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@thewolfarmy
Wolf sculptures by Sally Matthews
Happy Friday!
A Special Thank You!
I want to personally thank everyone who has reblogged, liked, and or showed interest in the posts shared here on Wolf Army. Each one of you are spreading the word and furthering the fight against Wolf prosecution and standing with them to further educate the public on how wolves are important, not only to ourselves, our ecosystem but the world as a whole.
What do you think would happen, if the magnificent wolf was lost forever?
What are you opinions on the decision to remove wolves from the endangered species list & The trophy hunts?
Again, we here at Wolf Army thank you from the bottom of our hearts, and we appreciate each and every one of you.
We howl with you!
A dozen wolves were legally killed in the first 40 hours of Wyoming's 3-month hunting season in its "Trophy Zone."
In Wyoming's "Predator Zone," which encompasses the remaining ~85% of the state, wolves and pups can be killed any time, by almost any means, and without a license.
It's the 21st century. Is this what wildlife "management" should look like in our time?
Simply eradicating a species not only ignores the ecological (and monetary) worth of these animals, it also abdicates our role as stewards of the landscape.
Latest on the hunt: http://bit.ly/2wuQN85
Background: http://bit.ly/2wuQN85
BREAKING!:
They were a federally protected species last April. TODAY, WOLVES CAN BE KILLED THROUGHOUT THE STATE.
Starting today, 44 wolves in Wyoming's "Trophy Zone" are targeted to be killed as the state's regulated trophy hunt begins.
In Wyoming's "predator zone," which encompasses the remaining ~85% of the state, wolves and pups can be killed any time, by almost any means, and without a license.
It's the 21st century. Is this what wildlife "management" should look like in our time?
Simply eradicating a species not only ignores the ecological (and monetary) worth of these animals, it also abdicates our role as stewards of the landscape.
More: http://bit.ly/2ygNMwJ
Wolves are highly social animals that live in well-organized family units called packs. Cooperative living gives wolf families a number of benefits. In addition to facilitating successful hunting, pup-rearing, and defending pack territory, cooperative living allows wolves to limit their own population densities—or self-regulate—helping to keep their ecosystems in balance.
Unlike small mammals who multiply like bunnies or some predators who’s boom or bust depends on said bunnies, large carnivores like wolves keep their own numbers in check. According to a new work published in Oikos, population control is what distinguishes “apex predators” from the rest.
Here
Favorite Wolf Film?
Feared and admired, cursed and revered, wolves are the stuff of legends! For decades Hollywood has recognized the public's fascination with the dynamic species. Do you have a favorite wolf film? Let us know!
via NY Wolf Center
BREAKING:
BREAKING
Wolf Killed for Trophy Right Outside Yellowstone
Although the general rifle season to hunt wolves opened just 4 days ago, trophy hunters have already killed a wolf right outside Yellowstone National Park. The animal was killed in Wolf Management Unit (WMU) 310.
The importance of a keystone predator such as the wolf to a balanced and resilient ecosystem is undeniable. Studies also show that since their return over 20 years ago, wolves have delivered an economic boost to Yellowstone’s surrounding communities. University of Montana researchers found that wolves bring an estimated $35M in annual tourist revenue to the region.
Trophy hunting of wolves brings in money too. Wolf hunting licenses cost $19 for residents and $50 for nonresidents.
Perhaps Montana should take a closer look at the economics of wolf hunting. Seems that Yellowstone wolves are worth a lot more alive than dead.
Is Montana killing their golden goose?
Please follow Wolves of the Rockies for updates from Montana.
The Fable of The Wolf
The Two Wolves
An old Cherokee was teaching his grandchildren about life. He said, "A battle is raging inside me - it is a terrible fight between two wolves. One wolf represents fear, anger, envy, sorrow, regret, greed, arrogance, self-pity, guilt, resentment, inferiority, lies, false pride, superiority and ego. The other stands for joy, peace, love, hope, sharing, serenity, humility, kindness, benevolence, friendship, empathy, generosity, truth, compassion and faith."
The old man looked at the children with a firm stare. "This same fight is going on inside you, and inside every other person, too."
They thought about it for a minute, and then one child asked his grandfather, "Which wolf will win?"
The old Cherokee replied: "The one you feed."
~~~ by Unknown
Something is rotten in the state of Arizona... And it smells like cow.
What's wrong with this story?
A cow lives on a ranch in the southwest. A cow dies. Remaining on the landscape, the dead cow draws in predators (like wolves) looking for an easy meal. Scavenging is known to habituate wolves to prey on livestock. A wolf kills a cow. Ranchers are reimbursed for their losses and critically endangered Mexican gray wolf gets killed. Sound fair?
Here's the problem.
There's an imbalance. While livestock owners are compensated for livestock lost to wolves, and offered financial and logistical assistance with depredation avoidance measures, there is NO corresponding requirement for livestock owners to remove livestock carcasses on public lands (or take measures to protect their cattle from depredations in the first place).
When gray wolves were reintroduced into Yellowstone and the northern Rocky Mountains, there was a rule stipulating that stock owners must not leave carcasses accessible to wolves.
So where's the rule mandating livestock growers to practice basic animal husbandry (remove dead cows) within the recovery area of a wolf subspecies on the brink of extinction?
Something is rotten in the southwest states... And it smells like cow
View USFWS's kill authorization for critically endangered Mexican gray wolf F1557 of the Diamond Pack: http://bit.ly/2h7CfVe
Wolves understand cause and effect better than dogs
September 15, 2017 - Domestic dogs may have lost some of their innate animal skill when they came in from the wild, according to new research conducted at the Wolf Science Center in Austria.
In a study comparing wolves and dogs living in near-identical environments, wolves were better at working some things out, particularly at grasping the notion of cause and effect.
The research, by an international team in Austria, the Netherlands, Germany and England, is published in Scientific Reports.
Recently graduated lead author Michelle Lampe, of the Radboud University, in the Netherlands, said: “Children learn the principle of cause and effect early on, that if you touch a hot stove you will get burned, for example. Our study has shown the wolf also understands such connections, but our four-legged domesticated companions don’t.”
"It seems wolves are better at working some things out than dogs, which suggests domestication has changed dogs’ cognitive abilities.”
"It can’t be ruled out that the differences could be due to wolves being more persistent in exploring than dogs. Dogs are conditioned to receive food from us, whereas wolves have to find food themselves in nature.”
Michelle Lampe, Dr Zsófia Virányi, of the University of Veterinary Medicine in Vienna, Dr Juliane Bräuer, of the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Germany, and Dr Juliane Kaminski, of the University of Portsmouth, UK, investigated the reasoning abilities of 14 dogs and 12 human-socialised wolves.
The tests included the animals having to choose between two objects, one containing hidden food and the other empty to see whether the animals could make use of communicative cues, such as direct eye-contact and pointing gestures to choose the correct container.
Both dogs and wolves were able to follow communicative cues to find hidden food. However, in the absence of a human to show them where the food was, only the wolves were able to make causal inferences.
Dr Kaminski said: “In this experiment, the wolves showed a high understanding of cause and effect, which the dogs lacked.
"The wolves’ use of cues connected to eye-contact was particularly interesting because it may help science better understand the process by which wild animals became our four-legged companions.”
Dr Bräuer said: “The wolves’ ability to understand human communicative cues after being socialised with humans, may have made it possible to become domesticated.”
The authors say the results are compelling because in addition to comparing dogs and wolves living under identical conditions, with the same history and training regime, they also compared dogs living in packs to pets living with their human families.
Fourth author, Dr Virányi, said: “We were able to tease apart the influence of domestication from raising and living conditions. Few studies have achieved such strong, clear comparisons, though we must caution, too, that the wolves we studied are used to humans, which needs to be taken into account.”
Source
When Seaweed touches your foot in the ocean. O.O
Wolves have long faced a precarious existence in the face of an ever expanding human world. As their territory increasingly overlapped with humans, the two species came into contact. Unfortunately, wolves and humans aren’t known for getting on along so well.
Watch what happened when a pack of wolves spotted this woman in Norway.
This woman, named Anita, worked at the Polar Zoo in Salangsdalen, Norway (the world’s northernmost zoo) for two years. This was her first time seeing the wolves since 2008, and they obviously missed her.
It might be easy to forget that our dogs are the descendants of wolves, but not after seeing this! They’re dogs, alright. You can see it in the tail wag.