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- Xref: sparky rec.backcountry:9074 sci.environment:12899 talk.environment:4694 alt.wolves:230
- Newsgroups: rec.backcountry,sci.environment,talk.environment,alt.wolves
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!sun-barr!ames!pioneer.arc.nasa.gov!watson
- From: watson@pioneer.arc.nasa.gov (John S. Watson - FSC)
- Subject: Alaska to shoot hundreds of wolves from airplanes
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.183713.25800@news.arc.nasa.gov>
- Sender: usenet@news.arc.nasa.gov
- Organization: NASA Ames Res. Ctr. Mtn Vw CA 94035
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 18:37:13 GMT
- Lines: 72
-
- [sorry for any typos]
-
- New York Times
-
- Anchorage, Alaska ---
-
- Trying to tip the balance of nature in favor of the moose and caribous,
- wildlife officials have decided to start shooting wolves from airplanes
- over a huge portion of the Alaska wilderness.
-
- By reducing the number of wolves that prey on big-game animals,
- Alaska wildlife officials hope to produce a bounty for hunters
- and tourists.
-
- 'A wildlife spectacle'
-
- "We feel we are going to create a wildlife spectacle
- on a par with the major migrations in East Africa,"
- said David Kelleyhouse, director of the Division of
- Wildlife Conservation. "Mom and pop from Syracuse can
- come up here and see something that they can't see anywhere
- else on Earth."
-
- With votes this week, the ALaska Board of Game set in motion
- a major reordering of the predatory chain in a habitat
- often referred to as the American Serengeti.
-
- The move promises to affect the populations of
- the nation's biggest herds of moose, dall sheep,
- caribous, wolves and grizzly bears into the next century.
-
- To inflate Alaska's populations of moose and caribous,
- which already number well over a million,
- the state plans to kill hundreds of wolves each year.
- Wildlife experts estimate that the wolves,
- the primary predators of Alaska's big-game animals, number
- no more than 7,000 statewide.
-
-
- Shot from planes
-
- The plan calls for the wolves to be shot by game officials from airplanes
- or by private citizens who will be allowed to track them from the air,
- then land and shoot them.
-
- The plan enacted by the state game board is a five-year
- program to shooting wolves in a 43,000-square-mile
- area between Anchorage and Fairbanks, a section of birch
- forests, glaciers and tundra that is home to more than
- 60,000 caribous, 30,000 moose, 2,000 grizzly bears and about 7000 wolves.
-
- Since bears, as well as wolves, prey on the moose and caribous,
- the state will also try to eliminate more bears in some areas,
- althought the exact number have not been determined.
-
- Some biologist say the state has entered a dangerous phase
- of "playing God," that will so upset the natural cycles that it
- will actually produce fewer animals.
-
- A number of wildlife biologests say that killing
- hundreds of Alaska wolves each year would not guarantee a
- population explosion of large animals. In some areas,
- 80 percent of the wolves, which run in packs of eight to 30
- animals, would be killed.
-
- 'Bad biology'
-
- "This decision is bad biology all around,
- almost insulting from a scientific standpoint,"
- said Dr. Gordon Haber, a wildlife scientist
- who has been studying wolves in Alaska for 27 years.
-
-