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a "positive impact" on the park's wildlife/plants? What the??? Last I checked yellowstone park went from 20k elk to less than 5k. Yellowstone is dying thanks to a disease we introduced into the park called the wolf. This narrow minded approached from the pro-wolf folks is sickening. All they are about is the wolf...not any other animals.
Yes, those wolves have saved thousands of Montana people from having to take the time to go hunting and put meat in their freezer, thankfully we have those wolves to trim our herds by up to 90%. Wolves are our savior!
Quote from: asl20bball on January 05, 2013, 01:13:12 PMa "positive impact" on the park's wildlife/plants? What the??? Last I checked yellowstone park went from 20k elk to less than 5k. Yellowstone is dying thanks to a disease we introduced into the park called the wolf. This narrow minded approached from the pro-wolf folks is sickening. All they are about is the wolf...not any other animals.Actually, from a broad ecosystem perspective the wolves have helped the Northern Yellowstone range. The elk numbers there in the 90's were incredibly high, and you could see the overgrazing. That's why Montana was able to shoot hundreds of elk every year in the Gardiner late hunt, the numbers were way out of whack.Yellowstone is not dying from the wolves any more than it died from the '88 fires. They each have their place and have an ugly side to them too.I won't lose any sleep over this wolf being shot outside the park, collared or not. We shoot collared elk, deer, and sheep every year and I've never heard anyone complain about that.