Invasive species
Uploader Comments (BruceH59)
All Comments (104)
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@ruj1970 written by wolf biologists (and other experts) for my research, not pro-wolf sites.
There's a really good article about the legality of wolf reintroduction called "The 'Wholly Seperate' Truth: did the Yellowstone Wolf Reintroduction Violate Section 10 (J) of the Endangered Species Act?" Unfortunately I cannot provide the link to it, but it is worth looking up and reading. And from what I know of, it is NOT written by a wolf activist.
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@ruj1970 subspecies Canis lupus nubilus. But it should be noted that during the time of the reintroduction, this classification was new and as such most scientists accepted the older classification, which considers C. l. nubilus to be extinct (and as such it couldn't be used for the reintroduction).
By the way, using insults such as "ignorant" and "stupid" is not going to help your argument. I have been researching wolves for years, so I know what I'm talking about. And I only use resources
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@ruj1970 Plus, the ranges of C.l. irremotus and C. l. occidentalis met in Canada, so they would of - and probably did - interbreed with each other. And the two subspecies are not too different, with C. l. occidentalis being a little bigger than C. l. irremotus. It's not like Canis lupus arctos were dumped into the range of Canis lupus baileyi or something. And lastly, some scientists doubt that C. l. irremotus was even a seperate subspecies, and instead consider it to be a population of the wolf
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@ruj1970 I understand that the gray wolves living in the Northern Rocky Mountains today are not the same subspecies as the native gray wolves, but remember that the native Canis lupus irremotus was driven to EXTINCTION back in the 1930's by hunters, ranchers, and the government. So the scientists had no choice but to use a different subspecies for the REintroduction. Plus, Canis lupus occidentalis was already migrating down from Canada, so they would be there even if there was no reintroduction.
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@MrFloppywaffles Humans don't slit their bellys open and leave them to rot you moron. You fail every time you post.
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@CarlaVelosoWolf You are just ignorant. The wolves transplanted here are an entirely different sub species than the native wolf. It even states so in the wolf recovery plan from the USFWS. Why don't you educate yourself to the facts before opening your stupid wouth?
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@BruceH59 ward (and the Rocky Mountain population of Canis lupus occidentalis will spread eastward) and the two wolf populations will meet with each other (probably in the Dakotas or Eastern Montana) and bred with each other, thus introducing nubilus genes into the Rocky Mountain population. That is, of course, assuming that wolves in both places are not slaughtered, which, unfortunately, does not seem to be the case (which is one of many reasons why they should be protected and not hunted).
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@BruceH59 of the REintroduction). And once again, the two subspecies, Canis lupus occidentalis and Canis lupus nubilus, are not that much different (the main difference being that Canis lupus occidentalis is a little larger). Their ranges met, and as such they probably bred with each other. And Canis lupus occidentalis fufills the ecological role left by the extinct population of Canis lupus nubilus. And, who knows, maybe one day the Great Lakes population of Canis lupus nubilus will spead west-
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@BruceH59 extinct. And even though Canis lupus occidentalis is a little bigger, the two subspecies are very similar to each other - it's not like Arctic Wolves were dumped into the range of the Mexican Wolf or something. And lastly, there is doubt that Canis lupus irremotus was even a seperate subspecies at all; some scientists now just recognize it as a population of Canis lupus nubilus (which was believed to have been extinct, and the idea that it still existed was relatively new at the time
Canis lupus occidentalis is the largest most powerful wolf in the world save you propaganda for the gullible city slickers. There was video of the Native Rocky Mt wolves you lied they were NOT extinct. You just reading off some web page spreading lies like a good little troll. These Yukon wolves have never been this far south in these numbers ever in history.
BruceH59 1 month ago
Wolves are NOT an invasive species! They are native to the Rocky Mountains, just like the elk and the grizzly bears and the bison!
CarlaVelosoWolf 1 month ago
@CarlaVelosoWolf Maybe when you learn to understand the truth it would help. The brought down Yukon wolves the largest most powerful wolves in the world an invasive species. This is not the smaller Native rocky MT wolves. check your facts before you comment.,
BruceH59 1 month ago
:57. Wow, looks almost like what humans do to elk. What is your point?
MrFloppywaffles 2 months ago in playlist Uploaded videos
@MrFloppywaffles The point is that is what wolves are doing to our wildlife. People that hate wildlife love wolves. So wildlife hater are you doing dog fighting on the weekends?
BruceH59 2 months ago
The losers from the fringe radical wolf cult have nothing better to do with their tiny pathetic lonely lives but spread hate on my videos. LOL Too bad they are so dumb down they can't figure out why nothing they do is working to stop me. LMAO 90% OF Americans living with wolves want these things controlled. They are tired of the lies myths and greedy money grubbers in the wolf cult getting rich as their beloved wildlife is getting slaughtered off. That is why the avg IQ of the wolf cult is 80.
BruceH59 5 months ago