Community | December 17, 2011 | 16 comments

Feds Shoot and Kill an Endangered, Lonely Female Mexican Gray Wolf

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EthicalVegan
White Wolf Pack...

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December 17, 2011


Feds Shoot Lonely Mexican Gray Wolf Attracted to Dogs

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SILVER CITY, N.M. – At the direction of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, an endangered Mexican gray wolf was shot dead on private land within the Gila National Forest of New Mexico Wednesday. The lone 4-year-old female wolf was reportedly attracted to a residence to consort with domestic dogs and was shot as a purported threat to human safety. Earlier this year the same wolf had mated with a dog elsewhere and given birth to five hybrid pups, four of which were captured and euthanized; the fifth has not been found.

“This very sad episode is a result of the Fish and Wildlife Service’s refusal to release enough wolves into the wild to allow this single female to find a mate of her own kind,” said Michael Robinson of the Center for Biological Diversity.

The 1996 environmental impact statement on reintroducing Mexican wolves to the wild addressed potential hybridization and promised to minimize it in part through “reestablishing wolf populations in numbers sufficient that potential wolf mates are available for dispersing wolves.” But this has not occurred.

The document projected that by the end of 2006, 102 wolves, including 18 breeding pairs, would live in the wild, with the numbers expected to continue to rise after that; a 2001 scientific review concluded that the recovery area spanning the Arizona and New Mexico border had sufficient deer and elk to be able to support 468 wolves. Yet the highest number of wolves counted was 59 in 2006; at the end of 2010, only 50 wolves, including just two breeding pairs, could be found in the wild.

Despite this shortfall, over the past five years of the reintroduction program, which began in 1998, the federal agency responsible for helping endangered species has only released a single wolf from the captive-breeding pool into the wild (in November 2008) along with 11 wolves who had been captured from the wild in previous years.

Dozens of other wolves were captured and have been indefinitely locked up (and 11 other wolves were shot by the government for livestock depredations, though none in the past four years). Today, 12 once-wild wolves are biologically suitable and legally eligible for release into New Mexico.

“This lonesome wolf did not have to die,” said Robinson. “If there were enough potential mates for her to choose from, this social creature wouldn’t have desperately sought the company of domestic dogs. “To ensure another wolf doesn’t pay the same price, the Obama administration must release more wolves into the wild.”

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Via: http://www.mexicanwolves.org/

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16 comments // Feds Shoot and Kill an Endangered, Lonely Female Mexican Gray Wolf

  • Lisayou
  • wolfess
  • EthicalVegan
  • wolfess
  • EthicalVegan
  • EthicalVegan
  • EthicalVegan
  • EthicalVegan
  • EthicalVegan
  • EthicalVegan
  • EthicalVegan
  • Luna2na
    • +2
      Luna2na  
    • Image
    • EthicalVegan:

      This is something I know a lot about... Thanks for putting this up EthicalVegan. It's a sad tale about an endangered species that happens to be, most probably, the most persecuted animal on the planet. This is happening because a small group of elitists feel threatened. there are very few Mexican Grays out in the wild because of ranchers and rednecks who can't share the public lands with even the indigenous wildlife. Sure these are reintroduced wolves but that species had inhabited that region for thousands of years before the white folks - Euro-Americans - showed up. Since there have been localized efforts to kill off what few wolves are there, along with these "drama-queen" accounts (Just like in ID, MT, and WY), the few that are out in the wild have no mates available, thus cross-breeding takes place in some cases, as with this one. Crossbred, or hybrids, were a problem with the Eastern Red Wolf program years ago.

      It's about people not wanting to share the land with the wildlife. If they are so damned scared of wildlife, why do they live out where they are? It's also like the bison issues around Yellowstone NP, folks who don't want bison near their homes - they could have built those trophy homes just about anywhere else on the planet and avoided them.

      Wolves are part of a healthy ecosystem and are necessary to maintain biodiversity in the places where it is still possible, they once inhabited 90% of the continent, now they have these tiny little areas where they are sort of allowed to exist. Species-centrism is what I call it.

      And then there are those USDA clowns in the "Wildlife dis-Services" who fly around and shoot them to satisfy the ranching elite at taxpayer expense and flaunt their unprofessionalism and disrespect like these cads in this photo.

      Been dealing with this rubbish for nearly two decades now.

    • 5 months ago
  • EthicalVegan
  • Luna2na
    • +2
      Luna2na  
    • EthicalVegan:

      You're quite welcome.

      Do notice that in this photo there are 58 (!!) wolf paw stickers near the nose of the plane... one for each wolf killed by those in the plane. A blog, "The Wildlife News" posted a story about it, the LA Times did an article on it the next day and WS commented about it to a paper in Boise, ID the next day and I posted the Times' article on this site. Didn't get much notice but folks should realize how much of their taxes go into this sort thing, all to benefit the welfare ranchers.

      My mission in this is to educate the general public, most of whom have no idea this is, and has been, going on for a long time... too long.

      Again, thanks for putting this up.

    • 5 months ago
  • EthicalVegan
    • +1
      EthicalVegan  
    • Luna2na:

      Bloody hell! That's sickening, Luna2na!

      Please, please, please feel free to post anything and everything related to this, won't you? Especially in the animal rights-related group I hastily set up not too long ago.

      EDUCATION!!!!!! Yes, yes, yes!

      And thank you for loving all the wolves.

    • 5 months ago
  • wolfess
    • +1
      wolfess  
    • Luna2na:

      My father worked for the national park service so I was raised to respect ALL wildlife -- they have more of a right to be here than we do. I find it unconscionable that 'man' thinks he needs to remove these beautiful creatures from 'their' earth instead of trying to share the earth with all the creatures that Gaia has created.

    • 5 months ago
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