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The growth in wolf populations since they went on the endangered list in the 1970s is one reason livestock loss claims are up. Geir Friisoe, who oversees the Minnesota Department of Agriculture’s compensation program, said another reason lately is higher livestock prices.
Michigan, with nearly 700 wolves, paid $22,382 for 46 incidents in 2010 and $15,755 for 35 incidents in 2011. It has paid $9,465 this year for 12 incidents as of June 2, and payments are pending for 11 other incidents since then, said Brian Roell, a wolf specialist with the Michigan DNR.
The rise in claim payments comes as no surprise to Joe Martin, executive director of the Minnesota State Cattlemen’s Association. He said producers’ actual livestock losses to wolves are much higher, but the government pays only for losses that are verified to be the work of wolves. Coyote losses aren’t covered.
Originally posted by Parksie
Yeah Wolves are so evil its just loveable.
If you hear a normal pet dog howling 3 times in a row, myth has it that death follows. The howls are for the dead master.
Now if you hear the wolves howl, they just triangulated on the position of a sick loner and they are going to rip it to shreds. LOL Lots of people expecting to see a mythical scene of a wolf in the moonlit mist are going to be intimidated by the actual size and wildness of these creatures. Still awesome though.
ARH-WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Originally posted by specialcategory
This is another good reason people should not put their pets outside and leave them there for a time. It just enrages me when cat owners do that. It's the height of negligence and animal cruelty.
Originally posted by Elentarri
I have issues with "culling" animals.
If there is an overpopulation issue then why aren't we "culling" humans too? Humans are more invasive than wolves.
BTW - which wolf is going to go to all the trouble of chasing down a buck and wasting energy when some stupid human has provided slow, easy to catch food in an enclosure?
Originally posted by Elentarri
BTW - which wolf is going to go to all the trouble of chasing down a buck and wasting energy when some stupid human has provided slow, easy to catch food in an enclosure?
It is freedom, cats aren't meant to be in a house all day. Who are you to say that?
Originally posted by usmc0311
Originally posted by Elentarri
I have issues with "culling" animals.
If there is an overpopulation issue then why aren't we "culling" humans too? Humans are more invasive than wolves.
Honestly we do practice the culling of humans, we just call it war, disease and famine. I am all for hunting them as long as it is highly regulated and done so responsibly.
Originally posted by blamethegreys
The crux of the problems, for those not in the loop or far away, is that the wolves have thrived in the new ecosystems. The predictions made by biologists as to their population growth were grossly inaccurate. Some say it is because the Canadian wolves adapted much faster and efficiently to these warmer regions, others just point out the obvious: They have no predators and birth 2-4 pups a season. Pups that are adapted to survive much harsher environments.
So now the wolves are overhunting the elk and deer, and new packs pop up and stray into populated farmlands looking for easy food. This is where hunting and culling come into play. We screwed with nature, thinking we were fixing our past mistake, but we replaced the part labeled WOLF with an aftermarket part that doesn't work the same as the original.
Originally posted by blamethegreys
Agreed, but that stupid human had provided adequate protection for his slow, easy-to-catch food with that enclosure. Until the government (against the local population's wishes) reintroduced wolves to the ecosystem.
You can't blame the ranchers when they have said from the very start that this would be the outcome. In reality, a bunch of Idaho/Montana/Wyoming ranchers were smarter than the government's ubermensch scientists!
The issue now is mediating the damage and making everyone happy-ish. Culling and hunting seasons cost far less than subsidizing tall fences and lost livestock compensations.
Originally posted by blamethegreys
Agreed, but that stupid human had provided adequate protection for his slow, easy-to-catch food with that enclosure. Until the government (against the local population's wishes) reintroduced wolves to the ecosystem.