chickm1
Well-Known Member
you seem to rely on the govt to do the right thing..[/QUOTE said:Wrong. Am I in agreement with everything the F&W people do? No.
you seem to rely on the govt to do the right thing..[/QUOTE said:Wrong. Am I in agreement with everything the F&W people do? No.
Simply put. Most hunters have never watched the devastating effects of wolves on the ungulates populations. Most hunters don't live were wolves are. Wolves have decimated the elk, deer and moose populations in northern Idaho and Montana. It's easy to sit in your livening room and comment but entail you've watched the effects of wolves first hand your just spouting liberal talking points. The native hunters from these locations were wolves were introduced have been speaking till their blue for years about the first hand Vew of the devastation. Old subject the damage is done. The hunters from Elsewhere who all along have ridiculed us and never stood up for their fellow out of state hunters are finely getting a first hand perspective.
I'm about 40 miles north of Gardiner. You are correct. There is a reason MT requires the game wardens to have a 4 year university degree. So the minimum amount of brainwashing is present prior to hiring. The system is broken/rigged against logic.The govt brought them in, and they appear to want more of them
Ask anyone who has spent time near Gardiner, Mt.
The elk herd there has been DECIMATED by the wolves, yet MT FWP is considering CUTTING the hunt area quota from 2 to ONE. That is not per person- that is one wolf killed in the entire hunt area and the season closes!
The next zone over is being considered for the same cut.
This is arguably the most overpopulated area we have yet they want more of them? We already are not keeping up with pup production!
With some of the things FWP puts out, it's getting harder and harder to believe what they say. They also still claim that those same hunt areas are WAAAAYYYY above their elk population goals, yet ask anyone who hunts there- there are no tags and even fewer elk!
If we don't take out 80% of the wolfs out of Yellowstone now the only animals you will see there in 2 years is starving wolfs. Man thinks he knows how to handle nature all the time and all we do is screw up the natural order of things. They even put brown trout in Yellowstone lake and they are eating all the rainbow trout and cut throats another screw up. And yes if you read the surveys coming out of there everything is great FAKE NEWS.!!!!I hear all sides of this. If you listen to the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, the wolves are the epitome of a threat to the whole ecosystem. Western sheep and cattle ranchers will pretty much back that up. We must maintain a balance in the population, or we stand a chance to have another animal go extinct. That cannot happen. I seriously doubt the wolves in the west, will get to the problems caused by feral hogs and coyotes in Texas.
If we don't take out 80% of the wolfs out of Yellowstone now the only animals you will see there in 2 years is starving wolfs. Man thinks he knows how to handle nature all the time and all we do is screw up the natural order of things. They even put brown trout in Yellowstone lake and they are eating all the rainbow trout and cut throats another screw up. And yes if you read the surveys coming out of there everything is great FAKE NEWS.!!!!
good job troll, look at your source. Wolves will wipe out an entire herd often partially consuming the fetuses from cows while the cows are still alive.This from Forbes
33,715 views|May 6, 2016,12:29 pm
Why Wolves Are The Unsung Heroes Of Healthy Ecosystems
QuoraContributor
Consumer Tech
This article is more than 2 years old.
What should everyone know about wolves in the wild?
Answer by Oliver Starr, wolf handler and wilds advocate, on Quora:
Wolves are critical to healthy ecosystems – we need wolves more than wolves need us! Please watch this amazing video that helps put in perspective the role wolves play in restoring a damaging ecosystem back to health.
Unlike human trophy hunters, wolves take targets of opportunity – the young, the sick, the injured, the invisibly genetically inferior – in so doing they maintain the health of their prey species. Human hunters kill the fittest animals because they can – wolves improve the strength of their prey, humans consistently diminish it.
Wolves are considered both an apex predator and a keystone species. This means they are at the top of the food chain with no natural other animals that prey upon them for food.
Their reputation as dangerous animals or creatures that kill for enjoyment is simply inaccurate. As predators, wolves consume the flesh of other creatures. Unlike humans, their biology dictates a diet that consists almost entirely of meat. Wolves are the largest of all wild canids and they typically require large prey or a very high density of smaller prey to maintain their presence in an area.
Wolves have been known to eat moose, elk, deer, caribou, bison, musk ox, and virtually every other ungulate species that shares their range. Wolves will also eat smaller animals such as beavers, rabbits, squirrels, mice and, unfortunately, sometimes domestic livestock and pets.
Some people claim that wolves "decimate" they populations of the species they prey upon; however the facts do not bear this out. In the United States we've been documenting wolf recovery in the Northern Rockies for 25 years. We've also been documenting ungulate populations, particularly elk, for even longer.
While it is true that there are a few management units across the whole of the wolf recovery area that do show some reductions in elk numbers, by and large the presence of wolves has resulted in increases in elk populations nearly everywhere they've returned.
Wolves form very close social bonds. Wolf "packs" are actually families that typically consist of one or more breeding pairs, siblings of the breeders, and the offspring from one or more previous litters.
Lone wolves –perhaps the worst of all the mischaracterizations and vilifications heaped upon wolves is the idea that "lone wolves" are particularly killers or out to cause harm.
Nothing could be further from the truth! Lone wolves are technically known as dispersers and they're not looking for trouble, they're looking for love!
Not all wolves have the makeup to leave their natal group and set off on their own. It's a tremendously risky undertaking that very often results in the dispersing wolf dying in his or her effort to find a mate and start a family of their own.
Lol, way too much passion with the against side to carry on an open dialog, like Berger bullet threads.Well my trolling post didn't stop the chaos from ensuing. Here we are at page 14 calling each other morons.