Social Network

Email: timberwolfinfonetwork@gmail.com
Email: timberwolfinfonetwork@gmail.com

Wolves cause horse injuries near Daniel

Wolves cause horse injuries near Daniel
Grizzly kills 10 sheep

by Cat Urbigkit

Wolves were confirmed as being the cause of two horses running through a
fence and getting injured near Daniel over the weekend, according to Mike
Jimenez of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Jimenez said that USDA Wildlife Services officials did confirm that wolves
were involved in the incident and both horses were cut up in the fence.
While Jimenez said it couldn’t be confirmed that the wolves were actually
attacking the horses, “The horses hit the fence because there were wolves
there.”

Both horses are expected to recover and no control action on the wolves is
planned, Jimenez said.

Federal officials have received more reports of a group of wolves in the
Daniel/ Warren Bridge area during the last week, but no confirmation of
this report has been made, Jimenez said. No problems have been reported
either.

The female wolf with pups, known as the Green River pack, have a new
member. Her former mate was killed earlier this summer by federal
officials after killing livestock in the area on several occasions. The
Green River female’s new mate is a black-colored, two-year-old wolf from
the Teton pack. When asked if this male had been involved in livestock
depredations in the past, Jimenez said while the wolf has been “at the
right place, at the right time” when depredations have occurred, federal
officials don’t know “whether he’s the guilty party or not.”

Jimenez was particular in clarifying his agency’s stance on wolves
involved in opportunistic or sporadic livestock depredations versus wolves
chronically involved in killing livestock.

Most wolves in livestock areas in western Wyoming have opportunistically
killed livestock, Jimenez said.

“It’s the ones that have chronically done it that we take out,” Jimenez
said.

“We try to make a distinction there,” Jimenez said. “When it’s chronic we
jump on them pretty hard.”

Jimenez also noted that although his agency receives criticism from both
sides of the aisle, FWS does use radio-collars as a management tool,
including in control actions. When federal officials recently killed two
wolves out of a group in the Upper Green River region, the wolves in that
group that were not wearing radio-collars were the ones that were killed.
This left the collared wolves in place, so should further problems occur,
the wolves can be located more readily.

In other federal predator news, Mark Bruscino of the Wyoming Game and Fish
Department reported that a grizzly bear killed six ewes and four lambs on
the Thoman family’s domestic sheep allotment in Upper Green River region
of the Bridger-Teton National Forest last Thursday night. Because federal
officials didn’t receive word of the depredations for several days,
confirmation was eventually made over the weekend and no control action
was initiated.

Source