Another Species in Danger »

Posted By Formidable 11 months, 3 weeks ago in News

Many animals are said to define true wilderness, but the best candidate is arguably the wolverine. The reason isn't so much its legendary ferocity or even the remoteness of its habitat. It's the fact that the wolverine is so intolerant of human disturbance.

Read Full Story at nytimes.com »

260 Views Share Story 10 Comments Report

Submitted By:
Formidable

"Listen to Me and I will Listen to You"

Other Related Articles:

Why not submit a story?

RSS Join the Discussion

+ Add Comment
Comments So Far: 20 (view all)
  • 0%
    Formidable11 months, 3 weeks ago

    FTA:

    There have always been difficult compromises in applying the law, but over the last seven years the Fish and Wildlife Service has become a hostile gatekeeper, denying refuge to species that desperately need the government's full protection. That must change.

    (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (depth : 1) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
    Reply
    loading loading ...
    • 0%
      Dicax_Maximus11 months, 3 weeks ago

      This is one species that can be protected, without an impact on human life (well, except for a certain few well off's) !!!!

      Thanks for the article !

      (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (depth : 1) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
      Reply

      1 Reply

      loading loading ...
    • 0%
      RedRiverJ11 months, 3 weeks ago

      Very sad indeed.

      (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (depth : 1) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
      Reply
      loading loading ...
      • 0%
        Formidable11 months, 3 weeks ago

        On a lighter note; why the Woverines and not the Buckeyes?

        (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (depth : 1) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
        Reply
        loading loading ...
        • 0%
          HannibalBarca11 months, 3 weeks ago

          FTA: The reason isn't so much its legendary ferocity or even the remoteness of its habitat. It's the fact that the wolverine is so intolerant of human disturbance.

          And that is true.

          In one bush camp I was in one winter, the grocery truck came once a week so for a few days we stored some food out doors (it was -40) and a wolverine visited us.

          What he did not eat he pis sed on making the food useless, and one night attacked one of the workers (we were warned not to go out, but young dumb and full of ...)and 5 of us went out to rescue the poor guy; only the wolverine would not retreat.

          We finally got the fellow in and a helicopter came and took him to the hospital, over 200 stitches, skin grafting and a life time limp, and the wolverine, never saw him again.

          And do they ever stink.

          (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (depth : 1) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
          Reply

          1 Reply

          loading loading ...
        • 0%
          RedWhine11 months, 3 weeks ago

          "Picture a weasel -- and most of us can do that, for we have met that little demon of destruction, that small atom of insensate courage, that symbol of slaughter, sleeplessness, and tireless, incredible activity -- picture that scrap of demoniac fury, multiply that mite some fifty times, and you have the likeness of a Wolverine."

          Ernest Thompson Seton

          "Lives of Game Animals". 1925 - 1928. Vol. II

          (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (depth : 1) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
          Reply
          loading loading ...
          • 0%
            Formidable11 months, 3 weeks ago

            Some good news:

            Wolf Killings Stopped: Federal Court Temporarily Restores

            Protection to Wolves in Northern Rocky Mountains

            MISSOULA, Mont.â;; Today Federal Judge Donald W. Molloy issued a temporary injunction restoring gray wolves in the northern Rocky Mountains to the endangered species list, and thus halting indiscriminate killing of wolves, for the duration of a trial in which conservationist plaintiffs contest the removal of the wolves from the protected list.

            (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (depth : 1) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
            Reply
            loading loading ...
            • 0%
              Formidable11 months, 3 weeks ago

              The case involves 12 conservation organizations, including the Center for Biological Diversity, against defendant U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and state governments and livestock and trophy-hunting organizations that have intervened on the side of the government.

              Dozens of wolves have been shot since March 28, 2008, when wolves in Idaho, Wyoming, Montana, and parts of Oregon and Washington lost the protections of the Endangered Species Act.

              In order to garner the injunction, plaintiffs successfully demonstrated that they were likely to succeed on the merits of their claims, and that irreparable injury was occurring while the case was pending.

              "The wolf slaughter is halted," said Michael Robinson of the Center for Biological Diversity. "We're elated."

              (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (depth : 1) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
              Reply
              loading loading ...
              • 0%
                Formidable11 months, 3 weeks ago

                "Recovery requires allowing wolves in different populations to reach each other in order to mate and raise their pups," said Robinson. "Even before they were unlawfully removed from the endangered species list, the government was gunning down so many wolves that the Yellowstone population was reproductively isolated, a recipe for extinction."

                Robinson added: "This injunction will give the wolves a fighting chance."

                Gray wolves were exterminated from the western United States by the Fish and Wildlife Service and its predecessor agencies between 1915 and 1945, on behalf of the livestock industry. Passage of the Endangered Species Act in 1973 led to placement of wolves on the endangered species list, development of a recovery plan, and reintroduction of wolves to the northern Rocky Mountains in 1995.

                (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (depth : 1) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
                Reply
                loading loading ...
                • 0%
                  kboy11 months, 3 weeks ago

                  The protection of animals is very secondary to the desire by a small group of fanatics to not allow use of property by the owners or to stop some project. Most of these are "do as I say, not as I do" providing money and fanatics providing emotion instead of science.

                  (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (depth : 1) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
                  Reply
                  loading loading ...
                  • 0%
                    mmrhe11 months, 3 weeks ago

                    kboy

                    The problem is land owners in this country have too many rights as far as I'm concerned.

                    I live near a glacial lake in Northern Ohio. A developer came in and built himself a nice fat mansion on top of one of only two brooks left containing a native strain of trout.

                    No one could stop him because it took five years to prove to the State of Ohio that the Trout were truly native.

                    Am I a fanatic for denying that fat cat his "right" to rape, pillage and plunder cause he "owns" the land?

                    (comment_max_expanded_depth : 2) (depth : 1) (comment_max_render_depth : 3)
                    Reply
                    loading loading ...
                    View All 20 Comments

                    Add a Comment

                    Sign In With Your Propeller Account

                    Forgot your password?

                    Please keep your comments relevant to this story.

                    To create a live link, simply type the URL (including http://) or email address and we will make it a live link for you. You can put up to 3 URLs in your comments. Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted — no need to use <p> or <br /> tags.

                    Advertisement