Alaska Pays Bounty to Kill Wolves

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Gunmen Paid to Shoot Wolves from the Air

The Alaskan wolf cull has always been a controversial topic. Opponents describe it as savage and brutal, while proponents say it is necessary for the protection of other species. Alaska has upped the ante once more by
 offering to pay $150 for every wolf killed in the Alaska interior.

Mankind has always had a fear of the wolf, which often times resulted in hatred. This sparked the species of being hunted to near extinction in Europe, and aroused outspoken protests from ranchers when wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone. Alaska is one of the few places on Earth where wolves have flourished, but that livelihood is in jeopardy as the Government pays hunters to kill the animals from the air.

Shooting wolves from the air has always sparked heated debates in Alaska. It was first put to a public vote in 2000, when the citizens of Alaska gathered around a public referendum to ban the aerial hunting of wolves. Discouraged by the public view, then-Governor Frank Murkowski bypassed the aerial hunting ban by still allowing pilots to participate in land-and-shoot practices.

While the practice outraged many of the State's residents, who often have a love of Alaska's wildlife, the land-and-shoot wolf hunts continued for years. In 2003, Governor Murkowski opened the door for aerial wolf hunting, which he called the Predator Control Program. This program has been continued, and now expanded, by Murkowski's successor, Governor Sarah Palin, despite numerous ballots and petitions to stop the killing of wolves.

Under the revised Predator Control Program, the 180 pilots and gunners who have received permits to shoot wolves from the air will now be paid a bounty of $150 for each wolf they kill. The bounty will be collected when the hunter turns in the left front leg of the wolf, which will be used for scientific study by State biologists.

According to Denby Lloyd, commissioner for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, the left foreleg of the wolf can be used to determine the age of the wolf that was killed. This information will help the State adjust the program in future years.

 
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Everybody should go find a video of that ''sport'' on YouTube....it's cruel, sickening....
Wolves kill to eat, not because they are bad and not for sport. Ms. Palin wants to save the Caribous from wolves just to support the human hunting of them. So, in the end it will be the human being who will exterminate the caribous... and just for sport.
I do not believe moose or caribou are on any endangered species list. Wolves have not hunted them to the brink of extinction. The wolf population is being decreased so that there will be a larger moose population for humans to hunt. So basically, they want to kill massive numbers of one species so that they can hunt and kill another. Where is the logic in that?
Please, help me to understand. We are against killing of wolves because they are marvelous creatures, but it is OK for the wolves, to kill to extinction, the Caribou and Moose? Just call me crazy but I think keeping the wolf population under control would keep all three from extinction. I understand shooting from the air might be a little extreme but would you want to face a wolf head on? Thanks but no thanks! People need to start using a little of their brain along with their heart in order to make the right decisions.
This is very sad. I think wolves are the most fascinating of all animals. Thanks for this informative article on an issue I did not have previous knowledge of. You have prompted me to look into this so that I can do my part to help advocate against the killing of these mysterious creatures.
Personally, I don't believe in hunting. But I can see why it can be necessary. Where I live deer hunting is a big sport. It saddens me to see those lovely creatures killed. Yet, these same lovely creatures do cause car accidents (they get hurt so do others), they have run through windows of homes, and they starve to death. I suppose the wolf is the same way for the Alaska people, except that it can be dangerous, all top of all of that, too. What can we do?
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