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Email: timberwolfinfonetwork@gmail.com

Alaska Aerial Wolf Kill Toll Surpasses 200

Alaska Aerial Wolf Kill Toll Surpasses 200

– Hundreds More Wolves Targeted as Aerial Killing Programs Continue

ANCHORAGE, Alaska, March 4 /PRNewswire/ — The death toll from Alaska’s
aerial wolf killing program has reached at least 210, with hundreds more
scheduled for elimination by April 30th. Wolves are being shot directly from
airplanes, or being chased to exhaustion by aerial gunning teams, who then
land and shoot the wolves point blank.

The citizens of Alaska have twice voted in statewide measures (1996 and
2000) to ban the aerial killing of wolves. Nonetheless, Governor Murkowski
signed a bill two years ago overturning the most recent ban.

“It’s deplorable that Governor Murkowski continues to back the extermination of wolves in key areas across the state even though his so- called predator control programs lack scientifically-based standards and guidelines to monitor the program,” stated Karen Deatherage, Alaska Associate for Defenders of Wildlife.

“Lower 48 and urban trophy hunters are clearly the only beneficiaries of the governor’s ill-advised policy.”

So far, over a hundred aerial gunning teams have obtained permits from the
state to kill wolves in five relatively wild and pristine areas of interior Alaska. Plans call for up to 610 wolves to be killed in these areas by late spring. The programs are expected to last for four to five years.

Eighty grizzly bears, including sows and cubs, could also be killed this spring as part of the program.

“These programs are the equivalent of short-
sighted clear-cutting programs in our National Forests, only this time its
wolves and bears instead of trees, in one of the few places in America where
these animals still exist in natural, sustainable numbers,” says Deatherage.

The objective of this year’s program is to kill 80-100 percent of the
wolves in a 50,000 square mile area in an attempt to boost moose populations for hunters, despite the fact that insufficient data has been gathered on the
number of wolves and moose in this area. Aerial gunners can kill males,
females and even wolf pups as part of the program.

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