Mexican Gray Wolf Dies in Leghold Trap!

http://www.kjzz.org/content/1308/mexican-gray-wolf-dies
By: Mark Brodie on 08/20/2013

Wildlife officials said a Mexican gray wolf [one of around 50 remaining on Earth] has died in the Apache Sitgreaves National Forest. Arizona Game and Fish officials said a field team was trying to fit radio-telemetry collars on some wolves last weekend. One female yearling was caught in a padded foot trap, and the animal moved into rocky terrain on the edge of a slope. By the time crews could get to the wolf, she was no longer breathing and could not be revived.

Authorities said this is only the third time they have had a capture-related death in the 15-year history of the Mexican wolf reintroduction project in Arizona and New Mexico. The Mexican gray wolf was added to the federal endangered species list in 1976.

The federal government recently announced Arizona, New Mexico and other states would share $850,000 to help reduce conflicts between the wolves and livestock.

copyrighted Hayden wolf walking

Sears Sells Wolf Hunting T-Shirts!

http://www.sears.com/search=wolf?catalogId=12605&storeId=10153&levels=Clothing&autoRedirect=true&viewItems=50&redirectType=CAT_REC_PRED

THAT’S IT! I’ve officially lost all hope for humanity!! I’ve had it with this sociopathic society that has no regard or respect for the animal world! This is the lowest the human creature has ever crawled! If there were ever a time to drop completely out and go on the war wagon…

What’s driving me to these depths, you ask? Sears now sells “I Love Wolf Hunting T-Shirts”!! What are they trying to do, start a war?! Don’t they know that there’s a lot of folks out there who are only about a heartbeat away from going ballistic on the first person they see wearing a “Wolf Hunting Rocks” T-shirt?

Forget those beautiful, artistic images of wolves Sears used to sell, now they carry a solid black shirt with a red heart that simply states: “I (heart) wolf hunting” (how fucking clever, not to mention original).

If that’s too simplistic for your tastes, they also have dull brown shirts, in all shapes and sizes, ignorantly declaring “I have a Masters in Wolf Hunting.” One says, “Life without wolf hunting? I don’t think so” (to which we’d gladly oblige), while another idiotic shirt features a life-sized human heart over the words, “Wolf hunting, wolf hunting, wolf hunting, wolf hunting” as though it’s all the asshole wearing it has to live for.

Meanwhile, one bright-red shirt just says USA Wolf Hunting (like it’s something our country should be proud of?) Oh, and there’s one that just says, “Smile, life is wolf hunting.”

Well, if that’s all life is for some people, then they don’t deserve it.

 

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Wolf News and Hunt Updates

First, here are the numbers so far for this year’s wolf-kill season…

Latest Posted Idaho Wolf Hunt Kill total (current season): 2

Latest Posted Idaho Wolf Trapping Kill total (current season): 0
Latest Posted Montana Wolf Hunt Kill Total (season is currently closed): 0
Latest Posted Montana Wolf Trapping Kill total (season is currently closed): 0
Wyoming Wolf Kill Total (2013): 25

Regional Total Reported Killed Since Delisting: 1,184

National News:

Wolves Under Review
New York Times Editorial
August 15

Rocky Barker: Earth First! dead last in wolf advocacy
Idaho Statesman
August 19
http://www.idahostatesman.com/2013/08/19/2713697/earth-first-dead-last-in-wolf.html
•Seattle Gun Rights Examiner Blog: Wolf management saboteurs have playbook for disruption

•The Equation (Union of Concerned Scientist Blog): Wolves, the Endangered Species Act, and Why Scientific Integrity Matters
West Coast News:

Conservation groups seek stronger wolf protections
Metthow Valley News
August 14

Conservation groups seek stronger wolf protections

Confirmed Wolf Kill
Washington Ag Today
August 16
http://www.aginfo.net/index.cfm/report/id/Washington-Ag-Today-25655

Northern Rockies

Guard dogs being tested on Rocky Mtn Front
Great Falls Tribune via Miami Herald
August 16
http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/08/16/3567029/guard-dogs-being-tested-on-rocky.html

Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation Grant to Help Wolf Management in Wyoming
RMEF Press Release via AmmoLand
August 19
http://www.ammoland.com/2013/08/rocky-mountain-elk-foundation-grant-to-help-wolf-management-in-wyoming/#axzz2cRmEm8zo

Wyoming Game and Fish to trap wolves east of Yellowstone for monitoring
Yellowstone Gate
August 15

Wyoming Game and Fish to trap wolves east of Yellowstone for monitoring

Wolves cause death of 176 sheep near Fogg Hill; Forest Service says stay out of area
Teton Valley News
August 19
http://www.tetonvalleynews.net/news/wolves-kill-sheep-near-fogg-hill/article_f79754fc-08eb-11e3-82d9-001a4bcf887a.html

Elsewhere & Etc.

Court says DOE can force rancher to construct buffer fences
The Olympia Repirt
August 15
http://theolympiareport.com/court-says-doe-can-force-cattle-rancher-to-construct-buffer-fences/

Federal Officials Confirm Gray Wolf Taken In Kentucky
LEX18
August 14

http://www.lex18.com/news/federal-officials-confirm-gray-wolf-taken-in-kentucky
•AP Via the Republic: Federal officials confirm first gray wolf killed in Kentucky in more than a century

U.S. cattle inventory still declining
Drovers Cattle Network
August 15
http://www.cattlenetwork.com/drovers/markets/US-cattle-inventory-still-declining-219311601.html?ref=601
•The Wildlife News: Cattle Numbers Still Declining
Howling pups show Isle Royale wolves are reproducing, but not out of danger
MinnPost
August 16

Howling pups show Isle Royale wolves are reproducing, but not out of danger


•Michigan Radio: Wolf pups a good sign for struggling population on Isle Royale
BLM Public Lands Grazing Accounts for Only 0.41% of Nation’s Livestock Receipts
The Wildlife News
August 15

BLM Public Lands Grazing Accounts for Only 0.41% of Nation’s Livestock Receipts

Alyssa Grayson Gives Keynote Address at National Event
WolfWatcher
August 15

Alyssa Grayson Gives Keynote Address at National Event

Wolf hybrids allowed
Medford Mail Tribune
August 18
http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20130818/NEWS/308180318/-1/NEWSMAP

Stamford Woman Stumps In Support Of Endangered Gray Wolf
Stamford Daily Voice (CT)
August 14
http://stamford.dailyvoice.com/news/stamford-woman-stumps-support-endangered-gray-wolf

Little common ground found on wolf reintroduction
White Mountain Independent
August 16
http://www.wmicentral.com/news_premium/little-common-ground-found-on-wolf-reintroduction/article_6197762c-05d9-11e3-943f-001a4bcf887a.html

copyrighted Hayden wolf in lodgepoles

NYT: Wolves Under Review

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/16/opinion/wolves-under-review.html?_r=0

By 
Published: August 15, 2013

In June, the Fish and Wildlife Service prematurely proposed to end federal protection for gray wolves in the lower 48 states in the belief that wolves had fully recovered from near eradication in the early 20th century. This was politics masquerading as science. The Fish and Wildlife Service would love to shed the responsibility of protecting large carnivores, like the wolf and the grizzly bear, and hunters and ranchers throughout the Rocky Mountains would love to see wolves eradicated all over again.

By law, a decision like this one — to remove an animal from the endangered species list — requires a peer review: an impartial examination of wolf numbers, population dynamics and the consequences of proposed actions. But science and politics have gotten tangled up again. The private contractor, a consulting firm called AMEC, which was hired to run the review, removed three scientists from the review panel. Each of the scientists had signed a May 21 letter to Sally Jewell, the interior secretary, criticizing the plan to turn wolf management over to the states.

In the peer-review process, there is only the illusion of independence, for the simple reason that the Fish and Wildlife Service controls the appointment of panelists. The agency would like to pretend that these panelists were removed for their lack of impartiality. In fact, they failed to measure up to the agency’s anti-wolf bias. The Fish and Wildlife Service is now busy covering its tracks. It postponed evaluation of the delisting plan because, it says, the identities of the panelists, which were supposed to be hidden from agency officials, had been discovered.

If wolves can’t get a fair hearing at the federal level, what chance do they have at the state level? The answer is, very little. Scientists have already noted a 7 percent decline in Rocky Mountain wolves since they were delisted, and hunts authorized, in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.

Wolves arouse passions that seem to preclude any effort to treat them the way they should be treated: as part of a natural, healthy ecosystem. That is how the Clinton administration understood wolves when it reintroduced them to the region in the mid-1990s, and it’s how they should be understood now.

copyrighted wolf in water

Wolf advocates post how-to manual for saboteurs

http://www.capitalpress.com/newsletter/AP-wolf-trapping-081413

HELENA, Mont. (AP) — Environmentalists upset with a federal proposal to remove protections for wolves across most of the U.S. have posted a manual on how to disrupt wolf hunts and sabotage traps.

The 12-page manual published online Monday by Earth First! tells would-be saboteurs that Internet activism alone can leave activists with an empty feeling, so “why not try direct action?”

The manual instructs how to find traps and take them out by destroying or hiding them. It also instructs how to release a trapped wolf, noting that doing so is very dangerous, and suggests forming blockades where wolf permits are sold and walking ahead of hunters with air horns.

Earth First! Media spokesman Grayson Flory said his organization published the manual written by a group calling themselves the “Redneck Wolf Lovin’ Brigade.” The impetus was the Obama administration’s announcement in June that it plans to end Endangered Species Act protections for almost all wolves in the United States, he said.

“We don’t believe something being illegal automatically makes it right or wrong,” Flory said. “The wolf hunt manual that we’re redistributing is only about protecting life, not killing it. We’re completely against the harming of living things.”

[Oh really, that’s a welcome switch from their statement in the manual that, “We are hunters and proud of it…feral hogs beware.”]

Wolf hunts already are allowed in Montana, Idaho, Wyoming and Minnesota. A hunt is scheduled for this fall in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.

Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks spokesman Ron Aasheim said the state’s wolf hunting policy was a public process that deserved respect.

“This shows you the extremes people are willing to go to in making their points and affecting public policy,” Aasheim said. “But if something comes to pass and people do break the law, they will be prosecuted.”

Montana Trappers Association president Tom Barnes said hunters and trappers help manage the wolf population.

“All we ask is that we can manage these wolves,” Barnes said. “Hunting is a tool to do that, just like trapping, for any other animal species.”

A draft of the U.S. Department of Interior proposed rule to lift wolf protections said the roughly 6,000 wolves now living in the Northern Rockies and Great Lakes are enough to prevent the species’ extinction.

The agency says having gray wolves elsewhere — such as the West Coast, parts of New England and elsewhere in the Rockies — is unnecessary for their long-term survival.

A small population of Mexican wolves in the Southwest would continue to receive federal protections, as a distinct subspecies of the gray wolf.

Federal officials have delayed a required analysis of the proposal after a contractor provided the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service with information that could have identified scientists on the anonymous review panel. At least two scientists were told they couldn’t serve on the panel because they signed a letter supporting continuing wolf protections.

More mainstream coverage here: http://www.greatfallstribune.com/article/20130812/NEWS01/308120015/Radical-environmental-group-advocates-wolf-hunt-sabotage

copyrighted wolf in river

Heed the call of the wild: don’t cull the wolf

copyrighted Hayden wolf in lodgepoles

There are better ways to control North America’s wolf populations than removing wildlife protections and permitting hunting

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/aug/14/wolf-cull-hunting

by  www.theguardian.com,

Wednesday 14 August 2013

They encroach on natural habitats, kill wildlife and destroy native landscapes.

While this is, in many ways, the modus operendi of human populations, it is the excuse now being given by the US Fish and Wildlife Services (FWS) in its call on the federal government to remove the gray wolf from endangered species lists. All for the purpose of using human “ingenuity” (read: guns) to help reduce the population to a more “manageable” level.

Activists are beginning to take to the social media networks in calling for the government to not slaughter wolves. One petition, began last week, has already garnered several thousand signatures en route to its 10,000 goal.

With thousands of wolves across the country struggling to survive after decades of reintroduction since humans slaughtered nearly the entire population, it seems odd that calls have grown stronger to remove them from the Endangered Species Act (ESA). According to the FWS, in the Great Lakes region, there are roughly 4,000 wolves; in the Northern Rocky Mountains around 1,700; Washington State has nine total; the southwest about 60 wolves. In Alaska, where wolves are not protected by the ESA, there live about 10,000.

So, why have the calls for “culling” wolves increased so dramatically over the past five years, in a plan to reduce the populations which the FWS terms “control”?

The modern wolf story largely begins in 1995, in Idaho (my home state), when the state reintroduced a number of gray wolves into the state as part of the “experimental, non-essential” clause of the ESA. From there, the animals developed and grew in numbers across the state as wildlife biologists helped support the small ecosystems that were developed for the animals’ use. And in the United States Pacific northwest, the Nez Perce Native American tribe also started their own project, which enabled a pack of wolves to live and create familial ties in a large fenced area.

Not everyone was pleased that hills covered in snow and jagged mountains – the difficult terrain of Idaho’s mountains – are now home to wolves: some government officials and ordinary citizens claim the species has now overpopulated the wilderness areas and is a threat to “human activity”.

As one family friend, a hunter, told me recently, the wolves are “killing livestock, attacking people in the natural parks and without action could overrun our landscape”. Although he is right that wolves do attack livestock (and wild prey), there is little evidence that people are being attacked. Wolves rarely are aggressive toward humans unless threatened.

The problem is rather with the continued development on what had, historically, been remote areas; there, wolves are simply attempting to survive. With calls for removing wolves from the protection of the ESA, however, it could soon be open season for hunters – in what officials argue are “conservation” efforts to ensure the wolves’ survival.

I spoke with an Idaho biologist who has worked with both the FWS and the wolf reintroduction program. He argues that human populations continue to “overuse” hunting in the name of sport and this has reduced deer and elk populations, not just in Idaho, but in the Great Lakes and Alaska. The result?

Wolves have been forced to look elsewhere for food and sustenance. This results in cattle being attacked because the regular food chain has been disrupted. Hunting wolves won’t stop this problem unless all the wolves are killed.

He also pointed out that during such culls – which we have seen in Idaho and other areas – it is the adult wolves that are killed, often leaving cubs unprotected and unable to fend for themselves. “It is sad that this sort of thing continues,” he added.

Activists have called for a blanket ban on wolf-killing, but there is a need to work with the FWS and those who feel threatened by wolves. We must understand that the issue of wolves is a nuanced controversy in which those directly affected by the encroaching wolf populations must be heard. There needs to be compromise that does not threaten the whole wolf population and finds sustainable solutions in the specific environments where the reintroduction process has occurred.

At the same time, we can’t afford to reverse the good work of reintroduction programs and go back to the days when wolves were seen as a deadly menace to humans and their livestock – and had to be exterminated because of that perception.

Sab All Hunting, Not Just the Wolf Hunt

It never pays to procrastinate. Although I re-blogged Earth First’s “Manual for Sabotaging Wolf Hunts” a few days ago, I just now read the first speciesist lines of its pro-hunting introduction: “Lets shoot straight right from the start. We are hunters and proud of it.” (What part of the universal truth, that hunters are psychopaths and total scumbags, does EF fail to understand?) Their inconsistent attitude that it’s ok to hunt other species besides wolves prevents me from spreading the word about their manual any further.

It’s always sad when good-hearted people try to align themselves with their enemies and take on their ugly traits in order to boost the popularity of their cause. While it may seem like fun to emulate Elmers, when it comes right down to it, hating and killing wolves is a natural component of the redneck hunter’s credo. Rare is the hunter out to get “his” deer—whether for the purpose of subsistence, sport or trophy hunting—that doesn’t eventually resent the competition from natural predators.

Species like deer, moose, elk or feral hogs are every bit as sentient, and can experience fear and pain in the same way, as wolves. All animals value their lives; the frivolous taking of an innocent life is not something to be proud of. If we modern humans (7 billion and counting) can lead healthier lives without killing and consuming animal flesh, and thereby messing with the food chain, why should we inject ourselves into natures’ intricate web by playing top predator?

Remember, every grazer or browser we claim for ourselves is one less for the wolves who really need them.

Text and Wildlife Photography © Jim Robertson

Text and Wildlife Photography © Jim Robertson

 

No Wolf Proponents Allowed

Three wolf researchers were removed from a review panel based on their public criticism of a federal plan to turn management of the wolf over to states.

Federal officials apparently ordered a purge of an independent science panel tasked with reviewing whether gray wolves should come off the Endangered Species List, a move the federal government supports.

Three prominent independent wolf researchers — Roland Kays, John Vucetich and Robert Wayne — were removed from the review team based on their public criticism of the federal plan. They specialize in different areas of wildlife research, but they have one thing in common: In a May 21 letter to Interior Secretary Sally Jewell, they questioned the scientific basis for a plan to turn wolf management over to states.

Related: Majority of Minnesotans mad over state allowing wolf hunting

Shortly after being picked for the review team, the private contractor amec, which is running the review project, told the scientists they were off the panel because they had signed the letter, along with 13 other scientists.

In an email sent to the men on Wednesday, amec scientist Melissa Greulich wrote: “I understand how frustrating it must be, but we have to go with what the service wants,” a reference to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s concern about potential conflict-of-interest issues associated with the scientists who signed the critical letter.

Fish and Wildlife expertscharged withadministering the review said the fact that the scientists took a position on the plan was inconsistent with the agency’s scientific integrity policies.

The head of a government watchdog group said the last-minute removal of the three scientists confirms that Fish and Wildlife did exercise veto power over the review panel, despite the agency’s claims that it left the choice to the contractor.

“To avoid dealing with the serious scientific concerns … the Fish & Wildlife Service is packing the review panel for its own proposal,” Jeff Ruch, director of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, said in a statement.

“Selecting your own reviewers defeats the purpose of independent peer review,” Ruch said.

Related: Wolf howl identification developed by British scientists

One of the purged scientists said he thinks the process is politically driven.

“What I understand happened is, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service told the contractor you can’t pick anybody that’s on that list,” said Vucetich, a professor at Michigan Technical University who has spent his career studying wolves. He was referring to the letter signed by the scientists who disagree with turning gray wolf management over to states.

The federal wolf proposal doesn’t reflect the best available science and fails to measure up to the requirements of the Endangered Species Act, Vucetich said.

“The Service did not request that any particular scientists be excluded from participation as peer reviewers for the agency’s gray wolf proposals,” Fish and Wildlife spokesman Gavin Shire told MSN via email. Shire said the agency doesn’t know who the panelists are in advance of the final selection.

Gray wolves were wiped out in the Lower 48 states by the middle of the 20th century. Today they live in Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin, with a small population just taking hold in the Pacific Northwest. Currently, all those populations are protected under the Endangered Species Act. The Fish and Wildlife Service estimates that about 1,600 wolves in the northern Rockies and 4,400 in the western Great Lakes region.

Chinese customs seize 645 wolf skins from Greece

Pelts arrived on July 29 flight from Athens

 Author: Damian Mac Con Uladh

The 645 wolf skins were concealed in bags that were labelled ‘fur scraps’. It is not clear if the skins are from Greece’s indigenous wolf population, which is estimated to number 500-700 animals

Customs officers check wolf skins at Beijing Capital International Airport, 8 August 2013 (Reuters)

 

Customs officers check wolf skins at Beijing Capital International Airport, 8 August 2013 (Reuters) Customs officials in China on Thursday seized almost 650 pieces of wolf skins that arrived on a flight from Greece last month.

The pelts, which cover a total area of 200m2 when spread out, were imported into China on July 29 on a flight from Greece to Beijing Capital International Airport, officials said, describing the haul as the biggest case of suspected smuggling of skins of endangered wild animals in China in over a decade.

According to Chinese media, the goods were packed into 30 sacks, each of which was labelled “fur scraps”. The accompanying documentation stated that the total weight of the freight was 1,400kg and was valued at $3,700.

But as that represented a price of $3 per kilo – well below the average market price for fur scraps – customs officials became suspicious and decided to carry out on inspection.

Customs officers check wolf skins at Beijing Capital International Airport, 8 August 2013 (Reuters)

 

Customs officers check wolf skins at Beijing Capital International Airport, 8 August 2013 (Reuters) After x-raying the consignment, officials opened the bags to find up to twenty pelts in each sack concealed beneath fur scraps on top.

The seized skins are mostly brown in colour but there are also black- and grey-haired pelts.

A trading firm in Beijing is suspected of smuggling the wolf skins and arrests have been made, customs officials told the media. They estimate that the market value of the skins could be in the region of 1m yuan (€125,000) or more.

It is not clear if the skins are from Greece’s indigenous wolf population, which is estimated to number 500-700 animals, or were imported from elsewhere.

Make Sure FWS Gets the Message: Americans Want Wolves to Stay Protected!

Make Sure FWS Gets the Message: Americans Want Wolves to Stay Protected!

July 28, marked the halfway point of the 90-day comment period on the proposed delisting of nearly all gray wolves in the lower 48 states, and we’re making a racket they can’t ignore.

The premature delisting of gray wolves flies in the face of sound science and is an invitation to a recovery disaster.

Please send an urgent message to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service – demand that they withdraw their delisting proposal.

Take Action by going Here: https://secure.defenders.org/site/Advocacy?cmd=display&page=UserAction&id=2621