- Banned
- #181
littlebuf
Banned
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2012
- Messages
- 1,983
I'm pretty sure I mentioned that
Based on 60-70% of the posts in this thread I think it'd be just fine if quite a few current hunters quit. The tinfoil hat stuff makes hunters as a group look pretty bad.
Great question! Oregon will protect wolves, Cali already has a bill in to protect the few wolves they have. They are spreading across the west with the liberal mentality. I live on the East side of the sierras in NV., they will be here soon and I dread the day. Yes wolves area amazing animals, I'd love to have one on the wall, elk and deer taste much better so I prefer their numbers stay up and wolves stay away. I trap and coyotes are smart, elusive and hard to catch, a lot goes into learning coyotes. Wolves are even harder, bigger and more detrimental to a habitat 100x over. We can't keep coyote population regulated with year round harvest how do you control wolves? I also run hounds for lion and bear, MT., ID., and many other states have had several accounts of hounds being slaughtered by wolves and left. Unable to run dogs to control lion and bear #s and add wolves you have a very bad situation for all prey species.please do explain how adding more predators to a controlled area (face it our "wildernesses" have boundaries of human population) could possibly raise the number of prey species. im all ears
Tapeworm virus - A tapeworm is not a virus. And, tapeworms have always been extremely common before the introduction of the wolves. Almost any carnivore can carry tapeworms including foxes, coyotes, and lions. It's very normal for elk and moose to have tapeworm cysts in their organs and doesn't kill them. They pose no threat to humans unless you like eating wolf sh!t.
http://www.skinnymoose.com/bbb/2012...hern-rockies-before-canadian-wolf-transplant/
This article details the distribution of the 5 sub species of gray wolves found in North America. The wolves that were introduced into the lower 48 did not historically live here, thus making them non-native. Some would consider them an "invasive species".
And for those who would like to read on the Hydatid disease that wolves are spreading here is a good article with other articles linked at the bottom of the page.
http://www.skinnymoose.com/bbb/2010...-have-thousands-of-hydatid-disease-tapeworms/
Pretty narrow minded. 9 pages of comments and not one person suggesting the solution of increasing the carrying capacity of the area for the herd. Ya know, like don't bulldoze, pave and turn all your wilderness into strip malls, parking lots and Wal-Marts?
You can't support more predators of any kind, because there ain't any wilderness left. Work on the root cause of the problem. Everyone here is fired up about the symptoms.