Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




FLORA AND FAUNA
France reshuffles the pack in bid to end wolf wrangle
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Feb 07, 2013


Can you teach a wolf not to eat sheep?

The idea is being floated in France, where the return of the wolf has got farmers and environmentalists at each other's throats.

Under a proposed "National Wolf Plan," the government says it will conduct experiments into "educating" the canine carnivore, which is spreading stealthily in remote areas.

Rest assured, this scheme does not entail lecturing wolves about the cuteness of lambs or trying to convert them to vegetarianism.

Instead, it entails capturing individual wolves that are known to attack a local flock and then marking these bothersome predators before letting them go.

The theory is that the animal will be so traumatised by the experience that it will leave the sheep alone and instead hunt for deer, boar, rabbits and other wild animals.

But if the wolf remains a problem, the ID makes it easier to be singled out and shot.

"Eleven of France's regional parks have said they are willing to take part in the experiments," Ecology Minister Delphine Batho said this week, as the proposal met a mixed reception.

Once plentiful, the wolf officially died out in France in the 1930s, wiped out by farmers and hunters.

More than a half a century later, wolves began creeping back, crossing the border from Italy. In 1992, suspicions of the comeback were confirmed when a pair of wolves were spotted in the Mercantour park in the southeast of the country.

Today, according to Eric Marboutin at the National Office for Hunting and Wildlife (ONCFS), there are around 250 wolves, 90 percent of them in the Alps, and scatterings of others in the east and southwest of France, including the eastern Pyrenees.

In 2011, a wolf was spotted for the first time in the Vosges, in eastern France, and last year, a wolf was photographed in a cornfield in the southwestern department (county) of Gers, the westernmost point of the species' advance.

The wolf is shielded by the Bern Convention on European wildlife, and in 2007 it joined other mammals on a list of species that in France are given special protection, except in specific cases where they pose a threat.

But flocks are under rising pressure as the wolves expand.

Two powerful groups -- the agricultural lobby and the environmental movement -- are fiercely at odds, despite efforts to forge consensus in a "National Wolf Group" that includes politicians.

Emotions flared last month in the upper house of the French parliament, where rural regions are strongly represented.

Senator Pierre Bernard-Reymond of the High Alps region blasted Parisians for what he said was their cosy image of an ancient predator.

"It's time to release a few wolfpacks in the Vincennes Park or the Luxembourg Gardens," he said -- a suggestion that was not adopted.

In 2008, 2,680 sheep were killed by wolves, according to an official count; this rose to 4,920 in 2011 and 5,848 in 2012, when the state paid out compensation of around two million euros ($2.7 million).

At present, 11 wolves are allowed to be shot each year. Anti-wolvers say that this restriction is far too inflexible.

Under the 2013-2017 plan, the figure would be adjusted in line with scientific estimates of what is a sustainable wolf population.

"The wolf is and will remain a species that is strictly protected," the ecology and agricultural ministries said in a joint statement.

"However, bearing in mind the healthy population dynamics of this species, it is possible to fine-tune the methods for managing it."

Capturing and marking a problem animal would mean that only the real culprits would be targeted. Or so it is hoped.

Jean-Jacques Blanchon of the pro-wolf Nicolas Hulot Foundation said wolf education had worked successfully in pilot experiments in the United States, "so we should make the effort to see what it can do for us."

Don't bother, retorted others.

"You might as well try to educate a shark," said Daniel Spagnou, a member of a commission probing the fraught relationship between wolves and mountain herdsmen.

"What a circus! Whatever next? Wolf-tamers?"

.


Related Links
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FLORA AND FAUNA
Indonesian Komodo dragon attack leaves two hospitalised
Jakarta (AFP) Feb 6, 2013
A Komodo dragon in Indonesia has attacked two employees in one of the giant lizards' protected island habitats, leaving its victims hospitalised with serious injuries, an official said Wednesday. One victim, a 50-year-old park ranger, was sitting at his desk at the Rinca island front office, where tourists usually check in, when the two-metre-long monitor snuck into his room Tuesday afternoo ... read more


FLORA AND FAUNA
Reaping Profits from Landfill Biogas

Versalis and Yulex partner to produce guayule-based biorubbers

Agricultural Growth in Chinese Desert Offers Opportunities For Economic Value and Better Ecology

Biofuels Blend Right In

FLORA AND FAUNA
Engineers Building Hard-working Mining Robot

Robofish Grace glides with the greatest of ease

Nexter joins robot development business

Game on: European student codes reach ISS

FLORA AND FAUNA
Sabotage may have felled U.K. wind turbine

Hgcapital And Blue Energy Agree UK Wind Farm Investment Deal

Japan plans world's largest wind farm

China revs up wind power amid challenges

FLORA AND FAUNA
GM says China monthly sales set record in January

Toyota quadruples April-December profit, ups forecast

Light yet safe contender for city streets

Daimler puts foot on accelerator in China

FLORA AND FAUNA
When Wind Turbine Blades and Solar Panels End Up in Landfills

Sinopec aims for cleaner fuel

Hungary moves ahead on E.ON purchase

Deuterium Uptake in Magnetic Fusion Devices with Lithium Conditioned Carbon Walls

FLORA AND FAUNA
World's First AP1000 Containment Vessel Top Head Ready

Westinghouse Commits To Czech Steel For AP1000 Plants At Temelin

Centrica makes U-turn on British nuclear plant plan

Fukushima operator TEPCO projects $1.29 bn year net loss

FLORA AND FAUNA
Obama's energy secretary stepping down

Emission trading schemes limit green consumerism

Latest Ways to Make Your Business Energy Efficient

China coal plant shut by health chiefs

FLORA AND FAUNA
Mixed forest provides beneficial effects

Paper giant APP promises no deforestation in Indonesia

Asian paper giant to halt deforestation

Measuring the consequence of forest fires on public health




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement