Idaho wolf killer posts
Newsweek INT. Without the oxygen of publicity, the attacker is just that: a killer with a car and a knife. The lone wolf needs the pack as much as the pack needs the lone wolf.
105 months ago
Fox News Yellowstone officials euthanized the severely injured wolf after hikers found the animal suffering in the northern edge of the park, near Gardiner, Montana, on April 11.
106 months ago
ABC News The reward for information leading to whoever shot a rare white wolf found inside Yellowstone National Park rose to $10,000 on Friday after a wolf advocacy group matched a $5,000 reward offered earlier by the park.
106 months ago
HuffPost News “The biggest question is: why did this man become a killer?”
108 months ago
HuffPost Weird News LOL.
127 months ago
HuffPost Weird News Oh man, Idaho and Colorado, y'all have no chill.
127 months ago
Us Weekly Idaho huntress Sabrina Corgatelli is defending herself against those who call her a "cold-hearted" killer for hunting animals including a giraffe and wildebeest.
128 months ago
Tony Povilitis Key Wolf Corridor at Risk in Idaho!
https://www.facebook.com/WolfYellowstone/photos/a.556922141049062.1073741831.556826021058674/846792332062040/?type=1&theater
Campaign for Yellowstone's Wolves
WOLF CORRIDOR NEGLECT and Grossly Unethical Spring Wolf Hunts in Idaho
In a letter today, biologist Dr. Tony Povilitis of CYW asked the Director of Idaho's Department of Fish and Game to explain how his agency plans to protect wolves and wolf populat
Read more ... ion connectivity along the habitat corridor between Yellowstone and Central Idaho (see photo). Only 14 wolves were documented for the area at the end of 2014. “Despite these low and uncertain numbers, 8 wolves from three packs of unknown size where removed by trophy hunting during the year, along with 4 other wolves of unknown pack affiliation. Moreover, breeding wolf pairs could be confirmed for only one pack while 4 of 6 pups born in the corridor during 2014 perished,” Tony explained. Idaho risks depleting wolves in the critical habitat corridor. Tony pointed out that scientists, writing in the journal Molecular Ecology, urged “management decisions that promote natural dispersal dynamics and minimize anthropogenic factors that reduce genetic connectivity.” The authors suggested buffer zones around core source populations and reduced hunting quotas within wolf dispersal corridors. Yet Idaho will continue to allow trophy hunting and trapping of up to 40 wolves each year in the corridor area. Apart from this issue, Tony expressed his personal dismay at Idaho’s wolf hunting in spring (March through June) across large sections of north-central Idaho on national forest lands. Coinciding with late pregnancy in wolves, denning, and rearing of pups, this hunting is “blatantly inhumane and discordant with even minimal standards of sportsmanship,” Tony said. “I strongly urge Idaho Game authorities to end this practice on ethical grounds and in fairness to countless Americans, both hunters and non-hunters alike, who believe in humane treatment of wildlife.” Tony’s letter can be downloaded at: https://www.dropbox.com/s/owgwjitdpbv6btu/To%20IDFG%20May%206%202015%28r%29.pdf?dl=0
#Keepwolveslisted #standforwoves #wolves
131 months ago
National Geographic The famed gray wolf that made headlines for her astonishing trek from the Northern Rockis to the Grand Canyon has been shot dead by a local hunter, who mistook her for a coyote.
Grand Canyon Wolf That Made Epic Journey Shot Dead in Utah
news.nationalgeographic.com
Genetic tests conducted at the University of Idaho found that the DNA sample taken from the wolf killed on December 28 was identical to the DNA in scat samples taken from Echo, the name given to the Grand Canyon wolf following a worldwide naming cont
Read more ... est among schoolchildren.
134 months ago
NPR Since 2008, the number of Idaho teachers leaving the profession has tripled.
134 months ago
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