Should we reintroduce wolves to the UK?
Jan. 31st, 2007 03:11 pmJust wondering what you thought.
Here are some people who like the idea: http://www.wolftrust.org.uk/whyreintroduce.html
and here's someone who's not keen: http://users.tinyonline.co.uk/wolf.help/the%20wolf%20in%20scotland.htm
Here are some people who like the idea: http://www.wolftrust.org.uk/whyreintroduce.html
and here's someone who's not keen: http://users.tinyonline.co.uk/wolf.help/the%20wolf%20in%20scotland.htm
no subject
Date: 2007-02-01 03:28 pm (UTC)I went to an excellent presentation by the project manager of the Northern Kites reintroduction programme recently -- which as Helflaed mentioned, has been a barnstorming success. They took completely the opposite approach from the other red kite reintroductions. The others introduced the birds into remote, rural areas, kept the nest locations top-secret in case of persecution etc -- red kites died out partly because they were poisoned and shot by gamekeepers, in the mistaken belief that they were in competition.
The Northern project introduced the birds 6 miles from the centre of Newcastle. When the first nest was discovered, they advertised it widely and set up a special viewing point, laid on buses etc, and within 8 weeks 11,000 people had seen the chicks. Everyone thought they were mad, but the birds have been taken to the heart of the local community and there was outrage when one was found poisoned. It's been one of the most successful of the reintroductions.
I think a similar approach should be taken with wolves -- well, not the "6 miles from city centre" bit, but the "totally engaging with and winning over the local community" bit. Wolf cubs adopted by local schools, etc.
Re 2 stealing wolves -- yes, I guess they *might*, but it strikes me as quite a tall order to steal a live wolf from the Scottish Highlands. Much easier to buy a pitbull, surely.
3 Wolf-dogs -- there's a thought! I've never heard of it happening back when there still were wild wolves, but I guess it could happen....
Neuromancer
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Date: 2007-02-01 03:49 pm (UTC)There was a UK government study in the 1990s that concluded that although there were a number of dogs described by their owners as 'wolf-dogs' in this country, there were only a handful that were probably genuinely of recent wolf descent, and those were living appropriately licenced as dangerous animals in wolf sanctuary type places.
I wouldnt' care to steal a wolf. Mind you, I wouldn't care to try to steal a badger either: those things are MEAN!
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Date: 2007-02-01 03:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-01 04:05 pm (UTC)Neuromancer
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Date: 2007-02-01 05:14 pm (UTC)No, I don't suppose there would be much direct risk, particularly in the short term. In the longer term it would be interesting if wolves continued to evolve closer to people.
If some of the stuff I've read is correct, wolves sort of continually evolve into dogs in the presence of rubbish. Timid wolves stay in the forest and eat deer, and remain wolves. Bolder wolves take advantage of the opportunities provided by civilisation, interbreed with, and eventually become, dogs. But on the whole, places where there are still wolves nowadays are places where there is a great deal of space between the rubbish: if you innoculate a quite crowded small island with an injection of wolves, would they stay wolves* ?
It would be fascinating to find out, certainly.
* which brings up the whole urban / rural fox thing. When urban and rural foxes behave so very differently and cannot survive in each other's territories - will they eventually become separate species?
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Date: 2007-02-02 07:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-01 05:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-02 07:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-03 10:43 am (UTC)The children's school sponsored one and called her "Sparkle". Lots of projects, posters etc in the school, and when a red kite was found dead there was uproar around here.