montana.

http://www.wildearthguardians.org/site/PageServer#.UkRpRL7n_UM

One-third of Montana’s wolves dead‏

From Defenders of Wildlife:

Last year more than ONE-THIRD of Montana’s entire wolf population was killed — and with a number of new and deadly hunting and trapping provisions, the death toll is expected to rise this season.

Anti-wolf forces are determined to drive the wolf population down to the bare minimum, and Montana is adopting more extreme wolf management tactics – making it cheaper and easier to kill wolves.

We need YOU to help us stop this relentless killing before it’s too late.

The killing has resumed.

Montana’s hunting season began in earnest on September 15th. Last year hunters and trappers killed off more than one-third of the state’s entire wolf population.

With a host of new and deadly hunting and trapping provisions, Montana is set to become a wolf tragedy in the making. We can’t let that happen.

Anti-wolf forces are determined to drive wolf populations down to the bare minimum. Earlier this year, they introduced a shameful batch of anti-wolf measures in the Montana legislature.

And they could spell disaster for Montana’s wolves:
•The cost for out-of state-hunters to purchase MT hunting licenses to kill wolves dramatically dropped from $350 to only $50, thus encouraging hunting of more wolves by out-of-state hunters;
•It’s now legal this season to use electronic devices to lure wolves to their death;
•The number of wolves a person can kill during hunting and trapping season has increased from one wolf in 2011 to five wolves this season; and
•As of now, hunters can now walk right up to the Yellowstone National Park border and shoot any wolf that crosses the invisible park boundary – even if it’s just for a minute.

Montana is adopting more extreme wolf management tactics, making it cheaper and easier to kill wolves.

With your help we’re fighting for the wolves.
1.We’re fighting against proposed bills that would put a shockingly low cap on the wolf population instead of maintaining healthy numbers like other wildlife species;
2.We’re on the ground in local communities to dispel misconceptions and anti-wolf propaganda ; and to build political opposition to the host of crazy anti-wolf bills sure to come with the start of the state legislative session in January;
3.And we’re working with ranchers, private landowners and others to pioneer non-lethal strategies so that wolves and livestock can peacefully coexist.

The war to save wolves now spans the country…from the Northern Rockies, where the killing has claimed nearly 1,200 wolves since 2011…to the Southwest, where the Mexican gray wolf is struggling to survive…to Washington, D.C., where anti-wolf forces are driving a misguided delisting proposal through the federal bureaucracy.

copyrighted Hayden wolf in lodgepoles

Wisconsin #1 for Deer “Harvest”

The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources boasts: “We rank first in the country for the highest single year deer harvest on record and are number one for deer harvest over the past decade. All of us work hard to keep it that way.”

Yet, according to a new article, Limited deer hunt may happen in three area communities, deer populations are doing too well in some parts of Wisconsin. Ironically, the state DNR is also keen to “control” (read: kill off) their wolf population through hunting and trapping, in part because wolves prey on deer. How contradictory is that?

Ashwaubenon, Allouez and De Pere considering deer population control measures

A limited deer hunt could take place in 2014 in parts of Allouez, Ashwaubenon and De Pere if local officials decide the population is too big for the area.

The municipalities hope to survey the deer population this winter in response to complaints from residents, who said the animals are damaging gardens and creating traffic hazards in certain neighborhoods. But they’re working slowly with this issue, which could prompt worries about safety, objections from animal-rights groups and other potential roadblocks.

Meanwhile, officials in the communities say they’re hearing from growing numbers of residents who don’t like deer grazing in their gardens, or having large animals darting across residential streets.

“We’ve certainly had more sightings of larger groups this year,” said Rex Mehlberg, Ashwaubenon’s director of parks, recreation and forestry. “People are seeing six, eight, 10 of them at a time. One group was 14 or 15.”

Local officials stress that no decisions have been made about whether they would allow a hunt, and that hunting would not take place in parts of town where people would be at risk. First, they would have to decide if they want to do a count of deer by helicopter this winter. The survey cost, estimated at $2,000, would be shared between the communities and likely would be funded in part through a grant.

De Pere officials are scheduled Oct. 1 to discuss funding for the study, said Parks, Recreation and Forestry Director Marty Kosobucki. he said the city also has discussed setting aside some money in its 2014 budget to clover part of the cost of a survey.

In Northeastern Wisconsin and elsewhere, complaints about deer have grown as communities have sprawled into areas that were once rural. Two Rivers was set to vote Monday night on allowing a limited bow hunt this fall.

More: http://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/article/20130916/GPG0101/309160344/Limited-deer-hunt-may-happen-three-area-communities?nclick_check=1

Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson, 2013. All Rights Reserved

Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson, 2013. All Rights Reserved

D.C Wolf Rally Speech by Oliver Starr

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Here’s the speech my friend and fellow wolf advocate, Oliver Starr, read at the D.C. Wolf Rally:

As the oldest grandson of a well known Colorado cattle man, people often ask me how I came to love wolves. I blame it on my mother. When I was about four years old she read the following words to me: “my birthday, my birthday, my birthday!! a striped box with holes! I hope it’s a wolf! And within the pages of Jan Wahl’s amazing children’s book called “A Wolf of My Own”, wolves took ahold of my soul and in the 41 Years since I heard those words I have not been able to shake their grip.

My mom should have known better than to read me a story where a kid got a wolf. Unlike the child in the book that actually got a puppy and only dreamed it was a wolf, I became obsessed with having a wolf of my own and then as i grew up, with seeing wolves restored to the wild landscape that has been theirs since long before man ever set foot upon this continent.

It hasn’t been an easy journey. Many of you have probably been called a “wolf lover” and it’s likely that the person referring to you this way meant it as an insult. Today I’m proud to call myself a wolf lover, but to a cattleman, having a grandson that loved wolves was nearly as bad as having a grandson that was a vegetarian!

When I was still a child, I’m sure my grandfather wondered what was wrong with me. How could a member of his family have a soft spot for something so awful. Today I wonder how anyone with a soul could knowingly and needlessly destroy something so beautiful, so essential and so rare as a wolf. I wonder how they could fail to see what I do; one of nature’s greatest masterpieces, sculpted by sun and sky and rain and cold and by the animals with which they dance in a duet of life and death.

I don’t blame my grand-dad for his feelings towards wolves. The prevailing sentiment during his lifetime was that wolves were no good. They killed cattle, they killed sheep, they cost us money! By the time my grandfather was in the cattle business, people in this country had been waging war against the wolf for hundreds of years and for hundreds of years before that on the continent we came from. It was simply a way of life, part of our culture.

When our forefathers arrived on these shores they brought with them their fear, hatred and misunderstanding of wolves, and so it was that we killed them and killed them and killed them, until there were virtually none left to kill.

But since those days we’ve learned a great deal about nature and the interconnectedness of all living things. Thanks to visionaries like Aldo Leopold, we’ve learned that a world without wolves is not a deer-hunter’s paradise, but a disaster for the hunter and the deer. We’ve learned that the indiscriminate killing of wolves and their close relatives, coyotes, doesn’t improve nature but impoverishes it. We’ve found new ways to prevent predators from killing livestock and we’ve been able to prove that coexistence is not only possible, but profitable. It costs less to protect livestock from wolves then it does to keep killing them year after year.

Sadly, we’ve been a lot less successful at changing the old ways of thinking, especially among ranchers and hunters. Ranchers still insist that wolves are a huge threat to their livelihoods while hunters claim that wolves are killing all the game — two myths that refuse to die in spite of massive evidence that disproves them.

While it is true that wolves sometimes kill livestock, ranchers grossly overestimate their impact. In fact wolves are near the bottom of the list when it comes to causes of mortality in sheep and cattle. Injury, disease, exposure and death during birthing all kill many times more livestock than wolves do. Even though much of these losses are preventable, they are considered acceptable, while any loss attributed to a wolf or coyote is grounds for a call to federal wildlife killers that come in and wipe out whatever predators happen to be in the area, whether or not they were actually responsible for the kill.

It’s also true that wolves kill elk, deer, moose, rabbit, musk oxen, mice, beaver and many other species. Of course they do! That’s their role in nature. However the claims of certain wolf-hating hunters that wolves are killing all the game is so ridiculous it’s laughable. The very existence of the wolf is predicated upon the fact that they exist in a dynamic balance with the animals they consume. If wolves were to wipe out the species they need to survive, what do these hunters think would happen to the wolf?

In some states the anti-wolf rhetoric has gone to even greater extremes, with people saying they fear for their lives and for the safety of their children as they walk to school.
And while it is true that on incredibly rare occasions a wolf may have hurt a human, the truth is that when wolves and humans collide wolves always lose. We’ve killed them by the hundreds of thousands. In fact little red riding hood has a lot more to fear from a hunter than a wolf!

Over the years I’ve talked to many people about wolves and the one thing nearly every wolf hater has in common is that they’ve never actually met a wolf or taken the time to get to know them as anything other than something to kill. I’ve spent thousands of hours with wolves and high content wolfdogs and I think it’s fair to say I do know them. They’re not the monsters of my grandfather’s fears, nor are they the cute and fuzzy stuffed animals I had as a child. They are, as former government wolf killer now turned wolf advocate Carter Niemeyer says, “neither as good as we hoped nor as bad as we feared. They’re just wolves.”

In the more than four decades since that fateful day when my mom read me a very wolfy bedtime story, I’ve been lucky to actually share my life and sometimes even my bed with wolves. But also, and much more importantly, to have seen the incredible success story of our Endangered Species Act and its required and equally successful effort to let the howl of the wolf — the true wild icon of our country — echo across the mountains of the Northern Rockies, the peaks of New Mexico and Arizona and throughout the Great Lakes region.

With the return of wolf to Yellowstone we have watched in wonder as an incomplete and damaged ecosystem has become healthier, more resilient and more wild. Where a complete suite of the animals that evolved there are once again interacting and shaping each other as evolution intended. It is proof in living form that our wild places need wolves as badly as wolves need a place in the wild.

But amidst this triumph that is both uniquely American and a shining example of how evils caused by human hands can also be undone by them, we’re about to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.

Wolves are not a recovered species in any sense of the word. Today they occupy less than 5% of their prior range and at only a fraction of their former numbers. The very idea that wolves have recovered sufficiently to have their Endangered Species Act protections removed should make every one of us cringe. How can you say a species is recovered when so much of its former habitat is still missing the breathtaking and mournful howl of its undisputed apex predator? And why should politics take precedence over science in determining the fate of such an important part of the natural world?

Over the past few months, many of us have watched in dismay and then horror as the Federal Government has moved forward with it’s plan to strip all but the Mexican Gray Wolf of it’s endangered species status. We’ve held our collective breath hoping a new Secretary of the Interior, a purported conservationist and a non-rancher, would reverse this disastrous course and allow the wolf to continue its path to long term survival. Instead we’ve been deeply disappointed to learn that at every turn politics has subverted science and even the great work of some of this country’s foremost wolf researchers has been turned against the wolf even as the scientists themselves have taken a stand against the delisting.

And it is for this reason that I’ve left my pack in the redwoods and traveled across our vast country to speak to you and to demand that wolves be restored to full federal protection and allowed to recolonize their former range. I demand it on behalf of the rivers and the streams, on behalf of the deer, the elk, the beaver and the bison. I demand it on behalf of the forests and the plains, I demand it on behalf of our children and our children’s children. We all have a stake in this decision and we all have a right to be heard. And so too do the wolves that can’t speak for themselves, but have every right to their own corner of this planet that none of us own but all of us share.