YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK — Twenty years after their ancestors were released here in one of the most controversial wildlife projects of the century, the howls of wolves punctuated the cold winter air Monday to the delight of dozens of wolf watchers. “This is a great day,” said Char Thompson of Eugene, Oregon, as she stood with her spotting scope on …
Speak for Wolves | An opportunity for the American people to unite and demand wildlife management reform and restore our national heritage
An opportunity for the American people to unite and demand wildlife management reform and restore our national heritage. Speak for Wolves: Yellowstone 2015 is about taking an important step towards stopping the wolf slaughter that is currently taking place across the United States. Continue reading via Speak for Wolves | An opportunity for the American people to unite and demand …
Rethinking predators: Legend of the wolf : Nature News & Comment
In 2008, Kristin Marshall was driving through Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming. Marshall, a graduate student at the time, had come to the park to study willow shrubs â specifically, how much they were being eaten by elk. Read the rest of the story: Rethinking predators: Legend of the wolf : Nature News & Comment.
Greater Yellowstone Coalition – Wolves: Wolf Stamp delays and Wyoming relisted
Greater Yellowstone Coalition – Wolves: Wolf Stamp delays and Wyoming relisted. A report from Oregon State University plant researchers William J. Ripple and Bob Beschta reinforces the belief that the wolf has been the primary factor in the improved health of aspen, willow, and cottonwood trees in Yellowstone National Park’s Northern Range. This in turn has benefitted such Yellowstone wildlife …