Published April 07, 2013
Wolves are as much a part of the real Minnesota as the 10,000 lakes.
No one would say there are too many lakes in the state and lobby to
destroy a bunch of them; but that was done to wolves, behind closed
doors, and more than 400 innocent wolves subsequently were killed in
just a few months.
By:
Robert Goldman, Duluth News Tribune
Wolves are as much a part of the real Minnesota as the 10,000
lakes. No one would say there are too many lakes in the state and lobby
to destroy a bunch of them; but that was done to wolves, behind closed
doors, and more than 400 innocent wolves subsequently were killed in
just a few months.
When America’s wolves were expelled from the
Endangered Species List in the northern Rockies and in the Upper Midwest
due to politics and not science, I had some faith that decent
Minnesotans would protect the wolves there, and I followed the situation
closely.
After all, 80 percent of Minnesotans voted in a
Department of Natural Resources survey to keep wolves protected. The
native Ojibwe people voiced strong opposition to the hunting and killing
of their sacred brother wolf. And a five-year moratorium on wolf
hunting after any federal delisting had been worked out after a long,
inclusive and democratic process years earlier and made into law. That
was democracy at work.
Since no comprehensive wolf population
survey has been done since 2008, population estimates are sketchy. The
population reportedly has not been growing for a decade and could be as
low as 1,600 wolves. Hundreds of wolves already are killed every year
allegedly to protect cattle and by poachers and due to vehicle
collisions, disease and starvation. Randomly killing more wolves for
“fun” is certainly ethically and ecologically questionable. After all,
wolves are not numbers; they are living beings.
Wolves benefit the
ecology in so many ways. They keep their prey species healthy and
strong. And they ensure biodiversity and protect the health of living
forests. Should that be punishable by persecution and death?
Eco-tourism
provides a billion-dollar boost to Minnesota’s annual economy. In a
world of vanishing wild lands and wildlife, wolves are the superstars
folks come to see, hear and admire. Does anyone
*eally want to ruin what remains of Minnesota’s wholesome reputation by killing the golden goose of the state’s forests?
After
going through a list of shaky excuses to justify killing wolves, the
Minnesota Department of Natural Resources finally acknowledged the
random trapping and shooting of wolves was purely for sport killing and
pelts. The DNR also admitted that random killing would have little
impact on the already minimal depredation of cattle (only 91 cows out of
140,000 were taken by wolves in northern Minnesota in 2011) and no
impact whatsoever on the state’s massive deer population.
Shame on
wolf biologist David Mech for enabling the persecution and death of
thousands of wolves in the Rockies and Upper Midwest. Haven’t wolves
suffered enough from ignorance, hatred and cruelty? Why has Mech given
his blessing to the recreational killing of wolves by people who
demonize and hate them instead of spreading understanding, respect,
tolerance and even love for living wolves? Isn’t that supposed to be the
mission of his International Wolf Center?
The Public Trust
Doctrine states that wildlife in each state is owned by no one
individually but by everyone collectively. According to this democratic
doctrine, wildlife should be managed (or left alone) according to the
wishes of the majority of residents. Isn’t it time we treated America’s
wildlife with respect and decency, according to the humane values of the
majority, which has evolved throughout America?
Wolves are highly
intelligent, highly social, family-oriented and sensitive beings. They
should not be subject to barbaric trapping, hideous snaring or any
random slaughter as if they exist in a shooting gallery for sadistic
blood sport. As a beautiful, ecologically vital, apex predator placed on
this Earth by the Creator, wolves have every right to live in their
native homeland, unmolested and free.
Protect the wolves of Minnesota. Redeem your ethical and democratic values. Reinstate the five-year moratorium.
Robert
Goldman of Portland, Maine, is a wolf and wildlife defender who created
a petition, “Protect America’s Wolves,” through SignOn.org. It has
nearly 20,000 signatures. He has lived and worked in Alaska and out
West, including in Yellowstone National Park and in California.
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