(Off Topic) Gray Wolf Off the Endangered species - Page 2

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Don Corleone

by Don Corleone on 01 April 2008 - 14:04

I find it funny and typical that a dog board would be opposed to controlling the population of wolves. 

I have never once seen opposition to the govt. reducing the deer population. 

Coyotes are already a major problem in suburban settings.  If nothing is done, the wolf will become a major problem.  When their space is overpopulated and the food becomes scarse, they will venture outside of their domain.


darylehret

by darylehret on 01 April 2008 - 17:04

One of the biggest problems, is some people fail to differentiate between the mythical wolf and the real wolf.  Some of the loudest voices for the wolf's behalf (the mythical minds) have never even seen a wolf in the wild, except in an edited television documentary, and get all warm and fuzzy.  Those against the wolf often seem fueled with overzealous prejudice, emphasizing all evidence that sheds poor light on the species, in some attempt to cast it from diety-status.  Somewhere in the middle falls the role of the politicians, trying to appease both sides, the self-preserving ranchers and thrillseeking hunters, and the wildlife bioligists with their "intelligent tinkering".

I've witnessed more than a dozen wolves in their natural environment, and more on game farms, and don't feel I have any unrealistic notions about them at all.  Just about any species throughout pre-written and modern history is tied with some symbolistic status, but perhaps none more so than the wolf.  These romanticized views are what have fueled the funding and efforts behind wolf recovery, to the unfair detriment of other important studies, I'm sure.  But no amount of imagining will prepare you for a face-to-face encounter, and the full implications of this recovery are far, far greater than the 'rationalist experts' could have guessed.  The field of wildlife management is in alot of ways similar to breeding practices we see.  Not alot of forethought involved, and a lack of unified vision.

"The older I get, the more skeptical I become of large-scale interventions, because we truly know so little about ecosystems — usually not enough even to ask the right questions."
~wildlife biologist John Weaver of the Wildlife Conservation Society

"Can we entrust the recovery of declining wildlife species and damaged ecosystems to agencies that have consistently failed to consider the large-scale and long-term implications of their interventions?"
~Thomas McNamee, author of The Return of the Wolf to Yellowstone


by justiceforthebreed on 01 April 2008 - 22:04

wolfs are fab


pagan

by pagan on 03 April 2008 - 23:04

Wolves are fab ,and loyal and should be allowed to live in peace.


Two Moons

by Two Moons on 03 April 2008 - 23:04

The point is large predators can only survive in wilderness and we have so few places left.

Man as a manager of nature is a poor choice.   One day nature will show man who's really the boss.

I think its already trying.

JMO






 


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