I visited Yellowstone not long after the reintroduction. It felt different just because wolves were there, even if you never see one. Just like the grizzly bears. It's hard to explain.
@@coyotedust Not true. Wolves and elk coexisted for thousands of years before settlement and the wolves didn't destroy the elk herds. Habitat loss, disease and over hunting are what is causing elk numbers to decline.
I don’t have to read. I’ve done my own boots on the ground research just outside the park for 40 yrs before and after reintro. Wildlife balances are way out of whack in some ranges in the same ecosystem. Troubling when FWP told the wolves have damn near wiped out the moose population in the area I’ve studied. It got so back that the feds have had to fly it and mitigate the multiple wolf packs 2 or 3 times in the past 5 yrs. Love the wolf, but also love their prey and just want balance. It’s different in the park because of the 1000s of bison you don’t have outside the park. Think that’s the big difference in balance difference
I grew up in Bozeman and the Yellowstone area, eight years university biological sciences at MSU. I saw a large wolf plain as day on the west edge of the part in 1968. I damn well know a wolf when I see one. The government authorities insist that was not possible, there were zero wolves there then. I know exactly what I saw in 1968. I saw a large wolf on the west edge of the park, so there were wolves there.
I live in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan where there are at least 600 wolves according to the Michigan DNR. However, the UP is a large place and obviously has many more. I see tracks daily year round. I see actual wolves 3-4 times per week. What I don't see is small game such as rabbits, squirrels and grouse. There is also less deer. There is definitely less mature deer and few bucks with large antlers. There needs to be balance. Currently there is not.
@@kyle2441 Yeah. Listening to it scream for help as it's intestines are consumed first would be as heart wrenching as when these invasive Canadian Gray Wolves wolves do that to your cow and you must choose between no food, shooting wolves and going to prison. That's the issue. The law preventing you from defending your animals. But if you have video footage and a couple months to spare, you might be one of the few allowed depredation permits and become nocturnal.
Their leading cause of death is not from other wolves, that was the case when they were introduced and protected by ESA. Now the leading cause of death for adult Yellowstone wolves is being hunted and trapped outside the park, and it’s not even close.
Wolves in Michigan now, happen to see one on our property in the Manistee National Forest. Just pure luck, walking in the kitchen and saw one walking thru the woods.
Little red ridding hood was the demise of the wolf😮I watched a wolf elk hunting one year from about 100 yds for about 10 minutes. It was awesome to see one in the wild for the first time
Before I even watch this video I'm guessing when they removed the wolves that deer and elk started over populating and starving to death. God knew what he was doing when he created the world. Leave it to man to think he knows more than God. Smh
Well, I would say, we don’t love wolves for something real, like the narrator, said but I would say we love wild animals, and the Apex of the species that was wiped out in our country was a tragedy in the fact that they’re back make them all the more special.
well even if the wolf doesn't eat the elk the fear of being eaten would stop deer and elk and everyone from over eating in open areas... but i couldn't say whether thats good or bad its just life right?...
When the deer and elk don’t have any more natural predators, they overpopulate, they aren’t as healthy, and they destroy the landscape, the environment, the rivers, the park, truly amazing.
@@kareyrose yeah I mean that’s the common answer but I’m saying it’s sad and interesting that fear is also a huge factor in the strategy, and while the claims are that deer do this, yes they doooo buuuut humans have ruined the environment by destroying migration paths and escape routes sooo it would be an unfair advantage for the wolves who are not only being reintroduced which means the native animals are too naive to avoid them… but also when they do catch the news that the wolfs are back and town they’ll have no where to run… leaving overgrowth… and it’s funny how we listen to industrial cattle farmers but don’t talk to any hippy anarchists 🤷♀️. Farmers are the bad guys, homesteaders are good, and they deal with predators but industrial farms that deal with major loses because of overpopulated cattle herds and poultry houses have no right talking… the mission is far from finished but the wolves are are a great warrior of the eagle chief and life will go on 🍎🌎✌️
Restoring the lost balance to nature is so important to the survival of the Earth and our enjoyment of it. Cattle are not indigenous to the area, if the ranchers want them there, either they have to figure out how to keep their livestock safe while tolerating the presence of the wolf, or they suffer losses, or move thier cattle. it's pretty simple, really.
I think what you're meaning to say is that cattle aren't an aboriginal specie's in north America, at least. You could say they are indigenous, and definitely native. What would be the key difference,them not migrating themselves, but being shipped here?
@@YousirArdume If an animal was shipped here by human it is not aboriginal, indigenous or native. Cattle were shipped here by Europeans back in the day making them an invasive species. I am not sure where you are getting your information or definitions from but they are verifiably wrong.
@@BeautifuLakesStreamsBiologists "Unlike native grazers like elk, cattle didn't evolve here. They're an invasive species - and the harm they'd been inflicting was clear in overgrazed range, mucked-up pastures, manure-polluted waterways and trampled vegetation" - Center for Biological Diversity "An invasive species is an organism that is not indigenous, or native, to a particular area." - National Geographic You are a fool if you think cattle do not harm the environment. The run off from farms pollutes waterways. The methane gas from manure damages the ozone. I could go on and on.
@@EthanDurant you know nothing of ecology. It is clear in the first laughable reference you made. Start with a topic called regenerative agriculture. That will at least get you to a very base level. Then come back here and try to lecture a biologist. By the way, I doubt NatGeo made that very bad attempt at trying to define invasive. They are biased, but not that badly.
Can’t believe that 60 minutes did not bring up the fact that when wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone that after a while the water levels rose making the ecosystem better overall!
wolves actually play an essential part of the ecosystem, they keep populations of deer, moose, elk, etc otherwise these animals overgraze and destroy the underbrush of forests. I cannot understate how important wolves truly are and how destroyed the ecosystem has become in areas that historically had wolves but no longer do :)
@@xeonpaiEssential as in essentially wiping out local populations of deer and elk. So many myths running out there (like what you wrote) are just talking points completely detached from reality.
@@paulring86 Everything I said is scientifically proven to be true, I'm sorry but you have no idea what you're talking about. Do more research before you espouse such stupidity.
The wolves are a lot more attractive and suited to their environment than the humans lining up to gawk at them, or ranchers who insist their profit is more important than the balance of nature.
You are so right!!!!! There are agreements which state that very thing. However, those who experience loss must prove the wolves were the real cause and not some disease or other fatal experience. To make matters worse, the livestock remains may not be located in time to establish/perform a necropsy and so the Agencies are able to decline reimbursement.
ORCA ways as well in The Silent World thank you kindly 60 Minutes because your show series paid in full Paramount plus debate not romantic because of evolving links between the human race and #animals on land or in the ocean. smib. #Amen. 🐬
Ranchers killed all the wolves, not because of people's fears of wolves based on "The Big Bad Wolf" but because they weren't willing to let the wolves have a tiny bit of their herds. Greed killed all the wolves just like greed killed all the buffalo. Your premise that it had something to do with a fairy tale is outrageous, wrong, and not real journalism.
Wolves take only a very small percentage of a herd and the rest of their diet from other wildlife. But ranchers aren't willing to share any of the flock they're raising for humans to eat. So the wolves have to die. Greed is killing the wolves.@@TheScmtnrider
30 years on we can see it was a mojority plus. Of course no one knew for sure back then. That's what these tests are for. It could have gone completely the other direction, but how would we know without running a test.
What ranchers always seem to never bring up is that they are compensated for injury or death of their livestock if attacked by wolves. Plus the fact they blame dead an animals on wolf attacks even though the animal died some other way and get compensated for those too. Wolves are also in more states then mentions, Oregon, Washington, California, Colorado, Arizona, around the great lakes area and even in North Carolina.
@@jimtheobald1141 I guess in rare cases that might happen. But with the "fake" cases they are over compensated and it will make up for that. Of course the big factor is the 35 million of tourist dollars that the wolves brought and almost all of that is during the winter when it's is much slower.
The rancher how has the farm 100 miles away he had riders and Guardian digs and he has no loss of cattle or sheep. So way arent every farmer doing this is these wolves on your land
The impact has been positive. The animals they hunt and eat are the ones that are overgrazing and overpopulated. That makes the area out of balance. Diseases thrive, and animals starve to death when the wolf is gone. It seems paradoxical, but it isn't. It's the opposite. Ignorance and fear of them lead to them being eradicated and that was a shame.
@@jenniferloftus2363 well coming from Idaho and being involved in cattle I assure you that they are a problem.. see them eat a calf out of a cow multiple times.. that’s why we don’t give them a chance to do it.. if we see them they are getting Shot 100% of the time
Instead of killing wild things, we should let them roam freely. Instead of the sizable expenditure for “animal damage control” on the front end (via taxes), why not have a fund based on a meat tax (like the environmental impact tax on every gallon of gas sold) that ranchers who lost livestock (documented cases) can apply for money from this fund (like Super Fund sites, but for livestock loses)? This would save on everyone’s taxes except those consuming meat. The carnivores among us are the ones who will help keep the ranchers operating in the black. Because of the new tax, some people will eat less meat … and help improve their lives and longevity, as well as mitigating climate change.
Sounds like a great idea! Maybe when the cows, deer, elk, antelope, and sheep roam freely onto golf courses, lawns, football and baseball fields those animals will all benefit from the lush vegetation we humans provide. Then we can all enjoy watching them - what a joy it will be!!!
I get a wolf tag every time I can. That was not the wolf that was native. There’s thousands of them everywhere now. Elk and deer numbers are plummeting. The balance is out of control and they are extremely hard to manage populations.
I'm no wolf hugger but I know that no predator species can be "out of control". Their numbers march in lockstep with available prey, with some very slight variation The deer elk numbers are declining from wasting deer disease and all the people moving into Idaho Wyoming Montana area
@@willbass2869 I am pro-wolf and I am pro-conservation...we need balance. I have witnessed wolves in the wild they are incredible. The wolf was exterminated completely as well as the grizzly in lots of states because of the lack of big game on the landscape over 100 years ago and attacks on livestock grazing. In Lewis and Clarks writings, they talk about the lack of game in the ID and MT areas. The goal for the project was a reintroduction...but you can't reintroduce something that was extinct. So they brought in a Canadian gray wolf. That wolf hunts in packs and is about 50% larger to what was native. They wanted 15 breeding pairs total in WY. Fair enough. At this point, they are well over 100 breeding pairs from that introduction across the west. After that, they need to be managed as the undulate population as dropped off. I have been camping, fishing, etc. in Wy, ID and Mt for over 40 years. The game in not on the landscape like it was. The way the wolf was managed 100 years ago was with poison. It is extremely hard to have a balanced population of wolves and big game. What happens is the wolf numbers explode as they have and are (there are 3 packs in CA now) so they eventually wipe out the game and then they die off of starvation and disease. Most wolf packs sport hunt just eating the guys. Then the game comes back and explodes and we end up in this cycle of 25-35 years vs we could have balance the entire time. The bigger issue now is the biologists are not making the calls. The wolf that was just added to CO, was on a ballet. That is ridiculous. And it was dropped in a cordor that will not work. Those wolves have already moved out of that area. Wy, Id, and Mt all talk about the issues they have with the abundance of wolves on the landscape. It's an "out of control" issue. We need balance if not it is not fair to the wolf or the big game. And we have made incredible growth the last 75 years with conservation of big game in the USA.
@@yo2stix your decline in elk deer has little to do with wolves. Urbanization & large scale factory farming have bigger impact on food, shelter and migratory routes of prey species
@@willbass2869 Wolves live in the mountains not neighborhoods. There has been a direct correlation in the decline of ungulates with the Canadian wolf transplant. Look into. Its widespread knowledge.
God loves you and takes care of you so that this message reaches you. God is the one who created this great universe and has complete control over it. And the greatest loss that a person loses in this life is that he lives while he does not know God who created him, knowing the Messenger of Muhammad, the last of the messengers, and the Islamic religion, the last of the heavenly religions. The great intelligence, before you believe in something or not, is to read it, study it, and understand it well, and then you have the choice to believe in it or not. I advise you on this now before you do not have time to do that.
There are many strategies these Ranchers can use to mitigate and address the chances of a wolf attacking their livestock. Why do some choose not to do so. We share this planet and all its habitats with Animals. Their argument is weak and self-serving. 🐺
"It is already a proven fact that, where wolves in have been reintroduced, the population of every big game species from mule deer to elk and moose has been reduced. Idaho had what was probably the highest elk population in America per square miles of habitat. But wolves were introduced, and their population flourished. At the same time the elk herds diminished. If you go to that state today it is difficult to see any elk herds, but wolf howls can be heard at just about any hour of the day or night. Yellowstone National Park is another excellent example of wolf mismanagement. The Park brought in a total of 31 wolves in an attempt to manage both bison and elk. The “buffalo” immediately reverted to an ancient defensive tactic of circular defense, and fended off the wolves for the most part. Only those buffalo that strayed from the herd (most often done by birthing cows) were in real jeopardy. Calf numbers fell as did cows, but the herd did not suffer too great a loss. Elk populations did not fare as well. The overall population began a downward spiral. That situation increased in its downward trend as the wolf population increased. Today, many visitors to the park are disappointed as they look for elk in the spacious meadows and see very few. The primary remaining herds are high in the mountains during the summer months and rarely visible to those tourists that cannot climb up to see them." For the record.
That's called "natural balance". When the predators eat their prey, their prey numbers decrease. When the prey numbers decrease, so does the number of predators, which then gives they population of prey animals a chance to increase again. With this increase of prey animals, the population of predators then also increases.
@@hyenaboy7504 EVERY national park in America has hardly ANY animals to see while there. Yellowstone was the ONLY national park where you could see all kinds of big game while there. Do you understand you've RUINED the best national park in America? Do you even care?
@@hyenaboy7504 National Parks are attractions, that cost money to upkeep. You've ruined what made it an attraction. Within 10 years, Yellowstone will have less visitors than Yosemite. You've ended the park.
Wolves were here first, it’s up to us to accommodate *them* and preserve their existence. Develop better methods of livestock protection. These beautiful creatures have just as much right to live in their natural home as we do.
Wolves are in Washington state too.
I visited Yellowstone not long after the reintroduction. It felt different just because wolves were there, even if you never see one. Just like the grizzly bears. It's hard to explain.
Not only did wolves reestablish the integrity of the food chain, but the wolves made the sound of Yellowstone come back.
Wolves are so beautiful and majestic.
And make great garments
@@1970BBB noo don’t hurt the poor puppies :(
The most beautiful animal on earth if you ask me
I was in yellowstone for the introduction, then 4 years later worked in the park... amazing to see them thrive
Wrong
@@bagelthug are you saying wolves are the bagels of the animal kingdom? Because I agree 100%
Destroyed our elk herds all over and we'll never forgive you
@@coyotedust that’s awesome the elk herds belong to you, I didn’t know that was a thing
@@coyotedust Not true. Wolves and elk coexisted for thousands of years before settlement and the wolves didn't destroy the elk herds. Habitat loss, disease and over hunting are what is causing elk numbers to decline.
I feel like hunting a wolf would be like hunting my dog lol. Can't hunt something I can't eat.
Unless it starts hunting what you eat
@@brandonsolberg6929Nope
Wish more people would read and understand the research of keystone species!
Wish people would stop listening to fair tales 🙄 and damning the animals
Wish fewer people would pretend to be a biologist on youtube.
I don’t have to read. I’ve done my own boots on the ground research just outside the park for 40 yrs before and after reintro. Wildlife balances are way out of whack in some ranges in the same ecosystem. Troubling when FWP told the wolves have damn near wiped out the moose population in the area I’ve studied. It got so back that the feds have had to fly it and mitigate the multiple wolf packs 2 or 3 times in the past 5 yrs. Love the wolf, but also love their prey and just want balance. It’s different in the park because of the 1000s of bison you don’t have outside the park. Think that’s the big difference in balance difference
I grew up in Bozeman and the Yellowstone area, eight years university biological sciences at MSU. I saw a large wolf plain as day on the west edge of the part in 1968. I damn well know a wolf when I see one. The government authorities insist that was not possible, there were zero wolves there then. I know exactly what I saw in 1968. I saw a large wolf on the west edge of the park, so there were wolves there.
Love every single animal. But wolves are the ones i really love. Just can't help myself.
Wolves are my absolute favorite animal!! They are so beautiful and special
Great! Maybe they should live in your backyard
@@fm4695 that would be fine with me
Small animal ?😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I live in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan where there are at least 600 wolves according to the Michigan DNR. However, the UP is a large place and obviously has many more. I see tracks daily year round. I see actual wolves 3-4 times per week. What I don't see is small game such as rabbits, squirrels and grouse. There is also less deer. There is definitely less mature deer and few bucks with large antlers. There needs to be balance. Currently there is not.
Anecdotal evidence does not supersede peer reviewed research.
@@EthanDurant That's odd. Actual scientists use anecdotal evidence in volume to help understand local situations.
In 2022, Michigan hunters harvested 339,189 deer. Wolves are definitely not a problem for deer.
@@superdaveinca9254Unfortunately, wolves like easy meals. So, all those fenced in hamburgers-on-hooves are easy targets.
Same in Northern Wisconsin no deer are small animals left something need to be done with the wolf problem
Amazing clever animals
Such ad awesome success story!
Interesting and informative. Thank you.
Wolves are awesome!
Until you have to share your property with them.. there not that awesome when they eat your Boston Terrier...
@@kyle2441 Dude yer killing me!!!! Ruff ruff....yelp
@@kyle2441
Yeah. Listening to it scream for help as it's intestines are consumed first would be as heart wrenching as when these invasive Canadian Gray Wolves wolves do that to your cow and you must choose between no food, shooting wolves and going to prison.
That's the issue. The law preventing you from defending your animals.
But if you have video footage and a couple months to spare, you might be one of the few allowed depredation permits and become nocturnal.
Mai’stoh!!! (Wolf) in Diné (Navajo)
Navajo Nation love wolves!
Their leading cause of death is not from other wolves, that was the case when they were introduced and protected by ESA. Now the leading cause of death for adult Yellowstone wolves is being hunted and trapped outside the park, and it’s not even close.
True.
Incredible!!!
Would love to go yhere one day. We'll see. Beautiful animals
Stay away
Love wolves, hate hunters - it's not a fair fight.
I hate people who say they are hunters, but abuse the animals that they hunt.
I have always Loved wolves ❤ They are beautiful ❤
Thanks. Love ❤️ wolves
Laws need to be changed to protect wolves! They are majestic creatures 🐺❤🇺🇸
Going wolf watching in Yellowstone is totally on my bucket list.
Wolves in Michigan now, happen to see one on our property in the Manistee National Forest. Just pure luck, walking in the kitchen and saw one walking thru the woods.
It was shopping for lunch-pets
@@fm4695 I mean bears, mountain lion, and Coyotes do the same thing
Little red ridding hood was the demise of the wolf😮I watched a wolf elk hunting one year from about 100 yds for about 10 minutes. It was awesome to see one in the wild for the first time
Wolves and Orcas are my two favorite animals in the world
Great show
New Mexico has an amazing wolf refuge that you can camp in. Thank you R.R. Martin.
Before I even watch this video I'm guessing when they removed the wolves that deer and elk started over populating and starving to death. God knew what he was doing when he created the world. Leave it to man to think he knows more than God. Smh
Randy Newberg was criminally cut short and taken out of context by this -piece. I would expect nothing less from the liberal lens of CBS.
CBS won’t be around much longer … thank god
It's natural. Plain and simple.
I love these wolves.
Really? How do you cook them?
Well, I would say, we don’t love wolves for something real, like the narrator, said but I would say we love wild animals, and the Apex of the species that was wiped out in our country was a tragedy in the fact that they’re back make them all the more special.
We live in an artificial world…
Good, Thx
Awesome
Glad they're back and doing well. We were stupid to remove them.
Wolves are Amazing. 🦊❤😘
I loves wolves🐺.
A very majestic and misunderstood animal❤❤
well even if the wolf doesn't eat the elk the fear of being eaten would stop deer and elk and everyone from over eating in open areas... but i couldn't say whether thats good or bad its just life right?...
When the deer and elk don’t have any more natural predators, they overpopulate, they aren’t as healthy, and they destroy the landscape, the environment, the rivers, the park, truly amazing.
@@kareyrose yeah I mean that’s the common answer but I’m saying it’s sad and interesting that fear is also a huge factor in the strategy, and while the claims are that deer do this, yes they doooo buuuut humans have ruined the environment by destroying migration paths and escape routes sooo it would be an unfair advantage for the wolves who are not only being reintroduced which means the native animals are too naive to avoid them… but also when they do catch the news that the wolfs are back and town they’ll have no where to run… leaving overgrowth… and it’s funny how we listen to industrial cattle farmers but don’t talk to any hippy anarchists 🤷♀️. Farmers are the bad guys, homesteaders are good, and they deal with predators but industrial farms that deal with major loses because of overpopulated cattle herds and poultry houses have no right talking… the mission is far from finished but the wolves are are a great warrior of the eagle chief and life will go on 🍎🌎✌️
@@SeagullAmIOne thanks for the laugh.
You never know when seeing a wolf who's gonna show up. Good guy or bad guy. Just look on there eye's. There just great.
awwwwww, cute puppies ❤❤❤❤❤❤
Restoring the lost balance to nature is so important to the survival of the Earth and our enjoyment of it. Cattle are not indigenous to the area, if the ranchers want them there, either they have to figure out how to keep their livestock safe while tolerating the presence of the wolf, or they suffer losses, or move thier cattle. it's pretty simple, really.
I think what you're meaning to say is that cattle aren't an aboriginal specie's in north America, at least. You could say they are indigenous, and definitely native. What would be the key difference,them not migrating themselves, but being shipped here?
@@YousirArdume If an animal was shipped here by human it is not aboriginal, indigenous or native. Cattle were shipped here by Europeans back in the day making them an invasive species. I am not sure where you are getting your information or definitions from but they are verifiably wrong.
@@EthanDurant It would help you to look up the definition of invasive species. You are using the wrong label for cattle.
@@BeautifuLakesStreamsBiologists "Unlike native grazers like elk, cattle didn't evolve here. They're an invasive species - and the harm they'd been inflicting was clear in overgrazed range, mucked-up pastures, manure-polluted waterways and trampled vegetation" - Center for Biological Diversity
"An invasive species is an organism that is not indigenous, or native, to a particular area." - National Geographic
You are a fool if you think cattle do not harm the environment. The run off from farms pollutes waterways. The methane gas from manure damages the ozone. I could go on and on.
@@EthanDurant you know nothing of ecology. It is clear in the first laughable reference you made. Start with a topic called regenerative agriculture. That will at least get you to a very base level. Then come back here and try to lecture a biologist. By the way, I doubt NatGeo made that very bad attempt at trying to define invasive. They are biased, but not that badly.
Can’t believe that 60 minutes did not bring up the fact that when wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone that after a while the water levels rose making the ecosystem better overall!
Such a cool story!
9:09 when reality hits the fairy tale
Wolves have nearly eradicated deer up here in Minnesota.
sure dude. The population of deer in Minnesota is still very healthy
wolves actually play an essential part of the ecosystem, they keep populations of deer, moose, elk, etc otherwise these animals overgraze and destroy the underbrush of forests. I cannot understate how important wolves truly are and how destroyed the ecosystem has become in areas that historically had wolves but no longer do :)
Deer eradicated in Minnesota? Complete poppycock. Deer are numerous and the state is vast.
@@xeonpaiEssential as in essentially wiping out local populations of deer and elk. So many myths running out there (like what you wrote) are just talking points completely detached from reality.
@@paulring86 Everything I said is scientifically proven to be true, I'm sorry but you have no idea what you're talking about. Do more research before you espouse such stupidity.
A whole hundred years? 🎉
Wolves are a protected species in Yellowstone National Park Region. 🐺.
Love ❤. Shared 💜
Saved on UA-cam ❤️
Oops, wrong, Yellowstone has a hunting season for these animals.
I thought the whole "alpha wolf" thing had been debunked and even retracted by the guy who originally published it?
I thought the government reimbursed ranchers for their lost lifestock?
The wolves are a lot more attractive and suited to their environment than the humans lining up to gawk at them, or ranchers who insist their profit is more important than the balance of nature.
and i bet you use something that is made from beef and beef byproducts. Smh
Not to real natives. Wolves represent family.
Government should pay for the livestock that are killed by wolves
You are so right!!!!! There are agreements which state that very thing. However, those who experience loss must prove the wolves were the real cause and not some disease or other fatal experience. To make matters worse, the livestock remains may not be located in time to establish/perform a necropsy and so the Agencies are able to decline reimbursement.
@@fm4695It would definitely appeal to both sides, just need the ranchers to be honest. Wolves must continue to thrive
Lovely.....
ORCA ways as well in The Silent World thank you kindly 60 Minutes because your show series paid in full Paramount plus debate not romantic because of evolving links between the human race and #animals on land or in the ocean. smib. #Amen. 🐬
This more about people looking at wolves than wolves ! Show us the wolves !
It was about the reintroduction of the wolves to the park and all its implications.
Who else came from the Wolf Howling Short?
I was blown away when I saw people that I have worked with in this video!
Ranchers killed all the wolves, not because of people's fears of wolves based on "The Big Bad Wolf" but because they weren't willing to let the wolves have a tiny bit of their herds. Greed killed all the wolves just like greed killed all the buffalo. Your premise that it had something to do with a fairy tale is outrageous, wrong, and not real journalism.
Not greed, survival!
I'm guessing your grocery store is only minutes away.
Wolves take only a very small percentage of a herd and the rest of their diet from other wildlife. But ranchers aren't willing to share any of the flock they're raising for humans to eat. So the wolves have to die. Greed is killing the wolves.@@TheScmtnrider
here puppy... go pet them lol
I support the wolves is awesome that they've been doing so great keep protecting them
Protect our nature and animals🌎🙏🏻✨💚
When he says the West, well there's still the lobos od new mexico and Texas. It's the Mexican Gray wolf, although there aren't many left.
Thought the "alpha" wolf thing was a myth.
The way it used to be , roaming buffalo ,wolves and indigenous peoples living with land !
Never imagine the wolves makes money
"Alpha" wolves in a pack. Humans in their "pack" just call them Mom and Dad.
30 years on we can see it was a mojority plus. Of course no one knew for sure back then. That's what these tests are for. It could have gone completely the other direction, but how would we know without running a test.
glad for my four legged friends
What ranchers always seem to never bring up is that they are compensated for injury or death of their livestock if attacked by wolves. Plus the fact they blame dead an animals on wolf attacks even though the animal died some other way and get compensated for those too.
Wolves are also in more states then mentions, Oregon, Washington, California, Colorado, Arizona, around the great lakes area and even in North Carolina.
Not always. What happens when the cattle or sheep just get get carried off
@@jimtheobald1141 I guess in rare cases that might happen. But with the "fake" cases they are over compensated and it will make up for that.
Of course the big factor is the 35 million of tourist dollars that the wolves brought and almost all of that is during the winter when it's is much slower.
Incorrect. Ranchers are not ALWAYS compensated.
@@thePrisoner1000 Nope...the often do not get compensated.
@@marge3157 I didn't say they always get compensated, but the fact they don't seem to talk about the fact that they do get compensated.
The wolves are dope... 💥💥💥
Before wolves the park had wildlife. Now not so mutch. The great Gardner Montana migration was amazing . It no longer exists.
Wolves are wildlife, though.
Long live OR7!
WOLVES ARE BEAUTIFUL PLEASE DO NOT HARM THEM!!
I agree.
As long as they stay away from my livestock. I won't harm them but my livestock guardian dogs might have a different perspective.
My favorite animal
I'm a veteran too! How do you cook yours?
The rancher how has the farm 100 miles away he had riders and Guardian digs and he has no loss of cattle or sheep.
So way arent every farmer doing this is these wolves on your land
Only 35 million reason
why wolves in america
will stay
imagine that
How is anyone surprised a predator would thrive in their habitat? But what’s the real impact on there prey ?
The impact has been positive. The animals they hunt and eat are the ones that are overgrazing and overpopulated. That makes the area out of balance. Diseases thrive, and animals starve to death when the wolf is gone. It seems paradoxical, but it isn't. It's the opposite. Ignorance and fear of them lead to them being eradicated and that was a shame.
@@jenniferloftus2363they weren’t even the same species of wolf that was native to the area.. talk about ignorance
@@marcspencer800just like the colonizers aren’t native to the area, so what?
@@marcspencer800like that makes a functional difference.... oh wait - it doesn't.
@@jenniferloftus2363 well coming from Idaho and being involved in cattle I assure you that they are a problem.. see them eat a calf out of a cow multiple times.. that’s why we don’t give them a chance to do it.. if we see them they are getting Shot 100% of the time
They have been treated like the real Americans, the Native Americans. We shpuld leave them alone. They are a vital part of natures cycle.
Instead of killing wild things, we should let them roam freely. Instead of the sizable expenditure for “animal damage control” on the front end (via taxes), why not have a fund based on a meat tax (like the environmental impact tax on every gallon of gas sold) that ranchers who lost livestock (documented cases) can apply for money from this fund (like Super Fund sites, but for livestock loses)? This would save on everyone’s taxes except those consuming meat. The carnivores among us are the ones who will help keep the ranchers operating in the black. Because of the new tax, some people will eat less meat … and help improve their lives and longevity, as well as mitigating climate change.
Sounds like a great idea! Maybe when the cows, deer, elk, antelope, and sheep roam freely onto golf courses, lawns, football and baseball fields those animals will all benefit from the lush vegetation we humans provide. Then we can all enjoy watching them - what a joy it will be!!!
Start bringing back the prey. Balance the ecosystem.
Yep…that bull looked really weak 🙄
Going to get to the point where they will need to hire guides to find elk.
boohoo
Yellowstone did JUST FINE for 50 years WITHOUT WOLVES.
But the wolf population isn’t fine
it was fine for the thousands of years prior when there were wolves.
Yellowstone is better WITH Wolves.
I get a wolf tag every time I can. That was not the wolf that was native. There’s thousands of them everywhere now. Elk and deer numbers are plummeting. The balance is out of control and they are extremely hard to manage populations.
I'm no wolf hugger but I know that no predator species can be "out of control". Their numbers march in lockstep with available prey, with some very slight variation
The deer elk numbers are declining from wasting deer disease and all the people moving into Idaho Wyoming Montana area
@@willbass2869 I am pro-wolf and I am pro-conservation...we need balance. I have witnessed wolves in the wild they are incredible. The wolf was exterminated completely as well as the grizzly in lots of states because of the lack of big game on the landscape over 100 years ago and attacks on livestock grazing. In Lewis and Clarks writings, they talk about the lack of game in the ID and MT areas. The goal for the project was a reintroduction...but you can't reintroduce something that was extinct. So they brought in a Canadian gray wolf. That wolf hunts in packs and is about 50% larger to what was native. They wanted 15 breeding pairs total in WY. Fair enough. At this point, they are well over 100 breeding pairs from that introduction across the west. After that, they need to be managed as the undulate population as dropped off. I have been camping, fishing, etc. in Wy, ID and Mt for over 40 years. The game in not on the landscape like it was. The way the wolf was managed 100 years ago was with poison. It is extremely hard to have a balanced population of wolves and big game. What happens is the wolf numbers explode as they have and are (there are 3 packs in CA now) so they eventually wipe out the game and then they die off of starvation and disease. Most wolf packs sport hunt just eating the guys. Then the game comes back and explodes and we end up in this cycle of 25-35 years vs we could have balance the entire time. The bigger issue now is the biologists are not making the calls. The wolf that was just added to CO, was on a ballet. That is ridiculous. And it was dropped in a cordor that will not work. Those wolves have already moved out of that area. Wy, Id, and Mt all talk about the issues they have with the abundance of wolves on the landscape. It's an "out of control" issue. We need balance if not it is not fair to the wolf or the big game. And we have made incredible growth the last 75 years with conservation of big game in the USA.
@@yo2stix your decline in elk deer has little to do with wolves.
Urbanization & large scale factory farming have bigger impact on food, shelter and migratory routes of prey species
@@willbass2869 Wolves live in the mountains not neighborhoods. There has been a direct correlation in the decline of ungulates with the Canadian wolf transplant. Look into. Its widespread knowledge.
@@willbass2869 You are no biologist either, but here you are pretending to be one on youtube.
for the backstory, read Shadow Mountain, by Renee Askins
God loves you and takes care of you so that this message reaches you. God is the one who created this great universe and has complete control over it. And the greatest loss that a person loses in this life is that he lives while he does not know God who created him, knowing the Messenger of Muhammad, the last of the messengers, and the Islamic religion, the last of the heavenly religions. The great intelligence, before you believe in something or not, is to read it, study it, and understand it well, and then you have the choice to believe in it or not. I advise you on this now before you do not have time to do that.
There are many strategies these Ranchers can use to mitigate and address the chances of a wolf attacking their livestock. Why do some choose not to do so. We share this planet and all its habitats with Animals. Their argument is weak and self-serving. 🐺
Where did all the elk go?hmmmmmmm.
I live here - they are everywhere and they eat my f-ing plants
Decimating again
"It is already a proven fact that, where wolves in have been reintroduced, the population of every big game species from mule deer to elk and moose has been reduced. Idaho had what was probably the highest elk population in America per square miles of habitat.
But wolves were introduced, and their population flourished. At the same time the elk herds diminished. If you go to that state today it is difficult to see any elk herds, but wolf howls can be heard at just about any hour of the day or night.
Yellowstone National Park is another excellent example of wolf mismanagement. The Park brought in a total of 31 wolves in an attempt to manage both bison and elk. The “buffalo” immediately reverted to an ancient defensive tactic of circular defense, and fended off the wolves for the most part.
Only those buffalo that strayed from the herd (most often done by birthing cows) were in real jeopardy. Calf numbers fell as did cows, but the herd did not suffer too great a loss.
Elk populations did not fare as well. The overall population began a downward spiral. That situation increased in its downward trend as the wolf population increased.
Today, many visitors to the park are disappointed as they look for elk in the spacious meadows and see very few. The primary remaining herds are high in the mountains during the summer months and rarely visible to those tourists that cannot climb up to see them."
For the record.
That's called "natural balance". When the predators eat their prey, their prey numbers decrease. When the prey numbers decrease, so does the number of predators, which then gives they population of prey animals a chance to increase again. With this increase of prey animals, the population of predators then also increases.
@@hyenaboy7504 EVERY national park in America has hardly ANY animals to see while there.
Yellowstone was the ONLY national park where you could see all kinds of big game while there.
Do you understand you've RUINED the best national park in America?
Do you even care?
@@LavishPatchKid balanced ecosystems aren’t ruined.
@@hyenaboy7504 National Parks are attractions, that cost money to upkeep.
You've ruined what made it an attraction.
Within 10 years, Yellowstone will have less visitors than Yosemite.
You've ended the park.
@@LavishPatchKid national parks exist as a way to preserve nature.
Honestly why would anybody worry about a wolf least problem on earth
Unless it's threatening your livlihood.
@@karnaagmaybe you need to give the land back to natives and relocate, like the Europeans made the natives relocate
That wouldn't make any sense at all. That rancher owns the land. Who cares who used to have it. We all live on conquered land.@@kmack998
My uncle’s cousin in law shot one of the druids pack members on a wolf hunt out of yellow stone
Wolves are rule followers. They must follow the rules of the pack leader to survive. It’s ridiculous to suggest they don’t follow rules.
No. No no no. Shut it. There is only the parents.
Wolf tourism isn't even the stupidest thing I've seen today😒
♥️
Wolves were here first, it’s up to us to accommodate *them* and preserve their existence. Develop better methods of livestock protection. These beautiful creatures have just as much right to live in their natural home as we do.
There has to be a balance in the wild and when there not we pay the price
Paying the price? Luxury or inconvenience of not being able to hunt?
Tale my money! I want to go Wolf watching 😍😍
Wolves are the best 🔥🔥🔥