Wolves on the prowl again in Western Europe

treesparrow

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/315161,wolves-on-the-prowl-again-in-western-europe.html

Hamburg - Wolves are again howling through the woodlands of western Germany for the first time in 150 years, after spreading back into Western Germany now that most of their natural enemies have disappeared, conservationists say.

Wolf sightings have been common in Poland and eastern Germany for several years, but never in the heavily urbanised and industrial heartland of the Ruhr Valley and the Rhineland - until now.

Front-page tabloid headlines shocked city dwellers recently with reports that at least one wolf is on the prowl in North-Rhine Westphalia, Germany's most populous state and a region which borders on France.

Wildlife experts used DNA fingerprinting to confirm that a farmer's sheep had been killed by a wolf. It is the first report of a wolf attacking livestock in this part of Europe since the mid-19th century, when industrialization forced wolves to retreat to eastern Europe.

Ironically, the post-industrial era in Germany's ageing rust belt coincides with environmental awareness and conscious efforts to restore the balance of nature. In addition, the fall of the Iron Curtain 20 years ago has made east-west travel easier not only for humans, but also for wolves.

As wolves are encroaching on urbanised areas, they have even been spotted on the outskirts of large cities like Berlin.

Red foxes are also on the increase, again facilitating the return of wolves, which feed on foxes and their pups.

Experts say the disappearance of lynxes and brown bears in the 20th century has helped to reverse the fall in the fox population. Without those natural enemies, foxes have been able to establish themselves as the dominant carnivore in many areas of Central Europe.

And with the foxes roaming again across Western Europe, wolves are following literally in their footprints. The widespread eradication of rabies has also been a boon to wild canine families, since rabies has always been the primary biological enemy of these creatures.

"It is only a matter of time before wolves spread all across Germany in their move ever-westward," says Professor Josef Reichholf of the University of Munich.

Wolves and foxes are only the start of a resurgence in wildlife unseen since the Middle Ages, the biologist predicts.

"Weasels and otters and racoons are already well re-establishing themselves," he says. "And the European moose elk is poised to move westward. Indeed, elk are already relatively common in the Czech republic."

Reichholf says it is not the food that humans eat which interests foxes so much as the animal companions of humans - rats, mice, pigeons - and also the plentiful and often overflowing garbage that humans generate.

This does not mean that wolves - naturally shy creatures - will be moving into cities.

"Wolves are certainly welcome here as they enrich the local wildlife assortment," says Volker Boehning, head of the state hunting association in the state of Brandenburg, adding that any excess population would be tackled by hunters.

But canine carnivores, such as foxes and wolves, also help other species, such as song birds.

"They decimate not only mice but also other small mammals and snakes and other egg thieves," says Torsten Reinwald of the German Hunting Association. "We actually get appeals from residents to kill more foxes because they are eliminating too many predators in some nature wildlife preserves."

Germany will be a turning point for the wolf population, according to Professor Reichholf. "This is the region where we shall see whether the wolf spreads further westward and, if so, in what numbers," Reichholf says.

"The main problem will be the cliche of the 'big bad wolf' in the minds of many people. Wolves can, of course, be dangerous to humans in certain situations, generally when they are backed into a corner. But they are generally no threat to humans," he says.

Working in favour of the wolf's spread across Europe is a change in the mindset of modern-day humans.

"Europeans generally are very mindful of the dire effects that humans have had on the environment over the centuries," he says.

"As more predators move in, the balance of nature returns to normal and we see a reduction in rats and mice and rabbits," he says. "Those small creatures form the diet of predators such as the German Sea Eagle, which was the emblem of Germany for centuries but which was driven to the verge of extinction by unthinking hunters."

Now, he says, the German Sea Eagle is once again being spotted over the coastal forests of Germany - forests which, if you listen carefully at night, are again ringing of the howl of wolves.
 
Thanks again Treesparrow, interesting to know what goes on in nature on your side of the pond. :)

Here also is an interesting bio on a woman (_http://www.soulmedicinejourney.com/Wolves.htm) who is about to release a book based on her thesis about living with wolves. In one of her emails she urges people to sign a petition which is a link to an American group petitioning the wolf hunting in British Columbia which is discussed apparently from a leaked government document of their plans to come.

__http://www.soulmedicinejourney.com/Wolves.html
 
Row rages over calls for cull as wolves spread across France

By John Lichfield in Paris

The wolf, pursuing its lightning reconquest of France, has reached the Vosges Mountains on the Alsace-Lorraine border for the first time in 80 years.

After two decades of pro- and anti-wolf battles between nature-lovers, shepherds and politicians, even some supporters of the grey wolf (Canis lupus) are growing alarmed by the rapid progress of the world largest wild canine through the French countryside.

A mystery animal which has been attacking sheep in the Vosges since April has been identified by a remote-control camera as a wolf.

A handful of Italian wolves, which recolonised the French Alps around 1993, are thought to have multiplied to about 200 animals in 20 packs, reaching as far west as Cantal in Auvergne and as far north as Franche-Comté on the Franco-Swiss border, and now the Vosges. Within a decade, one expert predicted yesterday, the wolf could have ranged as far as the large forests just south of Paris.

A delegation of Alpine shepherds' leaders and local politicians will petition the environment minister, Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet, this week for the right to hunt wolves at will. Under the present rules, the wolf – protected under European law – can be shot legally only by government marksmen or by shepherds trained and licensed to defend their flocks from an actual wolf attack.

In practice, since the "anti-loup" code was agreed in 2004, only four wolves have been killed in France. Shepherds' leaders want the rules changed to allow them to organise hunting parties.

Daniel Spagnou, the mayor of Sisteron in Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, wrote a blistering open letter to Ms Kosciusko-Morizet earlier this month, accusing her of "blindly following" the advice of environmentalists and allowing sheep flocks in high alpine summer pastures to be "plundered" by wolves.

The French government authorised the official hunting and shooting of a wolf in Alpes-de-Haute-Provence last weekend after 62 ewes fell into a ravine while fleeing an attack.

There have been 66 confirmed wolf attacks in France so far this year, compared with 86 in the whole of last year.

Pro-wolf groups say there is no evidence that attacks are "out of control", although some accept that the rapid spread proves tougher action is needed. Jean-Marc Moriceau, a wolf expert and the author of Men Versus Wolves, The 2,000 Years War, said: "We should organise a wolf parliament, bringing together shepherds, ecologists and government... We need a way of protecting flocks and managing the wolf population."

At the present rate of progress, Mr Moriceau said, wolves would reach the forests 50 miles south of Paris in 10 to 15 years.

Until the late 18th century, long after the last wolf was shot in Britain, wolves lived just across the Channel in the Pas de Calais. However, Canis lupus is not expected to knock on Britain's door any time soon. Western and northern France is no longer wooded or wild enough to sustain them.

_http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/row-rages-over-calls-for-cull-as-wolves-spread-across-france-2325946.html
 
Wolves close in on Berlin after more than a century

Naturalists in Berlin have sighted a pack of wolves and their cubs just 15 miles south of the German capital for the first time in more than 100 years.

The German office of the World Wildlife Fund said yesterday that farmers had alerted its field workers to the existence a wolf pack which appeared to have moved into a deserted former Soviet army military exercise area near the village of Sperenberg south of Berlin.

Janosch Arnold, a WWF wolf expert, told Berlin's Die Tageszeitung that naturalists equipped with infra-red night vision cameras had filmed the animals in the area overnight.

"There is definitely a wolf pack with cubs and they seem to be on top of the world," he said.

Germany's "last wolf" was reputed to have been shot and killed by hunters in 1904. In 1990, a year after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the animals were declared a protected species and the population began to grow again. Wolves were sighted in remote areas of eastern Germany after they entered from neighbouring Poland.

The discovery of wolves living and apparently breeding so close to a large urban conurbation like Berlin is the first since German reunification in 1990. But Mr Arnold said the areas of largely uninhabited forest in the surrounding state of Brandenburg and plenty of deer and wild boar were decisive factors.

"In principle, the whole of Brandenburg is attractive for wolves. Anywhere that a wolf finds peace and quiet and food offers the animals good living conditions," he said.

Since 1990 the number of wolf packs, comprising two parent wolves and usually cubs aged up to two years, is estimated to have risen to a total of 14 in Germany. Their presence is mostly confined to the former communist east. Mr Arnold said fear of wolves was unjustified as the animals were reclusive and shy of humans.

_http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/nature/wolves-close-in-on-berlin-after-more-than-a-century-8336163.html
 
I read somewhere, long time ago, that in the past when chaos and wars and famines and crisis were present wolves had hard time and were took as a scapegoat. That's why at some times there were genocides of wolves and in Europe in particular almost all wolves disappeared. It is interesting to see that now, in this historical moment of humanity, wolves come back and I would not be surprise that again they would be killed. This fear that they provoke is something else from just a fear of wolf, I am sure. Surely an hysterical collective fear that comes from our internal cave.
 
loreta said:
I read somewhere, long time ago, that in the past when chaos and wars and famines and crisis were present wolves had hard time and were took as a scapegoat. That's why at some times there were genocides of wolves and in Europe in particular almost all wolves disappeared. It is interesting to see that now, in this historical moment of humanity, wolves come back and I would not be surprise that again they would be killed. This fear that they provoke is something else from just a fear of wolf, I am sure. Surely an hysterical collective fear that comes from our internal cave.

Searching texts of mythology, where "wolves" are discussed, amongst others, and then other texts where "comets" are discussed, seems the two are often interchangeable and carry in mankind's "collective fear" in telling through time and are generally presented, as you say, as a "scapegoat". Think a few references will turn up if searching on the forum these two terms together.
 
loreta said:
I read somewhere, long time ago, that in the past when chaos and wars and famines and crisis were present wolves had hard time and were took as a scapegoat. That's why at some times there were genocides of wolves and in Europe in particular almost all wolves disappeared. It is interesting to see that now, in this historical moment of humanity, wolves come back and I would not be surprise that again they would be killed. This fear that they provoke is something else from just a fear of wolf, I am sure. Surely an hysterical collective fear that comes from our internal cave.

Hi Loreta
May be, as you know French, you could read Jean-Marc Moriceau's books (Fayard editions) about the wolf in France and in Europe through his very documented historical research ["Histoire du méchant loup" and "L'homme contre le loup"]

The fear of the wolf is more (real) than merely "an hysterical collective fear that comes from our internal cave".
Wolves are powerful predators and we humans can eventually be (have been) their preys, specially children, depending on the circumstances. But our cattle is definitely their prey, and in the past it was a threat to the survival of poor people, that is, most of the people.
So much that they burnt their last forests in the beginning of the 20th century in the south east mountains of France, to get rid of this predator.
Nowadays farmers raising cattle in these areas, particularly sheep, have many problems to deal with the wolf's presence.

Anyway, the interesting point is, afaik, that this predator is somehow revealing our unbalanced way of living, starting with agriculture...
 
Thanks for the reference, Eoeste. I always like to read about wolves, I think they are magnificent beasts. As with talking about predators, for me the worst predator in this planet is not the wolf but he man. But maybe you are right, maybe in some eras the wolf was dangerous but was it a reason to killed him in is entirety?

There is also a very good book that takes another point of vue by Farley Mowat, Never cry wolf.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Never_Cry_Wolf

Wolf is not the only one who was a scapegoat in certain times. Cats also suffered a lot by this strange irrationality and ignorance of humans. There was also a genocide of cats.

Anyway, is always very important to learn. Thank you.
 
loreta said:
Thanks for the reference, Eoeste. I always like to read about wolves, I think they are magnificent beasts. As with talking about predators, for me the worst predator in this planet is not the wolf but he man. But maybe you are right, maybe in some eras the wolf was dangerous but was it a reason to killed him in is entirety?

There is also a very good book that takes another point of vue by Farley Mowat, Never cry wolf.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Never_Cry_Wolf

Wolf is not the only one who was a scapegoat in certain times. Cats also suffered a lot by this strange irrationality and ignorance of humans. There was also a genocide of cats.

Anyway, is always very important to learn. Thank you.

Thank you loreta for your link, which might be another book on my list.

Man has indeed a predator's mind : all this violence wanting to exclude, suppress or enslave what disturbs him, and looking to devour, to possess without restraint all that is at hand and beyond...
 
voyageur said:
Searching texts of mythology, where "wolves" are discussed, amongst others, and then other texts where "comets" are discussed, seems the two are often interchangeable and carry in mankind's "collective fear" in telling through time and are generally presented, as you say, as a "scapegoat". Think a few references will turn up if searching on the forum these two terms together.

Thank you. I will look to read more about this. I think it is a fascinating subject. Even in fairy tales the wolf is a dangerous character, and talking with people in my village they have all a very bad and negative image of him. In fact everybody hate the wolf. So because everybody hates him I have tendency to doubt and try to understand why of this anger. Because what I see is anger, an irrational anger.
 
[quote author=loreta ]

There is also a very good book that takes another point of vue by Farley Mowat, Never cry wolf.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Never_Cry_Wolf

[/quote]

Here is a link to the above as a movie trailer of the same name, based on the authors (FM's) personal story. The cinematography is, as said below. "stunning". :

_https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Izb0ScZSBpk

This is the second film directed by the great Carroll Ballard. Like his first film, "The Black Stallion" (1979), it also deals with themes of isolation and human/animal relationships. Utilizing stunning cinematography and music, this is a grand adventure in the far north. Based on Farley Mowat's semi-autobiography of the same name, it tells about a man sent to uncover the reason behind the decline of caribou herds.
 
The decline on caribou was not due to wolves. But the author was paid to prove the contrary, that the decline was due to wolves. That is an example of how the government is a crook. In that case, the Canadian government.And how people believe all the lies concerning wolves, and anything else. People in my area where I live are afraid of wolves, why? They say that they kill their beast. False! What is killing their animals are the vaccines. Also they amplify: and for them is a reason to go to chase the wolf and than put the picture of the wolf in the newspaper as a trophy. Disgusting.

Our forest in this region is almost empty of animals. Nobody says nothing. They rent the forest to hunters: for a few bucks they permit that some men, two days a week, can come and kill. There is almost no more birds, no more rabbits, no more foxes, no more deer. We live in a world of predators and people who don't care about anything. And when a wolf is seen somewhere they pointed the finger to him: he is the assassin, the devil, the culprit! A reason to hunt, to kill, to express their anger and their insignificance.

They just not kill rabbits or birds. In the North of Spain not some time ago they killed a bear that was protected. We have a good example: our king, our master, is a hunter of elephants. And people here respect their king, a macabre character. They are in admiration of a devilish man with a crown on his head.

Sorry if I make noise, everything is related, I think so.
 
[quote author=loreta ]
Sorry if I make noise, everything is related, I think so.
[/quote]

Yes, seems many things are relative.

In BC there was a further announcement recently to accelerate the Wolf cull. This corresponds to culls in Idaho, Washington State and Montana. The fact remains that these wolves have no boarders and drift from province to state to province also, much of this is against their free will as they are trapped and relocated for sometimes sporting reasons. Calculating them is not so easy, so many false premises.

Here is an 2010 article featured on Counterpunch.

Snip

Death Cults Among Us -The War on Wolves

If Canadians wanted to persecute their wolves, there was no need to ship them south; Canis lupus is sufficiently under siege in the "great white north," with provincial governments scapegoating wolves for everything from the precipitous decline of mountain caribou to the near-extinction of the Vancouver Island marmot.

The aforementioned points reflect a disturbing but common trait among provincial, state and federal "environmental" agencies in jurisdictions throughout North America – specifically, an obsessive predilection that drives wildlife managers to reflexively default to the oxymoronic tactic of conservation-by-killing. Given the evidence (i.e., the body count), coming to the conclusion that government agencies which "manage" wildlife essentially operate as death cults is not difficult. Countless policies are designed to harm or kill wildlife, particularly large carnivores. The euphemisms used to describe and camouflage such killing – e.g., "cull", "harvest," "control" – speak volumes about the underpinning philosophy (i.e., the so-called North American Wildlife Management Model) of these agencies.

_http://www.counterpunch.org/2010/10/12/the-war-on-wolves/
 
State of emergency in Siberia: Russian republic to hunt down 3,000 wolves
novosti-vladimir-astapkovich-ria-492.n.jpg

A Siberian republic has ordered more than 3,000 wolves to be killed in three months, due to increased attacks on livestock. Authorities declared a state of emergency and summoned hunting parties, promising six-figure rewards for the top hunters.

­Officials estimated that over 3,500 wolves are terrorizing livestock in the Siberian republic of Yakutia.

More than 16,000 domestic reindeer and some 300 horses have been killed by the overpopulation of wolves in 2012, officials said, adding that damages to the region’s households topped 157 million rubles ($5 million) last year.

Yakutian President Yegor Borisov announced a state of emergency and urged a clear plan of action, declaring a three-month 'war on wolves.'

Borisov has called for special hunter brigades to be formed and provisioned with “everything necessary” in order to counter the wolf threat.

He has also promised six-figure rewards for the three best hunters, and said he would announce the exact sum of the prizes later.

The hunters are to track down and eliminate wolf packs until the number of wolves in Yakutia drops to about 500. Hunters must kill more than 1,000 wolves each month in order to meet the mid-April deadline set by officials.

The massive wolf migration from the taiga forests to Yakutian reindeer pastures was caused by a decrease in the population of mountain hares, which are central to the wolves’ diet, experts said.
_http://rt.com/news/siberia-emergency-wolf-hunt-446/

Pack attack: Second Russian republic on hunt for wolves

A second Russian republic in Siberia has begun hunting down wolves that continue to threaten livestock, following a similar move by Yakutia, the largest Russian republic in Siberia. But the experts are warning that the plan is not feasible.

In January Siberia’s Republic of Khakassia, located in south-central Siberia, organized a group of 30 people, made up of expert hunters and specialists from the State Committee that began hunting wolves in the Lake Balankul region.

“When wolves start attacking deer and livestock they have to be killed and the population controlled. This is the right policy,” Russian WWF’s Head of the Biodiversity Program Vladimir Krever told RT.

During the holiday season hunters were able to kill four wolves.

Wolf hunting involves a lot of resources. The hunters use a roundup tactic by first luring the animals to a specific place and making sure they stay there, then marking the territory with flags.

As the area is secured, somewhere between three to 12 hunters surround a pack of wolves and position themselves not more than 50-60 meters apart and pursue the attack together.

Republic of Khakassia has been implementing measures to cut down on the number of wolves in the area since 2011, as the predators continue to threaten domestic livestock.

Last year, the republic managed to hunt down 129 wolves, and the year before that 103.

Yakutia, located in north-eastern Russia, is also fighting with the influx of wolves in the area and has ordered more than 3,000 wolves to be killed in three months due to increased attacks on livestock. Authorities declared a state of emergency and summoned hunting parties, promising six-figure rewards for the top hunters.

More than 16,000 domestic reindeer and some 300 horses have been killed by the overpopulation of wolves in 2012, officials said, adding that damage to the region’s households topped 157 million rubles (US$5 million) last year.

Vladimir Krever argues that the number of wolves can even be higher in the region, but the main point is that the number of wolves in the area of such a size “isn’t even that many.”

Even though Krever does not disagree with the policy of increasing the hunt for the wolves, he still believes that the idea of killing 3,000 wolves is not a feasible one.

“Normally they kill around 600 wolves a year in Yakutia. If you really tried you might be able to double that figure if you used expensive helicopters and planes to spot them,” Krever said. “Even if they were able to kill 3,000 wolves the population would recover quickly. But they simply won’t get near to killing 3,000 wolves. This is a totally unrealistic target.”

_http://rt.com/news/russia-hunting-wolves-livestock-720/

I'm wondering if the recent extremely cold weather conditions -even for Siberia- has played any role in the wolves attacks on domesticated livestock?

http://www.sott.net/article/255078-Cold-as-Christmas-Emergency-in-Siberia-chilliest-night-in-Moscow

It just maybe that their natural prey is proving much harder to obtain.
 
Every time I read news like that I loose my mind, it is like killing the fathers of my dogs. I feel in commensurable sad. Also I see how humans are brutes, still. This is very disturbing. In situations like this I clearly see how humanity is still living in the caverns.
 

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