http://www.outdoorlife.com/outdoor/news/article/0,19912,1007479,00.html
Ranchers Balk at Wolf Plan
By Will Snyder, Outdoor Life
Say it doesn’t give them enough
leeway in protecting herds
November 28, 2005
Since the 1950s, when the wolf was
all but extinct, its reintroduction has
sparked controversy. The focus now is on
eastern Oregon, where wolves are
expected to migrate from Idaho after
federal rule changes. Ranchers are
worried that new laws governing
management of the wolf packs are too
stringent and will result in unnecessary
livestock deaths.
According to Oregon’s new management
plan, a rancher must witness a wolf
attacking livestock before he can shoot.
Letting a predator attack before being
allowed to act has many livestock
farmers scratching their heads. They see
the reintroduction of the wolf and the
subsequent plan from the Oregon Natural
Resources Council as a threat to grazing
lands.
Conversely, Alaska plans to thin its
herd by 500 this winter, in order to
protect caribou and moose herds. The
state is issuing aerial hunting permits.
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