Hmm, interesting theories presented here. Maybe the feed program at Jackson will live on after all!
Officials fighting CWD ponder a natural partner: wolves
By Theo Stein
Denver Post Environment Writer
The spread of chronic wasting disease toward Yellowstone's famed game herds alarms wildlife lovers, but two top researchers think biologists will discover a powerful ally in an old frontier villain.
The wolf.
Wildlife managers have never controlled a major outbreak of chronic wasting disease, a fatal neurologic malady of deer and elk first discovered in a captive Colorado mule deer herd in 1967.
No one knows for sure if wolves would target CWD-infected deer and elk, but wolves' uncanny ability to spot vulnerable animals may make them the best natural control for the disease, researchers say.
Full story here
Oak
Officials fighting CWD ponder a natural partner: wolves
By Theo Stein
Denver Post Environment Writer
The spread of chronic wasting disease toward Yellowstone's famed game herds alarms wildlife lovers, but two top researchers think biologists will discover a powerful ally in an old frontier villain.
The wolf.
Wildlife managers have never controlled a major outbreak of chronic wasting disease, a fatal neurologic malady of deer and elk first discovered in a captive Colorado mule deer herd in 1967.
No one knows for sure if wolves would target CWD-infected deer and elk, but wolves' uncanny ability to spot vulnerable animals may make them the best natural control for the disease, researchers say.
Full story here
Oak