Stop lupo Slaughter Club
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May 2010 recording of the Imnaha lupo pack howling. Click link below to listen.

wolves-holwing-4_08_102.mov

Courtesy Oregon Public Broadcasting.

Well so much for progressive thinking in Oregon. Cattle trump Lupi again. The ranchers are whining about six vitello depredations when they’ve Lost hundreds probably thousands of calves to coyotes, weather, disease. Why aren’t they complaining about that?

I want the figures on cows and calves Lost to non-predation and predation other then wolves, since the beginning of 2010. The new NASS numbers should be out but won’t cover 2010. Stop recitazione like...
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posted by Dark-Blood
That same anno [1906], bureau biologist Vernon Bailey traveled to Wyoming and New Mexico to investigate the extent of lupo and coyote depredations. Upon Bailey’s return to Washington, D.C., President Roosevelt invited him to the White House to see what he had learned. Although there is no record of their conversation, immediately following Bailey’s meeting the President, the Biological Survey recommended that the government begin “devising methods for the destruction of the animali [wolves].”

By the middle of the 20th Century, government-sponsored extermination had wiped out nearly all...
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Still missing. The alpha male of the Imnaha pack hasn’t been seen o heard from since May 31st. ODFW photo.

The hunt for two Lupi in Wallowa County could last all summer long. That’s the latest word from Oregon pesce and Wildlife.

ODFW is now giving federal agents until the end of August to kill two members of the Imnaha pack. It’s the third time ODFW has extended the hunt.

Also new, ODFW is answering critics in the environmental community who think the agency is violating its own rules, and letting the lupo hunt drag out for too long.

“Chronic Depredation”

ODFW has extended the wolf...
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aerial gunning of wolves

UDATE: May 2, 2012

In light of the Sacramento Bee’s explosive expose on Wildlife Services and the lawsuit filed against the agency da WildEarth Guardians, I felt it would be important to re-post this 2009 piece.

Remember this is a repost, reflecting what was happening in 2009, so a few of the links are outdated but Wildlife Services hasn’t changed, they’re still doing what they’ve been doing for decades, killing wildlife.

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October 19, 2009

Who is Wildlife Services? If te asked the majority of Americans, they probably couldn’t tell you. It was formerly known...
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May 27, 2012

The Sage Creek Pack was eliminated da aerial gunners in 2009. It was a huge loss. Yellowstone Lupi are genetically isolated, the Sage Creek Pack could have provided them with important genetics but that means nothing to the lupo killers. Wildlife Services was aerial gunning Lupi even as the first lupo hunt was taking place outside the park, which decimated the famed Cottonwood pack.

“The Sage Creek Pack roamed the Centennial Mountains between Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho – precisely in the area that could alleviate genetic isolation through the influx of wolves...
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For Immediate Release, October 9, 2009

SILVER CITY, N.M.— This week’s aerial gunning of the last four members of the Sage Creek lupo pack in southwestern Montana contributes to the genetic isolation of Lupi in Yellowstone National Park – even as, on Thursday, the Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks commission suspended the public wolf-hunting season near Yellowstone in order not to isolate the national park’s wolves.

Said Michael Robinson of the Center for Biological Diversity: “We are saddened da the loss of the Sage Creek Pack. Suspending the permitted wolf-hunting season near Yellowstone...
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video
Lupi have been feared, hated, and persecuted for hundreds of years in North America. Before the arrival of Europeans, Native Americans incorporated Lupi into their legends and rituals, portraying them as ferocious warriors in some traditions and thieving spirits in others. European Americans, however, simply despised wolves. Many, including celebrated painter and naturalist John James Audubon, believed Lupi ought to be eradicated for the threat they posed to valuable livestock. This attitude enabled a centuries-long extermination campaign that nearly wiped out the gray lupo in the continental...
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