Arial Hunting of Wolves in Alaska

Is disgusting… Sign the petition to have it stopped.

Alaska is the only state in the nation where trophy hunters can gun down wolves from airplanes or chase wolves to exhaustion and then shoot them from the ground.

Alaskans have voted twice to end the state’s brutal aerial hunting program, but state officials continue to let it happen by exploiting a loophole in federal law. This year’s hunting season has already begun, and hundreds of wolves could be killed yet again.

Please sign this petition to urge Congress to close the loopholes and end aerial hunting of wolves: http://go.care2.com/PAW_Act

Wolf opponents in Idaho and Wyoming are eager to follow Alaska’s cruel example. Hundreds of wolves could be killed in the Northern Rockies if these states get their way.

Please sign the petition to save America’s wolves and end aerial hunting:

http://go.care2.com/PAW_Act

6 thoughts on “Arial Hunting of Wolves in Alaska

  1. Pingback: Blog » Blog Archive » Arial Hunting of Wolves in Alaska

  2. C. King

    does anyone know if Alaska’s governor; Sarah Palin is working to stop this horrible sport?????

  3. Annette

    I have to admit that watching videos of this practice turns my stomach, but there would surely be consequences to many animal species, including wolves and humans, if effective wildlife management practices were banned. Let us not forget what happened in this country when horse slaughter was banned. The resulting surplus of horses has resulted in plummeting horse values, and horses being abandoned and neglected in record numbers. Now, perfectly healthy and well trained horses are selling at auction for less than $200, and some are being purchased by kill buyers for shipment to Mexico where there are no industry controls, and the barbaric cruelty being employed is beyond this writer’s imagination. I would have to say that there has never been a worse time to be a horse in this country. These are the unintended consequences of well meaning animal activists that failed to look at the big picture.

    Before anyone starts sending hate mail, please hear me out. Wolves and bears are top line predators, meaning that there are no natural predators to control their numbers. If you love animals, you must think about the consequences to other animal species if they are allowed to overpopulate in any given area. In a worst case scenario, disaster ensues for the overpopulated predator species as well. When their natural food sources become scarce, they will savage and prey on not only each other, but humans and domestic animals as well.

    Aerial management may seen unfair and barbaric, but consider the alternative that was used before airplanes were available. They were poisoned with strychnine baits. Poisoning likely affected non targeted species as well – such as eagles.

    Alaska has attempted other management methods in the past. See: http://www.wc.adfg.state.ak.us/management/control/predator_management.pdf

    Now let us discuss the impact of these predator species on humans. There seems to be a misconception that managing the population of these species is merely an attempt to preserve moose and caribou for sport hunting. On the contrary, the very lives and existence of approximately 16% of Alaska’s populaton is at stake. These are the native tribes that have depended on wild game as their main source of sustenance for thousands of years. It’s not like they can become vegetarians in these regions. I might argue that the continued existence of rural native Alaskan people is at far greater risk than the wildlife.

    Taken from http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=5791&page=36 :

    “The first humans in the Western Hemisphere are believed to have come from Asia across the Beringian land bridge into Alaska 12,000-15,000 years ago.” It is their home, too. For those that argue that the problem is simply too many humans in Alaska rather than too many wolves and bears, let me point out that there are approximately 635,000 residents or about 1.1 persons per square mile – in an area that is twice the size of Texas and one fifth the size of the lower 48 states. In the lower 48, there are approximately 79 people per square mile. Plenty of elbow room! The state’s population ranks 47th in the nation. “Human activities have had less effect on the ecosystems of Alaska than elsewhere in the United States. Conversion of land to agricultural use has been minimal, as is the extent of land alteration through mining and petroleum development.”

    My conclusion: Perhaps you don’t care about the tribes of people who are the last remaining ancestors of the “First Americans”. Do you not care about all of the other animal species at stake when bears and wolves overpopulate? Is there no concern for livestock, dogs, cats, and human children that are attacked when these predators are allowed to diminish too much wild game in a given area? And finally, have you no concern for the affect on the wolves, themselves, when they overpopulate? Aside from them preying on each other when food sources become scarce, it leads to a natural progression of disease and starvation among them.

    Posted by Bronco in the Daily Interlake: “The waxing and waning of species populations are regulated by nature and she seems heartless and cruel in her choices at times. Forget romantic notions of her preserving only the animals we hold dear and erasing the invasive and ugly ones. Fish and game management agencies throughout the country have been employing well thought out agendas that have led to game populations that exceed those before we set foot here hundreds of years ago. Those agencies have people in them who are concerned for our wildlife, not butchers who rejoice in their deaths. It’s unfortunate for the wolves, I agree. They are beautiful, intelligent, animals that mate for life and have strong family values. But left to propagate unattended they will follow the course of all species who find their numbers swelled to overpopulation. Mother nature introduces disease and starvation.”

    Before we jump on the bandwagon and condemn the people of Alaska while sitting at computers in our urban homes, let us educate ourselves about the issues first.

  4. Alexandra

    Sarah Palin working to stop this!? Palin enacted a bounty (later rescinded as illegal — which she knew but did it anyway – by AK courts) of $150 to any hunter who brought in the foreleg of a wolf shot from a plane or helicopter! She is no friend of wildlife or the environment.

  5. DiAnna Lamphear

    If you go to Defenders of Wildlife website you can read and see graphic videos on the arial huntings of wolves and the neg. influence that Sarah Palin has on the situation! I have also come across photos of her with friends in a bar drinking and wearing trophy wolves!

  6. Jwhunt22

    I just looked up in the 2008-09 alaska hunting regulations book to see if this is true, the book says that:

    You may not take game by:

    -Driving, herding, harrasing, or molesting game with any motorized vehicle such as: aircraft, snowmachine, motorboat etc.

    -Using a helecoptor for hunting except for transporting hunters, hunting gear, game meat, trophies, or any other equipment used to pursue game.

    It is also illegal to hunt or help someone else take game until 3am the day after you have flown.

    Shooting the wolves from aircraft is not used for trophy hunting, it is used by the game and fish commision to reduce numbers in certain areas where they get to high.