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Keyword: canadianwolves

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  • Wolf harvest: Hunters help curb depredations Idaho has among the most liberal hunting and trapping laws in the nation. But wolves reproduce so quickly that it’s barely made a dent.

    02/27/2025 6:16:45 PM PST · by artichokegrower · 45 replies
    Western Farm Press ^ | January 23, 2025 | Heather Smith Thomas
    Canadian wolves were released into Yellowstone National Park in 1995 and central Idaho in 1996 — but within a few years their territory and numbers had greatly expanded, along with their negative impact on livestock and elk herds.
  • Two newly released wolves into Colorado come from depredating Five Points pack in Oregon

    12/21/2023 6:37:56 AM PST · by george76 · 55 replies
    Fence Post ^ | Dec 20, 2023 | Rachel Gabel
    Two wolves released on Dec. 19, 2023, in Grand County, Colorado, 2302-OR, a juvenile female, black color, 68 pounds, and 2303-OR, a juvenile male, gray color, 76 pounds, come from the Five Points Pack. According to Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Livestock Depredation Investigations, Five Points pack wolves injured one calf and killed another in separate depredations in July of 2023; killed a cow on Dec. 5, 2022; and injured a 900-pound yearling heifer on July 17, 2022. ... On July 21, OFW authorized the killing of up to four wolves from the Five Points Pack after two attacks...
  • Wolves’ Pending Return to Colorado Gets Mixed Reception

    12/05/2023 1:08:43 PM PST · by NohSpinZone · 43 replies
    In late 2020, Colorado voters did something relatively unprecedented in the nation’s history by voting to reintroduce wolves to the state. That process, several years in the works now, will involve transplanting wolves from Oregon — and even though the measure was given the goahead three years ago, some opponents of the measure remain skeptical. That in and of itself isn’t too surprising; you’d think that if people changed their mind on how they’d voted, it would likely happen after wolves returned to Colorado, and that hasn’t happened yet. A recent article at NPR by Kurt Siegler offers a good...
  • Polis’ CDA taps wolf advocate with anti-ag ties to lead Colorado Bureau of Animal Protection

    02/09/2022 8:11:00 AM PST · by george76 · 3 replies
    The Fence Post ^ | 2/9/2022 | Rachel Gabel
    The Bureau of Animal Protection has a new director, selected from a pool of candidates that included two animal rights attorneys and a wolf introduction and “humane food choice proponent.” The final choice to lead the bureau, announced today by Colorado Commissioner of Agriculture Kate Greenberg, is Dr. Rebecca (Becky) Niemiec (pronounced “Knee-Mick”) an assistant professor in the Human Dimensions of Natural Resources Department at Colorado State University and the director of the Conservation Action Lab. ... The BAP falls under the umbrella of the Colorado Department of Agriculture, but open records requests by The Fence Post indicate governor Jared...
  • Release the Wolves: Polis tells commission to hurry and get wolves on the ground ( Colorado )

    01/15/2021 2:26:42 PM PST · by george76 · 38 replies
    The Fence Post ^ | 1/15/2021
    When voters were asked to decide whether to forcibly introduce wolves into Colorado, the result margins were the narrowest on the ballot, with only four counties west of the Continental Divide, the area primarily affected, voting yes. Now, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis has urged the Colorado Wildlife Commission to ignore the process prescribed in Prop 114 and get wolves on the ground by the middle of next year. Polis joined the commission meeting Wednesday, Jan. 13 and said he has a strong desire to carry out the will of the voters and introduce wolves to Colorado in a timely fashion....
  • Officials: Wolf kills 100-pound dog in Utah

    08/10/2010 6:03:55 PM PDT · by george76 · 59 replies · 2+ views
    ap ^ | August 5, 2010
    Lewis said the 100-pound Great Pyrenees was no match for the wolf, which injured a second guard dog in the same attack. The other dog was missing for several days but turned up Wednesday nursing injuries from the attack.. Officials say wolves are becoming a problem in northern Utah for the first time since the 1930s. Among other recent attacks was a wolf that killed two calves, and a wolf that attacked livestock in northern Utah's Cache County in July.
  • Report: 15 wolf packs breeding outside park ( Yellowstone )

    07/31/2009 6:31:37 PM PDT · by george76 · 14 replies · 1,428+ views
    Jackson Hole News ^ | July 31, 2009 | Angus M. Thuermer Jr
    Fifteen wolf packs have denned and produced pups in Wyoming outside Yellowstone National Park this year, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has reported. The federal agency, which announced it is continuing to monitor reproduction, did not say in its assessment how many pups might have been born to each pack. Yellowstone packs are raising litters without any apparent deleterious effects... Trappers are also working the Union Pass area near Dubois, where a calf was killed ... Last week, a yearling steer was killed by wolves
  • Park Volunteers Report Possible Wolf Sighting In Colorado

    12/29/2007 2:11:30 PM PST · by george76 · 8 replies · 107+ views
    The Associated Press ^ | December 28, 2007
    Rocky Mountain National Park officials say a recent report of a possible wolf sighting is credible, but it's difficult to be sure without more evidence. Ranger Jack Dinsmoor said Friday that two experienced park volunteers reported seeing what looked like a wolf on Dec. 4. They didn't get a photo, but large canine paw prints were later found in the area. Dinsmoor said park officials don't know if the animal was a wolf, a wolf-dog hybrid or ... Baskfield said the division did confirm that a large black animal caught on video by wildlife officers last February in northern Colorado...
  • Wolf debate hits close to home for ranchers ( Canadian wolves )

    11/24/2007 6:50:43 PM PST · by george76 · 115 replies · 20,524+ views
    Associated Press...The Billings Gazette ^ | November 24, 2007 | MATTHEW BROWN
    PRAY - For rancher Randy Petrich, the removal of gray wolves from the endangered-species list - a move that would open up the animals to hunting in the Northern Rockies for the first time in decades - couldn't come soon enough. Petrich has seen fresh wolf tracks almost every morning this fall - close enough to threaten his cattle. "I believe that any wolf on any given night, if there happens to be a calf there, they will kill it," ... Just 12 years since the wolves were reintroduced into Yellowstone National Park ... federal officials say the sharp rise...
  • Idaho county creates anti-wolf chapter

    02/22/2007 7:35:39 PM PST · by george76 · 31 replies · 606+ views
    (AP) -- ^ | February 22, 2007 | (AP) --
    Residents in Bingham County have started a local chapter of the Idaho Anti-Wolf Coalition, which is collecting signatures to once again try to get an initiative to ban gray wolves from Idaho on the ballot. The group failed to gather enough signatures to get a similar initiative on the ballot last year. Coalition Chairman Ron Gillett of Stanley said the group's new goal is to gather 100,000 signatures. He also has instructed petition carriers to make certain that everyone who signs is a registered voter. In 2006, the group collected more than 40,000 signatures in six weeks before running out...
  • Feds pledge action on wolf delisting ( Canadian wolves in America )

    12/20/2006 8:58:11 PM PST · by george76 · 2 replies · 607+ views
    Associated Press ^ | December 20, 2006 | JOHN MILLER
    The head of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said Tuesday his agency will start removing federal protection from gray wolves in Montana and Idaho by January, regardless of whether Wyoming has submitted an acceptable plan to manage its own wolves by then. Wyoming's plan is tied up in lawsuits, and Fish and Wildlife Director Dale Hall said his agency is moving ahead with Idaho and Montana, where management plans are already in place. ( Canadian ) Wolves were reintroduced to the northern Rocky Mountains a decade ago after being hunted to near-extinction, and now number more than 1,200 in...
  • Forest Service plans to ease limits on killing predators in western US

    08/05/2006 6:38:38 PM PDT · by george76 · 31 replies · 1,077+ views
    The Christian Science Monitor ^ | June 16, 2006 | Brad Knickerbocker
    The dispute between dominant species over shared habitat in the West is escalating. The proposal emphasizes continued protections for endangered species, and it states that such measures "shall be directed at the offending animal" while not jeopardizing the "viability of predator populations." The "offending animal" is the one perceived as a threat to people and livestock. There now are more than 1,000 wolves in the Northern Rockies region. In Idaho alone, the offspring of 35 Canadian wolves now number more than 500. Their main prey are...deer and elk. But they have attacked domestic animals as well...through 2005...( at least )...
  • Ranchers can kill wolves harassing livestock

    12/31/2005 11:37:23 AM PST · by george76 · 46 replies · 1,492+ views
    Reuters ^ | Dec 30, 2005 | Laura Zuckerman
    Next week, Idaho Gov. Dirk Kempthorne and U.S. Interior Secretary Gale Norton are expected to sign an agreement that would place management of an estimated 500 grey wolves into state, rather than federal, hands. The agreement would give ranchers permission to eliminate wolves that harass livestock. It also would empower state wildlife managers to pick off wolf packs that make a dent in the state's deer and elk populations. The wolf's revival in Idaho started a decade ago when officials released 35 wolves into central Idaho. Their numbers have grown steadily since then. Federal rules have carefully prescribed when ranchers...
  • Not just a predator: Wolves bring a suprising ecological recovery to Yellowstone

    10/01/2003 12:10:28 PM PDT · by presidio9 · 44 replies · 975+ views
    Boston Globe ^ | 9/30/2003 | Nicholas Thompson
    <p>LAMAR VALLEY, YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK -- It's a morning of freezing rain in the valley and a pack of wolves is roaming around Black Tail Creek. A few pups gnaw on an old elk carcass while some adults scout the nearby valleys for prey. Not far away, a few elk have sensed the impending danger and are dashing about. To the tourists in the park, the prospect of a wolf attacking an elk is riveting. To the biologists staring into their binoculars, the real action is taking place in Black Tail Creek itself.</p>