Monday, July 21, 2014
The Wisconsin Wolf Advisory Committee - - now heavily-weighted in favor of wolf hunting after an official DNR purge of opponents from an earlier, more broadlu-representative stakeholder's group - - will meet in Wausau tomorrow to discuss state wolf hunting policy which now allows the use of dogs.Here is the meeting information from a DNR website:
July 22 9 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. | Wausau Howard Johnson Hotel 2101 North Mountain Rd. | DNR Wolf Advisory Committee | David MacFarland | Committee will continue wolf management plan discussions. |
Wolf activist Rachel Tilseth has some observations for a guest op-ed:
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In
my dozen or so years as a volunteer WI DNR Winter Wolf Tracker, I
learned a great deal about wolves. Wolves are territorial predators,
social animals living within family packs, that depend on each other for
survival. Wolves have a beneficial effect on ecosystems as a keystone
predator. Wolves have been off the endangered species list now for over
two years, and are being managed by the state of Wisconsin.
Wisconsin
is only managing wild wolves as a trophy game animal. Managing the wolf
only as a trophy, especially using dogs to hunt them, is an outright
waste of natural resources, money, and time previously spent on
recovery.
I cite the loss of 23 hound hunting dogs during 2013 bear-hunting training season with reimbursement up to $2,500 per dog.
On
July 10, 2014, a Judge ruled that dogs could be trained on wolves and
this is concerning. Here is why. Based on what I've learned about
wolves during tracking:
Training
dogs to chase wolves during breeding season in January and February
will result in a blood bath. While tracking wolves during the winter
breeding season I found wolf scent marking every tenth of a mile, for
about a mile. There were multiple wolf tracks on the edge of the packs
range. I found obvious signs of a female wolf in estrous near these
scent markings. I'm certain if a wolf hound handler sends dogs to chase
wolves during breeding season it will end in a blood bath because wolves
are very protective of their mates at that time.
These
fringe hunters put both wild wolves and hunting dogs in known
situations that cause conflict. Should citizens be paying money for this
reckless behavior?
Over
the next several months the Wolf Advisory Committee, which Wisconsin
DNR Secretary Cathy Stepp admitted is stacked with pro-hunter interests)
will be writing training rules for dogs to chase wolves.
Stepp
has limited citizen input by selecting a committee stacked with pro
hunting lobbyists that cater to a minority of extremist fringe hunters.
All
citizens have the right to weigh in on this issue, including
ethical hunters, hikers, eco-tourists, cyclists, photographers and bird
watchers. I ask that Wisconsinites speak out against this practice of
chasing wolves with dogs and stop this before it ends in a north woods
blood bath.
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