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Tag: Wolf
Norway’s Wolves – Summer Update 2018
Another proposed massacre of wolves in Norway this winter.
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The illusion of "co-existence."
Greeting Cards
Meaningful greeting cards, journals and notepads for environmentalists, wolf advocates, and nature lovers.
SAVE OUR WOLVES 🇳🇴 TWEETSTORM
Final tweet sheet as of January 20, 2018 here. ***UPDATE - JANUARY 7, 2018*** The Oslo District Court decided (on January 5, 2018) that the Norwegian wolf hunt may continue. The temporary injunction has been dismissed by the court: the wolf hunt in Norway will continue, despite the fact that the wolf is a critically … Continue reading SAVE OUR WOLVES 🇳🇴 TWEETSTORM
Wolf Shadow Creative Works and Art Shop
The place for wolf lovers with a portion of profits donated to charities working towards the protection of wolves and the environment.
Save Norway’s Wolves: Tweetstorm
Wolves are listed as "critically endangered" on the 2015 Norwegian list of endangered animals, yet Norway is planning to cull more than two-thirds of its remaining wolves -- a move that will be disastrous for the dwindling members of the species in the wild.
No ESA Protection For Alexander Archipelago Wolves
The Department of Interiors' announcement that it will not provide Endangered Species Act protection to the Alexander Archipelago Wolves is a significant one for environmentalists as well as the timber industry in Southeast Alaska. Had the wolf been found worthy of listing, the listing process would have impacted timber sales throughout the Tongass National Forest. One cannot help but speculate that the logging industry swayed this decision.
In Memory of Echo, Wolf 914F
No charges were pressed against the Utah cougar hunter who killed Echo the wandering wolf a year ago today, December 28th, 2014… “I had a shot and took it.” The Tragedy of Echo~YouTube
Alaska’s Alexander Archipelago Wolves
The Tongass is one of the few old-growth temperate rainforests in the world and America’s largest national forest. Its towering stands of 700 year old trees provide vital habitat for bears, salmon, Sitka black-tailed deer, goshawks, and—importantly—the rare and dwindling Alexander Archipelago wolf. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service recently found that, because of excessive old-growth logging, this unique subspecies of wolf may warrant listing under the Endangered Species Act.











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