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Coyotes-Wolves-Cougars.blogspot.com

Grizzly bears, black bears, wolves, coyotes, cougars/ mountain lions,bobcats, wolverines, lynx, foxes, fishers and martens are the suite of carnivores that originally inhabited North America after the Pleistocene extinctions. This site invites research, commentary, point/counterpoint on that suite of native animals (predator and prey) that inhabited The Americas circa 1500-at the initial point of European exploration and subsequent colonization. Landscape ecology, journal accounts of explorers and frontiersmen, genetic evaluations of museum animals, peer reviewed 20th and 21st century research on various aspects of our "Wild America" as well as subjective commentary from expert and layman alike. All of the above being revealed and discussed with the underlying goal of one day seeing our Continent rewilded.....Where big enough swaths of open space exist with connective corridors to other large forest, meadow, mountain, valley, prairie, desert and chaparral wildlands.....Thereby enabling all of our historic fauna, including man, to live in a sustainable and healthy environment. - Blogger Rick

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Thursday, August 11, 2016

Two of the most respected commentators on Wild America, Dan Flores( A.B. Hammond Professor Emeritus of Western History at the U. Of Montana) and George Wuerthner,(Ecologist, Outdoor photographer and Wildlands Activist) have both come out this week with "high octane", smart and intuitive posts on why we as a people must find a way to get in touch with our innermost humanity and immediately stop killing Wolves and Coyotes(and by extension, all of our American carnivore suite)...............As Dan states in his article------"For a long stretch of the 20th century, coyotes were, along with gray and red wolves, the rare native American species designated by the federal government for eradication"...............Coyotes are not endangered and they don’t need our help to survive as a species (though recovering populations of wolves, which are often mistaken for coyotes during hunts, could use it)".............. "But there is something perverse in the government, and society, marking a species for death, setting it outside the bounds of even our wildlife protection laws"............. "We know coyotes(and wolves) are intelligent, social creatures"............. "They do not enjoy death".................. "No thoughtful human being, considerate of other life, should sacrifice for pleasure or a bet (animals such as these)"...................... "Doing so is immoral — not in a religious sense, but in reference to morality’s origins, the evolution of a sense of fairness among members of a social species, which early on came to include a human recognition that other creatures enjoy being alive and that depriving them of life is a very serious matter"...................."Killing an animal that for five million years has had an important role to play in nature is an act of adolescence"..................... "As long as urbanites keep their dogs and cats inside at night, coyotes pose no unique or overwhelming danger, certainly no more than other wild predators"............... "So why do we continue to mark them as targets for our blood sports?"...................George takes up the charge regarding how the Ranching interests of our Western States want Wolves killed "to benefit their profit margins",,,,,,,,,,,,,The irony is that these same folks who want Washington D.C. out of their lives are all too happy to be welfare Ranchers, utilizing cheap Government legislated grazing fees to feed their livestock on Public Lands.............."KILLING WOLVES ON PUBLIC LANDS IS NO LONGER ACCEPTABLE"..............."Rather than killing wolves for doing what wolves do-preying on large ungulates- we should be eliminating the source of the problem whenever there is a conflict-that is removing livestock(from Public Lands)"..................."In effect, domestic livestock are essentially appropriating and limiting the natural food of native prey that sustains wolves, bears, cougars and coyotes".............. "The idea that our public heritage and patrimony should continue to be sacrificed for the private profit of individuals is no longer acceptable"............... "By not challenging this paradigm, we all perpetuate the continued slaughter of public wildlife at the behest of private businesses"

http://www.thewildlifenews.com/2016/08/11/killing-wolves-on-public-lands-is-no-longer-acceptable/

Killing wolves on public lands is no longer acceptable

The recent decision by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife to kill members of the Profanity wolf pack because they have killed a few cattle grazing public lands in NE Washington is more than sad. That any wolves are killed merely to benefit the profit margin of private businesses utilizing public resources is an outrage. The real tragedy is that this slaughter of wild predators is repeated over and over throughout the West is reprehensible.
Keep in mind that alien domestic livestock have been imposed upon our wildlife. The real crime is that these wolves will be killed to benefit the bottom line of ranchers grazing livestock on public lands. Shouldn’t a prerequisite for ranchers getting subsidized forage on public lands be the minimum requirement that they must accept any losses to predators? If they don’t want such losses, they can take their cattle and sheep home.
The Gray Wolf and the Western Coyote



Rather than killing wolves for doing what wolves do—preying on large ungulates—we should be eliminating the source of the problem whenever there is a conflict—that is removing livestock.
If you leave your cooler on the picnic table in Yellowstone, or food accessible to wildlife in many backcountry areas, you can be fined for potentially introducing wild animals to human food sources.
Yet we allow ranchers to place four-legged picnic baskets across our public lands—typically without any supervision. Worse, if these predators, whether bears, cougars, coyotes or wolves, have the audacity to snack on these movable food treats, we kill the predators instead of holding the ranches accountable.
Keep in mind that the mere presence of domestic livestock compromises the habitat quality for public wildlife, including wolves in many ways. For instance, when domestic animals are released on public lands, it socially displaces wild ungulates like elk. In other words, when ranchers place their private animals on the public land they are creating a natural conflict because wolves have fewer wild prey to hunt.
Wolves raising pups cannot merely move to other lands to find prey.  So when elk and other prey are socially displaced, they often resort to the only other available food source—which can domestic livestock.
There is no free lunch (though admittedly public lands ranchers do pay almost nothing for the forage their cattle consume). When domestic animals consume grass and other plants on public lands there is that much less to support native grazers like elk and deer. Since the vast majority of forage on public is routinely allotted to domestic livestock, this reduces the overall carrying capacity of the land to support native ungulates.
Domestic livestock also can transmit diseases to wildlife that can reduce prey for predators as well. For instance, domestic sheep can transmit pneumonia and other diseases that can ravage wild herds, again reducing potential prey for predators like wolves.
In effect, domestic livestock are essentially appropriating and limiting the natural food of native prey that sustains wolves, bears, cougars and coyotes.
The idea that our public heritage and patrimony should continue to be sacrificed for the private profit of individuals is no longer acceptable. By not challenging this paradigm, we all perpetuate the continued slaughter of public wildlife at the behest of private businesses.

Image result for george wuerthner

George Wuerthner, 
An Ecologist, photographer, author, and activist, George Wuerthner has published more than thirty books on America’s wild places.
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The Opinion Pages | OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

Stop Killing Coyotes




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