Here is another example of why Humans have no business trying to do Mother Natures Job. The removal of wolves and cougars in Pennsylvania long ago is responsible for today’s deer problems — and maybe even the explosion of tick-related Lyme disease, a new study suggests. These observations come from a Penn State College of Agricultural Sciences-led study of carnivore …
400 wolves in Yellowstone or even Greater Yellowstone… Seriously?
400 wolves in Yellowstone or even Greater Yellowstone… Seriously? All the more reason why this population segment needs our proposed “Sacred Resource Protection Zone”. One has to question where they learned to count for one thing. Between 1995 and 1997, 41 wolves from Canada and Northwest Montana were reintroduced to Yellowstone National Park. Twenty years has passed and the population …
Update on Man that reportedly fires shots at wolves “in Yellowstone”
POWELL (WNE) — Yellowstone National Park officials are investigating a report that a man shot at some wolves in the park last Saturday morning. Witnesses said the incident occurred near Sedge Bay along Yellowstone Lake, after the man’s dog chased a deer and wolves began chasing the dog. The unidentified man reportedly told fellow park visitors that he’d shot at …
Minnesota wolves moved to Isle Royale
She slowly turned her head from side to side, sniffed the island air, and 20 seconds later, the 75-pound, four-year-old gray wolf darted out of a small crate to explore her new home, Isle Royale National Park. The female wolf, along with a five-year old male, are the first part of a broader effort to relocate 20 to 30 wolves …