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241
Sand Road |
First,
my apologies if you get this more than once. Second, please send this
onward to anyone who you believe may wish to learn more about recent experience
with wolves that have been introduced or have moved into territory with human
and domestic animal populations.
The
Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission will meet later this week, on December
2nd and 3rd. During that meeting, they are expected
to vote on the WDFW Wolf Plan.
One
aspect of living with wolves in your neighborhood that they have not adequately
considered is what happens when wolves become habituated to human presence in
the territory they inhabit or move through. The new behaviors that begin
happening are amplified when wolves are neither hunted nor harassed. Under
ESA and other species of concern rules and regulations, the wolves moving into
Washington generally cannot be harassed or hunted.
I’ve
attached a discussion by Dr. Valerius Geist on his experience with habituated
wolves. I ask that you read the document and consider what implications
wolves in your neighborhood have for your family, neighbors, pets, and
livestock. Dr. Geist lives on Vancouver Island, and has worked throughout
the west, including professional observation of the full range of wolf behavior,
how they interact with wildlife and domestic animals and
humans.
It’s
likely that our Fish and Wildlife Commissioners have not read Dr. Geist’s
discussion. Perhaps it would be helpful to them if they have the
opportunity to do so this week. To make it more helpful, I suggest that
you forward it to them with your personal concerns as to what this means to you,
your family, and your neighbors. The Commission’s email address
is:
Thank
you for taking the time to read Dr. Geist’s document and for passing it around
the state so that others can make their feelings known.
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