Forwarded by Jane Clark at [log in to unmask] This article relates to the grazing issue. ======= Subject: Action Alert: MEXICAN WOLF PACK TO LOSE FREEDOM Date: Thu, 13 Jan 2000 23:13:08 -0800 From: "Ed Smith" <[log in to unmask]> Hello everyone: Please read carefully the following message from the Center for Biological Diversity (formerly the Southwest Center for Biological Diversity). This alert makes manifestly clear the rampant power of the livestock industry. Their "War Against the Wolf" continues unabated today and with the same virulence as in times past. This is not the only case. Our federal government is now killing wolves in Montana's Tom Miner Basin just north of Yellowstone National Park because of a few earlier sheep depredations. Incidences such as those reported here convince me that we can never restore native wildlife upon our public lands so long as even one domestic animal that is an investment of a private business (i.e., commercial) grazes upon those lands. Best wishes, Edward M. Smith Chair, Wildlife Committee Sierra Club, Loma Prieta Chapter ***** January 13, 2000 MEXICAN WOLF PACK TO LOSE FREEDOM First Pack to Migrate into Gila National Forest Targeted for Incarceration The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service began trapping the Gavilan Pack of Mexican wolves yesterday, and has announced that the alpha male will never be re-released, and perhaps none of the pack will ever be freed. Last fall, the Gavilan Pack which consists of a mated pair, a yearling male, and five pups preyed on cattle that were being illegally grazed by rancher, Carlyle Cathcart, in the Apache National Forest. More recently, the pack successfully migrated into the western boundary of the Gila National Forest, as was hoped. On both the Apache and the Gila National Forests, severe overgrazing has reduced the number of natural prey available for the wolves. Thus, the wolves are left with little choice but to scavenge cattle carcasses, or prey on cattle. Today's decision to remove the Gavilan Pack jeopardizes the recovery of the most endangered mammal in North America. There may be as few as 19 Mexican wolves left in the wild today, and removing the Gavilan Pack will leave just eleven. Fish & Wildlife has already captured the entire Pipestem Pack, the first Mexican wolves to reproduce successfully in the wild in the U.S. in over 70 years. After first indicating the Pipestem Pack would quickly be freed in the Gila Wilderness, the agency has instead kept them in pens for over six months. The success of the Mexican wolf recovery program is premised on getting wolves into the Gila National Forest, where over 700,000 acres, mostly in designated wilderness, are currently cattle free. That is over a thousand square miles. Direct releases to the Gila have so far been stymied by the livestock industry's political pressure. Now, the Gavilan Pack is migrating into the Gila on their own, only to run into a minefield of illegal grazing, severe overstocking and undisposed of cattle carcasses along the way. Removing these wolves from the wild amounts to renouncing the promise of a corridor between Arizona's Blue Primitive Area and New Mexico's Gila Wilderness. Please call Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt to protest the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service decision to remove from the wild the Gavilan Pack. Tell him to immediately cease trapping and let the Gavilan Pack roam free. Tell him also that any wolves already trapped should be immediately released into the Gila Wilderness. (202) 208-7351. ___________________________________________________________ > Shane Jimerfield > Assistant Director > Center for Biological Diversity > Tel: 520.623.5252, ext 302 Fax: 520.623.9797 > PO Box 710, Tucson AZ 85702-0710 http - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - To get off the IOWA-TOPICS list, send any message to: [log in to unmask]