Demand U.S. Fish & Wildlife Stop Wolf Extermination "Culling" Program in Washington State

  • by: Randy Haworth
  • recipient: Daniel M. Ashe, Director-U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington D.C.

Wildlife officials in Washington State plan to exterminate an entire pack of endangered gray wolves. The Profanity Peak Pack contains at least 11 wolves, including six adults and five pups earlier this summer. Two, one a breeding female, have already been killed after several ranchers' cows were found dead or injured.

According to Huffington Post, Nick Cady, legal director at Cascadia Wildlands, deplores this so-called "culling" extermination of wolves, stating that "I do not believe it makes sense to spend taxpayer dollars to kill wolves in remote roadless areas on public lands."

This is the second time in four years that a pack of endangered wolves has received the death penalty because of the grazing of privately owned cattle on publicly owned lands, the Center for Biological Diversity said.

“By no stretch of the imagination can killing 12 percent of the state’s tiny population of 90 wolves be consistent with recovery,” said Amaroq Weiss, of the Center for Biological Diversity, on Thursday.

“We can’t keep placing wolves in harm’s way by repeatedly dumping livestock onto public lands with indefensible terrain, then killing the wolves when conflicts arise,” she said.

In 2012, hunters hired by the state killed members of the Wedge pack of wolves, in the same general area, for killing livestock.

Conservation groups say the livestock is the problem, not wolves.

“Cows grazing in thick forest and downed trees in the Colville National Forest are in an indefensible situation,” said Tim Coleman, executive director for Kettle Range Conservation Group. “We believe the wildest areas of our national forests should be a place where wolves can roam free.”
Under Washington’s wolf plan, livestock owners are eligible for taxpayer-funded compensation for losses. Taxpayers have also funded the radio collars placed on wolves.

Those collars are being used to locate and kill the wolves. This practice is referred to as the use of “Judas wolves,” because the collared wolves unknowingly betray the location of their family members, Weiss said.

Update #17 years ago
http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/environment/profanity-peak-wolf-pack-in-states-gun-sights-after-rancher-turns-out-cattle-on-den/
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