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I see wolves are to be removed from the endangered species list
http://tinyurl.com/28cwx5 Which brings up a questions I've had a few times when nobody was near to ask. Why haven't I ever seen any of the typical warnings in park handouts and trailhead signs that are commmon for bears, bison, even elk ..... for wolves? I remember one time at Slough creek when the local pack was playing/resting on a hillside above where I was fishing. They were a long distance away, but it was still clear I wouldn't want to have them mad at me ... big teeth g Are wolves so man-shy they aren't a danger? or why do they escape being pointed out in the warning literature? I once fished while parked at exactly the same spot and when I returned to my truck a brand new set of bear warning signs was posted around the parking lot. I noticed a ranger up the road and asked about the situation and was told that a bear had charged two anglers " a couple hours ago" near where I had been. It seems odd that bears warrant two hour response time and wolves get no mention whatever ?? !! |
#2
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![]() Larry L;107337 Wrote: I see wolves are to be removed from the endangered species list Great when does the wolf season open? Better yet- Save a school of trout & shoot a Loon :boxing: -- DoubleHaul ------------------------------------------------------------------------ DoubleHaul's Profile: http://www.njflyfishing.com/vBulleti...hp?userid=1306 View this thread: http://www.njflyfishing.com/vBulleti...ad.php?t=13944 ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#3
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Larry L wrote:
I see wolves are to be removed from the endangered species list http://tinyurl.com/28cwx5 Do you think its overdue? Which brings up a questions I've had a few times when nobody was near to ask. Why haven't I ever seen any of the typical warnings in park handouts and trailhead signs that are commmon for bears, bison, even elk .... for wolves? Its very rare that wolves attack humans (very few documented attacks). Even in the recent wolf pack encounters in Alaska (Eagle River and Anchorage - 4 known packs in that area) the wolves have been after pets. They mostly go after dogs, even on Emlendorf AFB, even on leashes. I remember one time at Slough creek when the local pack was playing/resting on a hillside above where I was fishing. They were a long distance away, but it was still clear I wouldn't want to have them mad at me ... big teeth g Are wolves so man-shy they aren't a danger? or why do they escape being pointed out in the warning literature? I once fished while parked at exactly the same spot and when I returned to my truck a brand new set of bear warning signs was posted around the parking lot. I noticed a ranger up the road and asked about the situation and was told that a bear had charged two anglers " a couple hours ago" near where I had been. It seems odd that bears warrant two hour response time and wolves get no mention whatever ?? !! That's because bears will attack man (especially when around their fishing grounds) while wolves don't. Chip |
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![]() "Chip Thomas" wrote Do you think its overdue? No ... I don't .... but then I don't know much about the overall situation. Larry L ( Lack of knowledge seldom keeps me from forming opinions :-) |
#5
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![]() "Larry L" wrote in message ... I see wolves are to be removed from the endangered species list http://tinyurl.com/28cwx5 Which brings up a questions I've had a few times when nobody was near to ask. Why haven't I ever seen any of the typical warnings in park handouts and trailhead signs that are commmon for bears, bison, even elk .... for wolves? snip Because bears (Griz if suddenly encroached upon and Blacks and Griz that have come to associate humans with food) will and have hurt/killed people on more than a few occaisions, the same goes for Bison and elk especially during the rut and when dumbasses think it would be cute to get a picture of hubby or little Johnny next to or even on the animal. The same cannot be said for wolves. Of the few documented cases in North America where wolves have killed (2 that I am aware of) or hurt human beings, I believe all but one involved captive wolves rather than those in the wild. The one involved a pack of wolves that had become dependant on the dump of remote Artic (mining? drilling?) operation, for their winter food. The crew members even occaisionally threw food to the wolves. The man killed and partially eaten was drunk and out alone at night near the dump. There are a few anecdotal unducumented reports of other wolf "incidents" but even those are few and far between. Even with the protections that wolves have in the lower 48, a few are killed on purpose by man every year (both legally and illegally), and wolves being the smart and social critters that they are have learned to keep their distance from humans here. Bob Weinberger |
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Larry L wrote:
"Chip Thomas" wrote Do you think its overdue? No ... I don't .... but then I don't know much about the overall situation. Larry L ( Lack of knowledge seldom keeps me from forming opinions :-) Lots of info available on wolves in Alaska. Google is your friend. 8^) There was an article in the ADN recently listing many of the recent encounters around Anchorage. It also had some info from the ADF&G with their observations and opinions. |
#7
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![]() "Bob Weinberger" wrote in message news:qIkvj.32392$s33.18961@trndny06... "Larry L" wrote in message ... I see wolves are to be removed from the endangered species list http://tinyurl.com/28cwx5 Which brings up a questions I've had a few times when nobody was near to ask. Why haven't I ever seen any of the typical warnings in park handouts and trailhead signs that are commmon for bears, bison, even elk .... for wolves? snip Because bears (Griz if suddenly encroached upon and Blacks and Griz that have come to associate humans with food) will and have hurt/killed people on more than a few occaisions, the same goes for Bison and elk especially during the rut and when dumbasses think it would be cute to get a picture of hubby or little Johnny next to or even on the animal. The same cannot be said for wolves. Of the few documented cases in North America where wolves have killed (2 that I am aware of) or hurt human beings, I believe all but one involved captive wolves rather than those in the wild. The one involved a pack of wolves that had become dependant on the dump of remote Artic (mining? drilling?) operation, for their winter food. The crew members even occaisionally threw food to the wolves. The man killed and partially eaten was drunk and out alone at night near the dump. There are a few anecdotal unducumented reports of other wolf "incidents" but even those are few and far between. Even with the protections that wolves have in the lower 48, a few are killed on purpose by man every year (both legally and illegally), and wolves being the smart and social critters that they are have learned to keep their distance from humans here. Not always quite so distant as was once the case and I had supposed still was. Less than two weeks ago Becky and I were chatting with a couple of staff members at the Schlitz Audubon Center along the Lake Michigan shore a few miles north of the city of Milwaukee and well within the urban metroplex. We had encountered a couple of coyotes (common enough these days even within the city proper) and were lucky enough to get some decent good photos even in the fading twilight. While showing off the photos to the staff, we were told that there had been quite a few recent sightings of wolves, or at least a wolf, within a couple of miles of the center. Could'a knocked me over with a fender! Wolves? In Milwaukee? No doubt about it......some of the sightings were reported by very reliable witnesses. A year and a half ago, a black bear managed to wander into Wauwatosa, no more than a mile from where I now sit. Ordinarily, bears do not come within a hundred miles of year, and only very few are even that close. This one probably came down largely through green belt along the Milwaukee River, at least for the last fifty miles or so. No telling where it started out. I don't know where it ended up either, after it was darted in a tree. It seems a lot of historically shy animals are becoming increasingly habituated to human presence.....almost certainly a result of shrinking habitat away from human encroachment. Deer are plentiful in Milwaukee county, virtually all of which is highly developed.....some time this week, I believe, sharpshooters are scheduled to thin the heard in the Havenswood State Forest (the only urban state forest in all of Wisconsin, if I recall correctly). Wild turkeys can frequently be seen in some of the outlying parks and along the parkways that border the various streams flowing into the city. There are beavers less three blocks from the house Becky and I recently shared a house, within the city limits. Her dog got bitten by a coyote less than a mile from there, also within the city. Peregrine falcons nest on a bank building, the tallest building in the city.....or did recently, I haven't heard much about them in the past couple of years. They most certainly nest in boxes at several power plants in the area. Pictures of nest boxes can be seen he http://www.we-energies.com/environme...t_wildlife.htm Note that the next box at the Oak Creek power plant (on the lake shore just south of the city) is currently occupied by great horned owls. Other raptors are seen so frequently, especially along the freeways where virtually no one ever approaches near to them on foot, that they arouse little notice among the general population. Cooper's hawks, rough legged hawks, red tailed, red shouldered, sharp shines, kestrels and broad wings (in season) are everywhere. Owls, though seldom seen by most, are also abundant.....great horned, barred, eastern screech, saw whet, etc. With the harsh winter we've been having (not really all that harsh by historical standards, but a damned sight worse than anything we've had in the past 14 years) there are fairly frequent sightings of snowy owls and even northern shrikes, which the field guides list as scarce, are popping up all over the place. Wolves in southeastern Wisconsin seemed like a highly improbable scenario just a few years ago. Now.......? Wolfgang |
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![]() "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... Snip a lot of good stuff in the interest of space Wolves in southeastern Wisconsin seemed like a highly improbable scenario just a few years ago. Now.......? Wolfgang Perhaps I should have been more specific when I said keep their distance,on a regular basis. as I meant avoiding direct contact rather than physical distance. And I was only applying that to the parts of the inland west where they are still purposely killed. Recent human encroachment on their habitat, though a convenient theory , may not answer why so many species of wildlife that heretofore studiously avoided populated areas are now a common occurrance in populated areas. I live in a town of only 12,000 people, but while the population of the town and the entire county (bigger in area than some Eastern states) has been quite stable for the last 50 years and is in fact less than it was in 1900, wildlife sightings in town have increased markedly in the last 20 years or so. The part of town that I live in was established prior to the transcontinental railroad coming through, and was the downtown area until downtown moved to be nearer the depot. Altough my house is only on a 1/3 acre lot, I now commonly have deer bedded in my back yard. A neighbor a block away had a cougar kill a deer in his yard a few years ago. Bear are now common visitors in the fall in any year with a poor wild berry crop. People in town now need to be sure to keep their small dogs and their cats in at night if they don't want them taken by coyotes or cougar. Three years ago we had a moose (which are not historically native to Oregon , but are recently becoming established in this and our neighboring county to the North - apparently from migrants from Idaho) walk down our street. And in the last few years I have to be especially vigilant to not hit elk at night at the west entrance to town. I believe the prime reason for much of the increased interaction with wildlife in populated areas is the change in our culture from one in which anything that was edible (and many that aren't) was killed, and the long time frame it took wildlife to respond to that change in culture and adapt to human concentrations BTW, if the relationship between coyotes and wolves there is anything like it is here, expect to see a drastic reduction in the coyote population as the wolf population increases. Bob Weinberger |
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Larry L wrote:
"Chip Thomas" wrote Do you think its overdue? No ... I don't .... but then I don't know much about the overall situation. Larry L ( Lack of knowledge seldom keeps me from forming opinions :-) We have plenty of wolves around here. Probably the majority of people are in favor of eradicating them, but there are a sizable number of people who like having them around. I'm in the second camp. Whenever I see one and it sees me it makes tracks. It's always a thrill to spot one. I'm not at all afraid of them, but I keep my dogs close when I'm skiing or fishing or whatever. I'm more afraid of my dogs eating the illegal poisoned baits or getting caught in the traps that the anti-wolf crowd puts out. I think they have to be controlled. I'm in favor of culling wolves that kill livestock and of compensating ranchers for losses. I'm not in favor of sport hunting for wolves, nor am I in favor of sport hunting for mountain lions, nor of bear baiting. Despite the alarmist rhetoric of the anti-wolf lobby, the elk are doing just fine. Elk hunting has become more difficult, though, because the wolves keep them on the move. It's also said that the bulls don't bugle as readily. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#10
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![]() "Bob Weinberger" wrote in message news:11mvj.11268$wG2.6218@trndny09... "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... Snip a lot of good stuff in the interest of space Wolves in southeastern Wisconsin seemed like a highly improbable scenario just a few years ago. Now.......? Wolfgang Perhaps I should have been more specific when I said keep their distance,on a regular basis. as I meant avoiding direct contact rather than physical distance. For pratcial purposes, I suspect that the difference is pretty much a matter of degree.....the more distance, the less direct contact. And I was only applying that to the parts of the inland west where they are still purposely killed. I haven't studied wolves in any depth, so I don't know much about mortality figures, but I suspect from what little I've heard that deliberate lupicide (well, they ain't "homo"....right?) ranks high among causes of death here, too. Recent human encroachment on their habitat, though a convenient theory , may not answer why so many species of wildlife that heretofore studiously avoided populated areas are now a common occurrance in populated areas. I live in a town of only 12,000 people, but while the population of the town and the entire county (bigger in area than some Eastern states) has been quite stable for the last 50 years and is in fact less than it was in 1900, wildlife sightings in town have increased markedly in the last 20 years or so. The part of town that I live in was established prior to the transcontinental railroad coming through, and was the downtown area until downtown moved to be nearer the depot. Altough my house is only on a 1/3 acre lot, I now commonly have deer bedded in my back yard. A neighbor a block away had a cougar kill a deer in his yard a few years ago. Bear are now common visitors in the fall in any year with a poor wild berry crop. People in town now need to be sure to keep their small dogs and their cats in at night if they don't want them taken by coyotes or cougar. Three years ago we had a moose (which are not historically native to Oregon , but are recently becoming established in this and our neighboring county to the North - apparently from migrants from Idaho) walk down our street. And in the last few years I have to be especially vigilant to not hit elk at night at the west entrance to town. I believe the prime reason for much of the increased interaction with wildlife in populated areas is the change in our culture from one in which anything that was edible (and many that aren't) was killed, and the long time frame it took wildlife to respond to that change in culture and adapt to human concentrations O.k., encroachment was a simplification. To be sure, other factors come into play everywhere to one degree or another. However, even in places such as you describe human activity, regardless of permanent occupancy, is ever on the rise, albeit with temporary local lulls. Certainly, the cessation of indiscriminate (at best) slaughter and of deliberate targeting for extermination has also made a great difference. But there are also species that are still hunted avidly in many parts of the country and that are thus pushed into relatively safe areas, like urban centers. This is compounded in some cases, like that of the white tailed deer here in Wisconsin, by policies which have increased the size of the herd beyond all expectations in recent years. In this instance, it isn't a marked diminution in hunting, or in habitat for that matter, that is the source of the migration; it is instead a drastic expansion of the population. But then, it isn't much of a reach to think of this as yet another form of human encroachment. After all, the deer are in effect being raised as just another domesticated livestock animal. Here in southern Wisconsin, the ring-necked pheasant is a good example of an animal whose population has suffered dramatically as a direct result of human encroachment. Once again, it isn't necessarily.....or not only.....occupancy of the land by ever increasing number of humans that is to blame. Such occupancy IS increasing in many places as people find themselves willing to commute ever greater distances between work and home (at least for now......till the REAL gasoline crunch comes) but other land use policies have also changed drastically in recent decades. Woodlots, small wetlands and fallow fields have shrunk drastically in many places not only as a result of residential developments, but also because of changing farming practices as small private landholdings continue to disappear into the may of agribusiness. As you doubtless know, fencerows and other parcels of wildlife habitat (however small and fragmented they may have been) continue to disappear at alarming rates all over the country. BTW, if the relationship between coyotes and wolves there is anything like it is here, expect to see a drastic reduction in the coyote population as the wolf population increases. It will be interesting to see whether wolves become permanently established here. I suspect it won't happen. There may be a couple here and there for a while, but there are just too many people, too much antipathy and too few places for the wolves to hide. If they are here for a while it is inevitable that they will be held responsible for the disappearance of somebody's little Fifi, and quite possibly justifiably so. One of the more interesting possible outcomes of the relatively stringent protection wolves have enjoyed in the lower 48 in recent years is that for the first time in the history of the occupation of North America by Europeans and their descendants, wolves are not being shot, or shot at, on sight by virtually everyone who has the opportunity. It's probably just a matter of time before some of them lose some of their fear is bred out of them. If populations increase enough it is also probably just a matter of time till someone IS attacked, and quite possibly killed, by healthy wild wolves. Then we get to start all over again. Wolfgang |
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