Monday, June 6, 2016

PRESS RELEASE!!!!!.... Center for Biological Diversity has just released that conservation groups including Center for Biological Diversity have filed suit challenging the U.S. Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services of their program initiating the killing of our wolves. They are using aerial gunners, snare traps (which strangle the animal) and at times use helicopters and/or planes to flush the wolves out and run them to exhaustion, then shoot them all down. YES THEY HAVE GONE ROGUE!!!! WHO DOES THIS, OUR US DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE WILDLIFE SERVICES... The Gray Wolf is an endangered species and listed, our Mexican Gray wolf is at extinction with only 87 left in the nation and our Red Wolf is in dire need of recovery... We need to take a stand on what is right and wrong, and this is totally BARBARIC... Center for Biological Diversity, Defenders of Wildlife, Sierra Club and many more, will continue fighting legally to exhaustion. These five conservation groups will continue to fight for our WOLVES and we need to write, call, FB the Department of Agriculture and tell them STOP GOING ROGUE... they are killing at will !! I have had petitions, and I hope many of you signed them, maybe we need another and another petition, so we may speak loud and clear!!!!!!!!! "EXTINCT IS FOREVER" Nothing ventured nothing gained.. they are most valuable part of our ecosystem, if earth is to remain in balance.... Mahalo nui loa



Center for Biological Diversity

For Immediate Release, June 1, 2016
Contact: Travis Bruner, Western Watersheds Project, (208) 788-2290
Andrea Santarsiere, Center for Biological Diversity, (303) 854-7748, asantarsiere@biologicaldiversity.org
Gary Macfarlane, Friends of the Clearwater, (208) 882-9755
Bethany Cotton, WildEarth Guardian,s (406) 414-7227
Brooks Fahy, Predator Defense, (541) 937-4261
Talasi Brooks, Advocates for the West, (208) 342-7024
Conservation Groups Challenge Idaho Wolf-killing
USDA's Wildlife Services Has Killed Hundreds of Idaho Wolves
BOISE, Idaho— Five conservation groups filed a lawsuit in federal court today challenging the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Wildlife Services’ killing of gray wolves in Idaho.
The agency killed at least 72 wolves in Idaho last year, using methods including foothold traps, wire snares that strangle wolves, and aerial gunning from helicopters. The agency has used aerial gunning in central Idaho’s “Lolo zone” for several years in a row — using planes or helicopters to run wolves to exhaustion before shooting them from the air, often leaving them wounded to die slow, painful deaths.
The agency’s environmental analysis from 2011 is woefully outdated due to changing circumstances, including new recreational hunting and trapping that kills hundreds of wolves in Idaho each year, and significant changes in scientific understanding of wolves and ecosystem functions.
Wildlife Services does most of its wolf-killing at the behest of the livestock industry, following reports of livestock depredation. For example, five wolves were killed outside of Hailey, Idaho in July 2015 for allegedly attacking sheep. Documents indicate that Wildlife Services has even attempted to kill wolves in the newly-designated Boulder-White Clouds Wildernesses. But Wildlife Services does not consider whether livestock owners took common-sense precautionary measures to avoid conflicts with wolves such as lambing indoors.
“Wildlife Service’s wolf-killing program is senseless, cruel, and impoverishes our wild country,” said Travis Bruner of Western Watersheds Project. “Killing wolves for private livestock interests is wrong, especially on public lands, where wildlife deserves to come first. In addition, new science shows that it does not reduce conflicts long-term.”
“Wildlife Services has never even bothered to consider how much mortality a healthy wolf population can handle,” said Andrea Santarsiere of the Center for Biological Diversity. “Recent research indicates the state may be overestimating wolf populations — something Wildlife Services must consider before killing more wolves.”
“It is long past time that we base wildlife management decisions on the best available science, not on antiquated, disproven anti-wolf rhetoric,” said Bethany Cotton, wildlife program director for WildEarth Guardians. “Wildlife Services needs to come out of the shadows, update its analyses and adopt practices in keeping with modern science and values about the ethical treatment of animals.”
The agency also kills wolves for the purported benefit of elk herds, including in the Lolo zone.
“The campaign waged against the Lolo’s native wolves in the name of elk is reprehensible. Science shows that the elk decline there is due to long-term, natural-habitat changes, not impacts from wolves,” said Gary Macfarlane of Friends of the Clearwater. “It is particularly galling that Wildlife Services is targeting wolves that mostly live in Wildernesses or large roadless areas. These, especially, are places where wolves should be left alone.”

“Wildlife Services, formerly called Animal Damage Control, has been criticized for over fifty years by some of our nation’s leading predator biologists. It has a long, documented history of violating state and federal laws, and even its own directives,” said Brooks Fahy, executive director of Predator Defense. “Idahoans and the American public deserve a guarantee that federal programs like Wildlife Services are using the most up-to-date scientific information available.”
The five conservation organizations are asking the court to order Wildlife Services to cease wolf-killing activities until it prepares an up-to-date environmental analysis of its wolf-killing program. The groups — Western Watersheds Project, the Center for Biological Diversity, Friends of the Clearwater, WildEarth Guardians and Predator Defense — are represented by Advocates for the West and Western Watersheds Project attorneys.
Read the complaint here.
The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.

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