Washington state has the remaining five members of a pack of gray wolves in its gun sights this week, after assassinating six members of the pack for killing cattle that a local rancher had sent to graze atop their den.
“This wolf family has been shattered by the loss of the breeding alpha female and five other members. All that’s left is an adult male and a few four-month-old pups.”
—Noah Greenwald,
Center for Biological Diversity
“It’s been a sickening week in the Pacific Northwest,” writes Noah Greenwald, the endangered species program director for the Center for Biological Diversity. “Snipers, including gunners in helicopters, have snuffed out half of Washington state’s Profanity Peak wolf pack and have put the rest of the pack in the crosshairs.”
“This wolf family has been shattered by the loss of the breeding alpha female and five other members. All that’s left is an adult male and a few four-month-old pups,” Greenwald adds.
The state is proceeding with the extermination program despite research showing its ineffectiveness and vocal protests calling on authorities to protect the wolves, which were on the endangered species list until 2013.
The pack being targeted represents a full 12 percent of the state’s gray wolf population, according to Greenwald.
This is the fourth time that the state’s Fish & Wildlife Department has killed wolves to protect Len McIrvin’s cattle, the Seattle Times reports, and it’s the first time that the department has targeted an entire pack, according to Reuters.
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