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Wait a minute, you might be on to something...“We are putting them in areas they were native to “
Yeah where people and children live and work and have livestock.
How about they put them in those blue cesspools. They were native there too
Wolves must be doing some good eating if the moose and elk populations want down that fast
In their minds the reason folks have guns is to hunt.
If there isn't any hunting left they haven't a need for a gun.
Demagogues lead the witless.
R
Umm... Hunting is already illegal in Yellowstone and has been since, well, before it's inception (1883). It's kind of a thing at every National Park. Wolves decimating the herbivore populations in the park is a problem, every wolf eats around 20 elk a year, but it's not going to impact hunting within the park one single, tiny, little bit as it's already against the law. We stand a better chance of eliminating personal income taxes before they will change the law to allow hunting inside National Parks.
Now if you want to make this argument for being able to shoot wolves outside park boundaries? 100% with you, and we do that in Wyoming already. We are under continuous litigation attempts to stop us, it's a never ending battle.
If you want to use this to argue against the conversion of National Forests and BLM land into National Parks and similar that would prohibit hunting on previously hunted lands, again, 100% with you and I'm just as pissed as everyone else when they take another wide swath of land and "protect" it. It's funny how virtually NOBODY went to south-central Utah until Billy Boy pencil whipped out Grand Staircase-Escalante "National Monument" from a bunch of BLM land. It was protected by the ranchers grazing on it and its isolation from knowledge. You could previously take the 4x4 only Burr Trail and count how many other vehicles you'd see on it with one hand. Now they paved half of it and the other half is graded regularly, to the point in dry weather you could get a Prius through with zero issues. Protected? I disagree..
They don’t stay in the park, and that’s also when we shoot them.Wolves stay in the park ?
How many places have the communists released these giant non native wolves ?
Does the game population in the park affect game outside the park ? I know long legged rats are like water. Pull some out or put more in one place it affects other places / they fill back in
One other note, wolves are very much native to Yellowstone. A big part of me wants more wolves there, many more, and to feed them tourists instead of elk.Wolves stay in the park ?
How many places have the communists released these giant non native wolves ?
Does the game population in the park affect game outside the park ? I know long legged rats are like water. Pull some out or put more in one place it affects other places / they fill back in
I think they would tire of the "Dim Sum Buffet" pretty quickly.........One other note, wolves are very much native to Yellowstone. A big part of me wants more wolves there, many more, and to feed them tourists instead of elk.
You haven’t read they brought northern Canadian wolves that are bigger that what was originally thereOne other note, wolves are very much native to Yellowstone. A big part of me wants more wolves there, many more, and to feed them tourists instead of elk.
Despite long-term trends of increased temperatures and reduced precipitation, trees such as cottonwood, willow, aspen and other woody species have been showing signs of accelerated growth in many areas since wolves were restored to the park in 1995. Beavers and riparian songbirds are also showing signs of coming back to areas where they had been missing or in decline since the 1930s.
Still, it will likely take many years for established shrubs and trees to reach a size sufficient to produce the abundance of berries and seeds that support a diverse ecosystem.
Wolves must be doing some good eating if the moose and elk populations want down that fast
And we’ll shoot them too.Just wait until they finish all the game off within the park boundaries! Wolves recognize no boundaries.
Pine beetle fucked up more trees than the elk ever could.20,000 elk were too many for the habitat in Yellowstone to support. Browsing by ungulates had prevented tree recovery in many areas of the park. They need to get the bison numbers down for some of the lower elevations where browsing by bison is harming the plant life there, too. The park is much improved by the presence of predators in the ecosystem. It is much healthier now than it was in 1995. There are still improvements to be made.
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Studies confirm effect of wolves, elk on tree recovery in Yellowstone National Park
CORVALLIS, Ore. - An analysis of 24 studies over a 15-year period has confirmed that wolves and their influence on elk represent a major reason for the recovery of trees that had previously been declining for decades in Yellowstone National Park. Despite long-term trends of increased...today.oregonstate.edu
The elk numbers have pretty much stabilized at 5000, indicating that is probably the level with predators that is about right for that ecosystem. The numbers have actually been climbing for the last decade.
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Elk - Yellowstone National Park (U.S. National Park Service)
Elk are the most abundant ungulate in Yellowstone National Park.www.nps.gov
Shooting doesn’t do much. Same with pigs.And we’ll shoot them too.
You know the prey includes people pets livestock children rightThere is most definitely a predator-prey population relationship. It’s always been true. Will there be a period wherein predators dominate and cause severe stress to local prey populations? Yes. Followed by predator range spread and then eventually decline to levels that allow prey species to recover.
It’s real. Nature truly does deliver.
YessirYou know the prey includes people pets livestock children right
Yes, send more tourists. The last ones were crunchy and taste good with ketchup.One other note, wolves are very much native to Yellowstone. A big part of me wants more wolves there, many more, and to feed them tourists instead of elk.
Pine beetles have definitely been a problem in recent history for white bark pine trees in the park. There was, however, nothing in the link about pine trees. Maybe you should read it. You can still disagree even after you know what it says.Pine beetle fucked up more trees than the elk ever could.
Wolves number in the low hundreds in Wyoming, regulated hunting each year culls out 10% or more of the population. On top of that, if a wolf is identified as going after livestock, they're declared a predatory animal and culled.Shooting doesn’t do much. Same with pigs.
There’s a reason poison was used to eradicate wolves
It’s a pity the prey doesn’t include the leftist pieces of shit that inflicted the wolves on us.You know the prey includes people pets livestock children right
We live in environments with many more manipulated variables than that. For example. We raise millions of head of cattle across the great plains and mountains. When elk populations run thin, those cattle are going to be the main targets. Like a weak stupid slow Buffalo. Colorado and New Mexico have large cow and elk herds. In 20 years we will see. I think it's retarded. I would much rather have the elk than the wolves. We have done a fine job of managing wildlife, and grazing without wolves for about 100 years now. They take into account animals and forage and give out licenses accordingly.There is most definitely a predator-prey population relationship. It’s always been true. Will there be a period wherein predators dominate and cause severe stress to local prey populations? Yes. Followed by predator range spread and then eventually decline to levels that allow prey species to recover.
It’s real. Nature truly does deliver.
Browsing by ungulates had prevented tree recovery in many areas of the park.
Reply to your top post.Pine beetles have definitely been a problem in recent history for white bark pine trees in the park. There was, however, nothing in the link about pine trees. Maybe you should read it. You can still disagree even after you know what it says.
Those are migratory elk numbers, permanent herds are the 5k down from 20k.Where in the hell are those numbers coming from:
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Elk - Yellowstone National Park (U.S. National Park Service)
Elk are the most abundant ungulate in Yellowstone National Park.www.nps.gov
Elk: Yellowstone provides summer range for an estimated 10,000–20,000 elk (Cervus canadensis) from six to seven herds, most of which winter at lower elevations outside the park.
Moose: https://www.yellowstonepark.com/things-to-do/wildlife/about-moose/ Around 800
Wolf: Around 108 wolves: https://www.nps.gov/yell/learn/nature/wolves.htm#:~:text=As of January 2023, there,and 123 wolves since 2009.
We are seeing the shit side of this coin now where we hunt whitetail.There is most definitely a predator-prey population relationship. It’s always been true. Will there be a period wherein predators dominate and cause severe stress to local prey populations? Yes. Followed by predator range spread and then eventually decline to levels that allow prey species to recover.
It’s real. Nature truly does deliver.
in case you missed it in the other threads.
I swear they must make people say it on TV. But every victim of an animal attack on TV seems to always mention how they don't blame the animal because, I was in his territory. Just more social engineering from the shit box.This all reminds me of the joke about the government man telling the farmer he could go anywhere he wanted. (And the inference is to do anything the government wanted) After entering the pasture, that the farmer warned him not to, the bull got after the gman and the gman kept yelling for help. The farmer hollered out, “show him your badge.” The results are what one would expect. (A mucked up day for the gman and a mucked up day for the farmer who got blamed for the gman’s demise)
The gmen know best (?) and apex predators are loved by people who live in New York City and Los Angeles, California. See the point. The gmen are going to do what the coastal elites tell them to do. I am not that familiar with the ecology of The Yellowstone, but I am very familiar with North Louisiana, where we are starting to have a black bear problem and starting to have an alligator problem. Not serious yet, but when one of those big city loving people come out to the state park and has their lovely house broke black lab or the truly precious toddler, become a meal for a gator, then we will see just how much they love apex predators. (Feeling sure, we country folks will get the blame)
Yes, but not pine trees, cottonwood and some others, as well as plants that produce food for wildlife beyond leavesReply to your top post.
That's yours, right?