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by Cat Urbigkit
Wyoming news reporter Cat Urbigkit lives in the
heart of wolf country, near Big Piney, Wyoming, a few hundred
miles south of Yellowstone National Park. As a news reporter,
rancher, researcher and Wyoming resident, she has followed
the wolf issue for many years and written many articles on
the topic, as well as an upcoming book on the history of
wolves in Wyoming.
The goal of this website is to present up-to-date, accurate
information about what is happening with wolves, focusing on wolves in the Rocky
Mountains, but referring to wolf happenings outside our region when there is
some local relevance. Rather than an agenda-driven advocacy site, this is the
place to be for the facts about wolves, with a strong focus on what’s happening
on the ground.
We invite those living in areas inhabited by wolves to contact
Cat with news tips, photographs, or other information. We also invite those who
want to support this endeavor to sign on as sponsors, and for our re aders to
support those sponsors.
2016
Wolf Watch Story Archive
12/28/16: Wolf
News Roundup
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Wyoming ends the year with a record number
of livestock depredations by wolves, according to federal
officials, and a record number of wolves killed by federal
wildlife officials in response to those depredations. While
the final numbers are not yet tallied, there were at least
110 wolves killed in the state in 2016 due to livestock depredations.
This is more than twice as many wolves that were killed in
each of the last two years in response to depredations..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
12/28/16: New
York Media’s views of the West: Click-Bait,
Animal Activism, and Fake News Rampant in Reporting
(Op-Ed by Cat
Urbigkit) Harper’s Magazine has a new feature article
that is typical of recent New York-based media reporting
on issues in the western United States. It’s the
latest in agenda-driven perspectives of those lacking an
intimate knowledge of the region they are writing about,
and who don’t make an effort to provide an unbiased
assessment of an issue. Readers seeking the real story
need to reject such click-bait, activist-driven reporting
and the fake news such pieces contain with inaccurate information,
lack of sufficient context, and uncorroborated allegations.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
12/12/16: Anti-wolf
dog vests tested
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Dogs in a village in Finland will be
equipped with safety vests this spring, in an effort to
keep them alive during attacks by wolves. Each vest contains
chili cartridges that will release chili powder into the
face of a wolf that punctures the vest while attacking
the dog..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
12/12/16: British
Columbia man stalked by wolf
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) According to media reports, a wolf attacked
and killed a dog on a ski trail in British Columbia before
following the dog's owner back to a parking lot. The attack
happened on a ski trail at the Bulkley Valley Nordic Centre,
which has stated its intention to leave the trails closed
while conservation officers investigate..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
12/11/16: Wolf
News Roundup
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Jackson Hole News & Guide reports
on the death of a wolf from Yellowstone National Park's
northern range. The nearly 10-year-old male from the Druid
Peak Pack was killed by a hunter in Montana during that
state's fall wolf hunting season. For the history of this
wolf, and the wolf pack that grew to 37 animals.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
11/18/16: Wolves
killing dogs
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) In six towns across central Sweden, villagers
held candlelight vigils in tribute to dogs that have been
killed by wolves. The dogs killed varied from family pets
to hunting or working dogs. In the United States, 40 dogs
killed by wolves in Wisconsin so far this year.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
11/10/16: Wolf
News Roundup
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) School children in a remote region of
southern Russia no longer have to walk six miles to school
after video emerged of the students trudging through snow,
with one student carrying an axe to fend off wolves. A
two-year old wolf originating in northeastern Washington
traveled about 700 miles before being killed by federal
officials while it was in the act of attacking domestic
sheep. Bold wolves have been approaching people walking
with their dogs on leashes in Pacific Rim National Park
Reserve on Vancouver Island. The California Department
of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) has confirmed the presence
of two gray wolves in western Lassen County..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
10/24/16: Coalition
pushes wolf delisting
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Sublette County Commission joined
a coalition of county commissions, hunting, conservation,
and livestock organizations in urging Congress to move
forward with removing wolves in Wyoming from federal protection.
The letter to members of the Senate Committee on Energy & Natural
Resources supports continuing of a rider on an energy policy
bill that would result in wolf delisting in the Western
Great Lakes region as well as in Wyoming ...... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
10/14/16: Thomans
Give Up Upper Green Grazing
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) In late September, W & M Thoman Ranches
herded their domestic sheep flocks down from the mountains
of the Upper Green, where they had grazed since July, just
as they had for every summer and fall for decades. But
this time was different, because the Thoman family knew
their sheep would never come back to the Upper Green for
grazing. The family had agreed to an allotment buyout deal
that would put an end to domestic sheep grazing in the
area. Long pressured by environmental groups and federal
officials, the Thomans at last conceded, and on Tuesday,
they waived their Elk Ridge Allotment Complex grazing permit
back to the Bridger-Teton National Forest without preference
to another livestock producer. The deal involved a buyout
(of an undisclosed sum) of the allotments, and was orchestrated
by the Wyoming Wild Sheep Foundation. ... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
9/26/16: Legal
battle over Wyoming's wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The legal battle over management of wolves
in Wyoming continues, with environmentalists arguing wolves
should remain under federal protection, while state and
federal officials maintain that it's time for wolves to
be subject to state management. A federal appeals court
heard oral arguments last week on a lower court's decision
overturning the delisting of wolves. A decision on the
case isn't expected for several months. Meanwhile, wolves
in Wyoming remain under federal protection pursuant to
the Endangered Species Act...... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
9/26/16: Jackson
wolf problems
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Walton Ranch has problems with the
Pinnacle Peak wolf pack, which dens on the National Elk
Refuge, but has taken up residence and is killing cattle
on the ranch's private property. There are at least 11
wolves in the pack, which is responsible for repeated cattle
depredations. Jackson Hole News & Guide reporter Mike
Koshmrl paid a visit to the ranch. ..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
9/8/16: Profanity
Peak wolf controversy
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The plight of the Profanity Peak wolf
pack in northeastern Washington has repeatedly preyed on
cattle and state officials made the decision to lethally
control the entire wolf pack. Wolves in this region of
the state are not under federal protection, but have protected
status under state law. In an unusual move, conservation
organizations joined in and said while the need to remove
the pack is regrettable, it is necessary. But a Washington
State University professor, Rob Wielgus, was vocal in his
opposition, going so far as to blame the livestock producer
for the entire conflict. In an interview published in the
Seattle Times, Wielgus claimed that the rancher intentionally
turned his cattle out over the top of a wolf den. In actuality,
the livestock were released more than 4 miles from the
den site and were dispersed throughout an allotment that
is more than 30,000 acres in size and moved from pasture
to pasture following an established rotation. Washington
State University took the unusual step of disavowing their
professor’s article and cited inaccuracies in his
statements and saying they are implementing internal university
processes to prevent subsequent inaccurate or inappropriate
statements that compromises the high standards of the university’s
research integrity...... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
9/8/16: Canadian
man attacked by wolf
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A 26-year old man was attacked by a wolf
at the Cigar Lake uranium mine in northern Saskatchewan,
Canada. A co-worker rescued the man, who was then flown
out to a hospital where he is now recovering from the attack.
In the wake of the attack, three wolves have been killed
in the area, but it is believed the wolf involved in the
attack has not yet been located. Additional security measures
have been instituted for mine workers. Officials believe
that the wolf may have become habituated to humans, leading
to the attack. This is the third attack on humans by wolves
in the area in the last 12 years, according to Canadian
press sources...... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
9/5/16: New
Predator Control Review Exposes Flaws
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A review of a new research paper shows
questionable selective use of data reporting and the appearance
of a biased predetermined outcome in arguments against
lethal control of predators....... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
8/26/16: Modern
Wolf Fable
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A speculative yet highly cited article
in the Washington Post entitled "Storied Alaska wolf
pack beloved for decades has vanished, thanks to hunting" opined
that the East Fork wolf pack roaming Denali National Park
since the days of Adolph Murie has vanished due to hunting.
A speculative yet highly cited article in the Washington
Post entitled "Storied Alaska wolf pack beloved for
decades has vanished, thanks to hunting" opined that
the East Fork wolf pack roaming Denali National Park since
the days of Adolph Murie has vanished due to hunting...... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
8/18/16: Washington's
Wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) TVW Public Affairs, a Washington state
public affairs network, has produced a half-hour documentary
on the return of wolves to the state. The program provides
a look at the impacts of wolves on livestock producers
and issues surrounding wolf management in Washington..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
8/4/16: Wyoming
Wolf Compensation
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Wyoming Department of Agriculture
is currently accepting public comment on regulations for
compensation of livestock losses due to wolf depredations
in the state's predator zone. The Wyoming Legislature allocated
$60,000 for the compensation program through June 2018,
and these regulations develop the structure for providing
the compensation.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
8/4/16: Banff
wolf poses human safety threat
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Wyoming Department of Agriculture
is currently accepting public comment on regulations for
compensation of livestock losses due to wolf depredations
in the state's predator zone. The Wyoming Legislature allocated
$60,000 for the compensation program through June 2018,
and these regulations develop the structure for providing
the compensation.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
7/27/16: Living
with Wolves in Europe
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Wolves are breeding rapidly across Europe,
according to a new article in The Economist. In central
Greece, Adam Nicolson finds shepherds and conservationists
at odds over how to deal with their incursions.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
7/27/16: Wolves
in Colorado
(By Colorado
Parks & Wildlife) Due to a recent increase in
unconfirmed sightings and reports of wolves in Colorado,
in addition to confirmed sightings over the past several
years, Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials say it is
increasingly likely that the growing wolf populations and
range in nearby states will eventually expand across state
lines. To help prevent the illegal take of the species,
officials are reminding the public that wolves remain protected
by the federal Endangered Species Act in Colorado... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
7/11/16: Wolf
Depredation Update
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
and USDA Wildlife Services have been busy with chronic
wolf depredation problems in western Wyoming. This update
has reports of depredations near Thermopolis, Cody, Lander,
Bondurant, Dubois, and the Greys River. There are at least
382 wolves in about 48 packs inhabited the state, including
Yellowstone National Park and the Wind River Indian Reservation.?
Wyoming has exceeded recovery goals for the Northern Rocky
Mountains for 13 consecutive years, yet delisting from
the Endangered Species Act remains entangled in the federal
courts. The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service manages for
wolf population growth and wolf distribution to minimize
chronic loss of livestock from wolves and promote wolf
conservation by maintaining the Wyoming wolf population
well above recovery objectives... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
6/15/16: Wolf
News Update
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A federal judge has halted the
release of Mexican wolves in New Mexico until the U.S.
Fish & Wildlife Service receives permission from state
officials for such releases. A female wolf from the five-member
Bow Valley wolf pack was killed by wildlife officials in
Canada’s Banff National Park last week after the
wolf demonstrated increasingly bold behavior. Bold behavior
toward humans prompted Parks Canada wildlife officials
to issue warnings for the public to use caution around
wolves in the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
6/8/16: Wolf
News Roundup
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Here are several stories from
around the area about wolf news. Wolves are killing cattle
in Jackson Hole. A wolf pack in Banff, Canada is boldly
following people and stealing food in campgrounds. In Idaho,
environmental groups are suing the USDA for the agency’s
wolf killing in the state.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
6/8/16: Western
Wyoming wolf problems
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) With the recent retirement of Mike Jimenez
of the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, responsibilities
for dealing with wolves that repeatedly prey on livestock
has transferred to Tyler Abbott of the agency’s Cheyenne
office. Abbott has had his hands full since taking over
the program a few weeks ago, with wolves in three areas
of western Wyoming causing chronic problems. There have
been numerous problem areas around the state where wolves
are preying on cattle, horses and sheep. Livestock producers
experiencing problems with wolves in western Wyoming can
contact FWS’s Tyler Abbott at 307-286-7242, or Rod
Merrill of USDA Wildlife Services at 307-320-5109...... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
5/12/16: Michigan
wolf population maintains
(By Michigan
DNR) Michigan Department of Natural Resources wildlife
division officials said the size of the state’s wolf
population has not changed significantly since the last
survey was conducted in 2014. DNR wildlife researchers
estimate there was a minimum of 618 wolves in the Upper
Peninsula this winter. The 2014 minimum population estimate
was 636 wolves...... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
5/12/16: Wolf
News Roundup
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Idaho’s harvest of wolves
in the 2015-2016 hunting/trapping season includes 137 killed
through hunting, and 122 through trapping, similar to last
year’s take. Montana's recent harvest included 137
wolves killed through hunting, and 73 through trapping.
Wolves in Idaho and Montana were removed from federal protection
in May 2011..... (Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
4/30/16: Wolf
hunting reduces sightings
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Visitors to national parks are
half as likely to see wolves in their natural habitat when
wolf hunting is permitted just outside park boundaries.
That’s the main finding of a paper co-authored by
the University of Washington appearing April 28 in the
journal PLOS ONE. Its authors examined wolf harvest and
sightings data from two national parks — Denali National
Park and Preserve in Alaska and Yellowstone National Park
that straddles Wyoming, Montana and Idaho — and found
visitors were twice as likely to see a wolf when hunting
wasn’t permitted adjacent to the parks. It’s
up to the reader to interpret whether the decrease in potential
wolf viewing inside the park because of hunting that occurs
outside the park is a positive or negative for humans and/or
wolves. Perhaps the question can be framed in this way:
Is the purpose of the park’s wolf population to have
a complete ecosystem, or to provide for human entertainment?..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
4/30/16: Washington
considers wolf compensation
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Capital Press reports that
Washington wildlife officials are contemplating a policy
on lethal control of depredating wolves. One idea is to
provide higher compensation for ranchers who exhaust non-lethal
preventative measures. That compensation could be as high
as five times the market value of confirmed cattle killed
by wolves...... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.)
4/2/16: Nine
wolves killed
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Responding to repeated livestock
depredations on cattle on private property in the Bondurant
area in recent weeks, federal wildlife officials have killed
nine wolves in the area, including three on Thursday. The
Dell Creek wolf pack has now been reduced from an estimated
16 animals to seven, but the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
has issued a kill order on the remaining animals in the
pack as cattle producers are now in their calving season
in the area. A second wolf pack, the 9-member Rim pack,
roams the same area. There are more than 1,700 wolves in
the Northern Rockies..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
4/2/16: Minimum
of 1,700 Wolves in Northern Rockies
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
has released its annual report for the Northern Rocky Mountain
wolf population – a population that has expanded
to include at least 1,700 wolves in 282 packs in Montana,
Idaho and Wyoming. From this core population area, the
wolf population has continued to expand in Oregon, Washington,
and California, for a total wolf population of about 1,900
animals in 316 packs with 114 breeding pairs..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/25/16: Wolves
killing feedground elk
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A photo of lined-up dead elk on
a Bondurant-area is making its way around social media.
The 19 dead elk are the result of "surplus killing" behavior
by wolves, in which the wolves kill more animals than are
consumed. According to Buckrail, Wyoming Game & Fish
Department personnel suspect the 9-member Rim pack is responsible
for the elk kills.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/18/16: Removing
Wolf Packs Reduces Depredations
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A new paper by wolf managers in
the Northern Rocky Mountains found that "full pack
removal was the most effective management response to reduce
future livestock depredations in a local area." Researchers
associated with the new paper suggested that depredation
management is most appropriately studied at the wolf pack-level,
or local scale. The new paper, "Effects of Wolf Removal
on Livestock Depredation Recurrence and Wolf Recovery in
Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming," was published in the
Journal of Wildlife Management by authors associated with
Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, University of Montana, and USDA Wildlife Services.
The researchers studied nearly 1,000 depredations by 156
known wolf packs in the tri-state area, comparing the management
response to depredations: no removal, partial pack removal,
and full pack removal. The median time between recurrent
depredations was 19 days following no removal, 64 days
following partial pack removal, and 730 days following
full pack removal... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/18/16: Wolf
Problems in France
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Australian famers must deal with
wild dog attacks on their sheep flocks, but a farm publication
in that country notes that at least it's not as bad as
French shepherds suffering wolf depredations on their flocks.
Australian farmers use guns and poison to kill depredating
dogs, while French shepherds would face jail time for killing
a wolf preying on their flocks. Matthew Cawood of Farm
Weekly reports that France's 300 wolves killed or mauled
10,000 sheep last year.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/18/16: Feds
plan grizzly delisting, WYO proposes plan
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
has once again proposed removing the grizzly bear population
in the Yellowstone region from federal protections under
the Endangered Species Act. In response to the successful
recovery of one of the nation’s most iconic animals,
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) today proposed
to remove the grizzly bear in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
from the Federal Lists of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife.
The restoration of the grizzly bear in Montana, Wyoming
and Idaho during the last three decades stands as one of
America’s great conservation successes—a testament
to the value of the Endangered Species Act (ESA) and the
strong partnerships it drives. The Yellowstone grizzly
bear population has rebounded from as few as 136 bears
in 1975 to an estimated 700 or more today.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/18/16: Should
wolves be released on Isle Royale?
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The National Park Service is moving
forward with an environmental planning process to address
the wolf population in Isle Royale National Park. The island's
wolf population has dropped to just two animals. According
the NPS, "The average wolf population on the island
over the past 65 years has been about 22, but there have
been as many as 50 wolves on the island and as few as three.
Over the past five years the population has declined steeply,
which has given rise to the need to determine whether the
NPS should bring additional wolves to the island. There
were three wolves documented on the island as of March
2015 and only two wolves have been confirmed as of February
2016. At this time, natural recovery of the population
is unlikely." The NPS is considering four alternatives,
including no action... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/18/16: Dell
Creek Wolf Pack Targeted
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Media outlets report that federal
officials have killed five wolves from the Dell Creek pack
in the Hoback, leaving the pack with 11 members. Lethal
control was ordered after the pack repeatedly preyed on
livestock on private ranchlands in the basin, killing five
head of beef cattle. In addition, the wolves have killed
about 50 elk on nearby elk feedgrounds managed by state
wildlife officials.. (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/17/16: Oregon
Wolves Delisted
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Oregon has enacted a law that
removes wolves from state endangered species protection
and protects the decision from environmental litigation.
State wildlife officials are now moving forward with a
management plan for wolves in the region. Wolves occurring
in the western two-thirds of the state remain under federal
protection. State officials note that the minimum Oregon
wolf population is now 110 wolves, a 36 percent increase
over the 2014 population. The population includes 11 breeding
pairs of wolves... (Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
2/27/16: Wolf
News
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Union-Bulletin reports that
a group of University of Washington researchers have published
a paper indicating that killing wolves reduces livestock
losses – the opposite of an earlier study published
by another group University of Washington researchers that
alleged killing wolves actually increases livestock attacks.… (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
2/18/16: Wolf
Depredation dispute continues
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) On Feb. 26, 2016, the U.S. House
passed the Sportsmen's Heritage and Recreational Enhancement
(SHARE) Act, along with an amendment that would delist
wolves in Wyoming and in the western Great Lakes States.
The bill now moves to the U.S. Senate for consideration.
In other wolf news, DNA tests confirm that the wolf killed
in a coyote snare in Utah last November was indeed a wolf.
The wolf was killed in November near Utah's border with
Wyoming.… (Click on the
link above for the complete story.)
2/18/16: WG&F
Elk & Wolf Update
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) South Pinedale Game Warden Jordan
Kraft euthanized a bull elk that had been attacked by wolves
and after performing a necropsy determined that the bull
elk was susceptible to predation due to an archery wound
on a front shoulder. Big Piney Game Warden Adam Hymas has
been monitoring elk distribution around feedgrounds and
native winter range to minimize damage to stored crops
and prevent livestock commingling issues. Wolves have been
killing elk on a regular basis at the McNeel Feedground
near Bondurant, causing damage issues. The wolf problems
have been relayed to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.… (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
2/8/16: Wolf
howling dialects
(By University
of Cambridge-UK) The largest ever study of howling
in the ‘canid’ family of species – which
includes wolves, jackals and domestic dogs – has
shown that the various species and subspecies have distinguishing
repertoires of howling, or "vocal fingerprints":
different types of howls are used with varying regularity
depending on the canid species. Researchers used computer
algorithms for the first time to analyze howling, distilling
over 2,000 different howls into 21 howl types based on
pitch and fluctuation, and then matching up patterns of
howling. They found that the frequency with which types
of howls are used – from flat to highly modulated – corresponded
to the species of canid, whether dog or coyote, as well
as to the subspecies of wolf. They are currently working
on research in Yellowstone National Park using multiple
recording devices and triangulation technology to try and
pick up howl sounds and location. From this, they might
be able to tell whether certain calls relate to distance
communication or pack warnings. The research was conducted
by a team of scientists from the UK, US, Spain and India,
and is published in the journal Behavioural Processes.… (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
2/5/16: Wolf
News Roundup
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) This is an update on wolf news
from Wisconsin, Washington and on delisting. A U.S. senator
from Wisconsin has introduced an amendment to delist wolves
in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan and Wyoming. It is attempt
provided by congressional members to try to move delisting
forward. Wisconsin's effort to transplant elk in the west-central
portion of the state has been hampered by predation from
a local wolf pack. A pack of wolves in Washington state
surrounded a pair of dogs near a family’s rural home,
but residents were able to scare them away by firing shots.… (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
1/25/16: Idaho
Wolf Management
(By Virgil Moore,
Director, Idaho Fish & Game) When Idaho Fish
and Game took over wolf management in 2011, the wolf population
had grown unchecked for more than a decade after reaching
federal recovery levels of 10 breeding pairs and 100 wolves
eleven years earlier. This was due to repeated lawsuits
that stalled delisting and delayed transfer of wolves to
state management. As a result, wolf conflicts with livestock
and elk populations were rampant in most parts of Idaho
north of the Snake River and livestock producers and hunters
grew increasingly frustrated. After five years of state
management of wolves in Idaho, we're seeing positive results.
Livestock depredations by wolves are down by almost 50
percent (59 in 2015). Idaho's elk herds are rebounding
too, but there are still some places in Idaho where predation
impacts are unacceptable. Conflicts are decreasing because
regulated wolf hunting and trapping seasons are helping
us balance predator and prey populations. The bottom line
is Idaho has a healthy, sustainable wolf population that
is over seven times higher than the federal recovery goal.
Idaho Fish and Game has proven we can responsibly manage
wolves, provide regulated hunting and trapping opportunity,
and reduce conflict. … (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
1/23/16: Dealing
with stock-killing wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A Montana wildlife official has
noted that aggressively dealing with wolves that kill livestock
works better than delaying action, according to a report
in the Seattle Times. Montana biologist Liz Bradley noted
that killing livestock is a learned behavior, so removing
more wolves earlier is better than "picking away" at
a stock-killing pack. In the end, fewer wolves will have
to be removed.… (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
1/23/16: Wolf
delisting moves in U.S. Senate
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A bill that would remove federal
protections for wolf populations in Wyoming and in the
Great Lakes states was met with a nod of approval from
the U.S. Senate's Environment and Public Works Committee
this week. Wolf delisting was proposed by U.S. Senator
John Barrasso as an amendment to the Sportsmen's Act, legislation
addressing recreational hunting, fishing, and shooting.
The bill, with Barrassso's successful amendment, can now
be scheduled for consideration by the full Senate.… (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
1/3/16: Wolves
in Poland
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Poland is home to a population
of 1,500 wolves. Wolf advocates want to release wolves
into Scotland. The two countries have big differences:
Poland raises pork, and Scotland raises sheep. Poland sees
wolves as a way to control the 200,000 wild boar that inhabit
the countryside. Read the story to learn the views of a
Polish wildlife biologist as he considers whether Scotland
could handle wolves.… (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
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2008
Wolf Watch Story Archive
2007/2006
Wolf Watch Story Archive
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