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Wolf
Propaganda
The following bit of WOLF PROPAGANDA is part of the faux hysteria about
wolves being benign creatures about to be eradicated worldwide if they
are
managed anywhere in the US. As you read it, ask yourself the
following
questions:
1.. Are there too few pronghorn antelope? Why does anyone
that does not
hunt pronghorns care if there are a few more or a few less? In
truth the
pronghorn antelope population in the West is doing and has done just
fine
with controlled hunting since their management for hunting utilizing
hunting
license funds and the excise taxes from guns and ammunition were made
available 75 years ago.
2.. While it is true that coyotes kill pronghorn fawns and does,
why does
the fact that wolves kill coyotes mean good news for pronghorns?
Just
because wolves in habitats full of bigger animals ignore pronghorn
fawns?
It is patently absurd to assume they will continue to do so as wolf
densities and numbers increase and concomitantly food such as deer and
elk
and beaver decrease. This is just a purposeful misconception
intended to
keep opposition to total wolf protection off balance and disunited as
time
ticks by.
3.. What is a "healthy" wolf pack? The more there
are in a pack, the more
destructive, the more dangerous and the more susceptible to disease they
become. The more there are in a pack the more food needed, the
more "fun
killing" and the more dangerous they are to anyone they encounter
from a kid
at a bus stop to an old guy in his garden or some equestrian riding to
and
fro.
4.. A wolf was just "vaccinated" with a bullet by a
farmer in
Massachusetts
. The tinker belle
biologist quoted in the report in the
paper, just marveled at all "those roads" the wolf must have
crossed in its
imagined journey from
Canada
. Why are
"Corridors" needed for wolves or
pronghorns or any wildlife? Consider all the "science"
about grizzlies and
lynx and wolverines and how "Roads" are the culprits and must
be eliminated
to "save" critter X. Could there possibly be a hidden
agenda here?
5.. If our efforts to "manipulate"
"ecosystems" (i.e. manage the plants
and animals for human benefit) might have "unintended
consequences" just
what the "#@*%" would you call this wolf business,
"INTENDED"? If so, why
aren't those responsible for introducing and protecting the wolves
RESPONSIBLE for the harms and destruction they cause to ranchers,
hunters,
dog owners, and rural
America
in so many ways?
What about the loss of big
game herds - the danger to hunters and campers and gardeners and rural
residents and children - the loss of pets and hunting dogs and working
dogs - the loss of livestock and ranching economic viability - the
"excuse"
for more Roadless and Wilderness Proclamations with attendant loss of
management on, access to and use of public lands - the growth of Federal
power and the absorption of State Authority and the attendant
subordination
of State agencies and legislation to Federal demands (i.e.
"strings" on
growing Federal funds)- the growing "taking" of private
property without
compensation for non-public use by Federal "LIST-MAKERS"- and
many other
etceteras but space is limited?
Not since Prohibition has a government program been as disgraceful,
corrupt,
and harmful to society as the Endangered Species Act. Like
Prohibition and
all its "consequences" repeal and return to local controls are
the only
answer available to Americans.
THE ARTICLE -
"Science Daily (Mar. 4, 2008) - As western states debate removing
the gray
wolf from protection under the Endangered Species Act, a new study by
the
Wildlife Conservation Society cautions that doing so may result in an
unintended decline in another species: the pronghorn, a uniquely North
American animal that resembles an African antelope.'
'The study, appearing in the latest issue of the journal Ecology, says
that
fewer wolves mean more coyotes, which can prey heavily on pronghorn
fawns
if the delicate balance between predators and their prey is altered.
According to the study, healthy wolf packs keep coyote numbers in check,
while rarely feeding on pronghorn fawns themselves. As a result, fawns
have
higher survival rates when wolves are present in an ecosystem.'
'"People tend to think that more wolves always mean fewer
prey," said WCS
researcher Dr. Kim Berger, lead author of the study. "But in this
case,
wolves are so much bigger than coyotes that it doesn't make sense for
them
to waste time searching for pronghorn fawns. It would be like trying to
feed an entire family on a single Big Mac."'
'Over a three-year period, researchers radio-collared more than 100
fawns in
wolf-free and wolf-abundant areas of
Grand Teton
National Park
and
monitored their survival throughout the summer. The results showed that
only 10 percent of fawns survived in areas lacking wolves, but where
coyote
densities were higher. In areas where wolves were abundant, 34 percent
of
pronghorn fawns survived. Wolves reduce coyote numbers by killing them
outright or by causing them to shift to safer areas of the Park not
utilized by wolves.'
'While pronghorn are not endangered, the population that summers in
Grand
Teton
National Park
, part of the Greater
Yellowstone Ecosystem, had been
reduced to fewer than 200 animals in recent years. Since wolves were
reintroduced in 1995, the pronghorn population in
Grand Teton
has increased
by approximately 50 percent. These pronghorn have the longest migration
--
more than 200 miles roundtrip -- of any land mammal in the lower 48
states.
The Wildlife Conservation Society has called for permanent protection of
their migration corridor, known as "Path of the Pronghorn," to
prevent the
animals from going extinct in the Park. Representatives from the
National
Park Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and U.S. Forest Service
recently pledged support for protecting the corridor.'
'If delisting occurs,
Wyoming
and
Idaho
have announced their
intention to
reduce wolf number by 50percent and 80 percent, respectively. At
present,
there are an estimated 300 wolves in
Wyoming
and 700 in
Idaho
.'
'"This study shows just how complex relationships between predators
and
their prey can be," said Berger. "It's an important reminder
that we often
don't understand ecosystems nearly as well as we think we do, and that
our
efforts to manipulate them can have unexpected consequences.""
Adapted from materials provided by Wildlife Conservation Society, via
EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.
Wildlife Conservation Society (2008, March 4). Are Wolves The
Pronghorn's
Best Friend?. Science Daily. Retrieved
March 4, 2008
, from
http://www.sciencedaily.com /releases/2008/03/080303145300.htm"
Jim Beers
5 March 2004
-
If you found this
worthwhile, please share it with others. Thanks.
- This article and other recent articles by Jim Beers can be found at
http://jimbeers.blogster.com (Jim Beers Common Sense)
- Jim Beers is available for consulting or to speak. Contact:
jimbeers7@verizon.net
- Jim Beers is a retired US Fish & Wildlife Service Wildlife
Biologist,
Special Agent, Refuge Manager, Wetlands Biologist, and Congressional
Fellow.
He was stationed in
North Dakota
,
Minnesota
,
Nebraska
,
New York City
, and
Washington
DC
. He also served as a
US Navy Line Officer in the western
Pacific and on
Adak
,
Alaska
in the
Aleutian Islands
. He has worked for
the
Utah Fish & Game, Minneapolis Police Department, and as a Security
Supervisor in
Washington
,
DC
. He testified three
times before Congress;
twice regarding the theft by the US Fish & Wildlife Service of $45
to 60
Million from State fish and wildlife funds and once in opposition to
expanding Federal Invasive Species authority. He resides in
Centreville
,
Virginia
with his wife of many
decades.
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