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Conservation Groups Intervene In Wyoming Wolf Lawsuit

Wyoming would allow shooting most wolves

 

November 8th, 2004

 

Contact Info:

Abigail Dillen, Earthjustice, 406-586-9699

Steve Thomas, Sierra Club, 307-672-0425

Louisa Willcox, Natural Resources Defense Council, 406-222-9561

 

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Cheyenne, WY-- Conservation organizations filed legal papers in Wyoming federal

court today seeking to intervene in a lawsuit over the future of gray wolves in

Wyoming. Earthjustice is representing the Sierra Club and Natural Resources

Defense Council in their efforts to ensure that wolves are not subject to

unregulated poisoning, trapping, and shooting across the vast majority of the

species’ range outside of national parks.

 

Twenty-eight Wyoming-based groups representing agricultural and outfitting

interests filed suit in September, challenging the U.S. Fish and Wildlife

Service’s refusal to approve Wyoming’s wolf management plan. The Wyoming

plan proposes to manage wolves as predators subject to indiscriminate killing

throughout 90 percent of their range in Wyoming outside of Yellowstone and Grand

Teton national parks.

 

“Wyoming wants to throw away a huge investment in wolf recovery and bring back

the bad old days of poisoning, trapping and shooting wolves on site, †said

Steve Thomas of the Wyoming Sierra Club’s Sheridan office. “That’s no way

to ensure a healthy wolf population.â€

 

Currently gray wolves in Wyoming are protected by the Endangered Species Act.

The Fish and Wildlfe Service is considering whether to “delist†wolves in

the Northern Rockies and turn management over to the states. Before that can

happen, Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming must develop management plans that are sure

to maintain viable wolf populations. Based on Wyoming’s proposal to manage

wolves as “predators†in the vast majority of their range outside the

national parks, the Fish and Wildlife Service has concluded that Wyoming’s

plan falls short.

 

 

The groups challenging this decision maintain that wolves are “severelyâ€

impacting livestock operations, elk numbers, and tourism revenues. According to

Louisa Willcox of the Natural Resources Defense Council, “These are just more

fairy tales about wolves. What we’ve actually seen over the last nine years

since the Yellowstone reintroduction is that wolves are barely making a dent on

livestock and elk, and tourism revenues are up year after year, in large part

because wolves are attracting so many visitors from all over the country.â€

 

“Let’s get real. Wolves kill fewer than 15 sheep in Wyoming every year.

Three times as many sheep die from overeating. Ten times as many die from eagle

attacks. Does that mean we should have an open season on eagles?†asked

Abigail Dillen, an attorney with Earthjustice. “Wyoming needs to come forward

with a balanced approach to managing wolves. The state doesn’t classify

mountain lions and black bears as predators that can be killed at any time by

any means. There is no legitimate reason to treat wolves any differently.â€

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