Mar 30, 2005
Canada's Grizzlies Need Your Help!
Press release from www.defenders.org
Alberta's small grizzly bear population occupies a remnant of its former range. In 2002, the provincial government rejected its own Endangered Species Conservation Committee's recommendation to list the grizzly as "threatened" and now has allowed two seasons of hunting the great bear. A draft "recovery plan" falls far below what Alberta's grizzlies will need to survive. The hunt should be stopped, the province's grizzlies should be listed as threatened, and an effective recovery plan should be funded and implemented. Please visit the action center at http://denlines.org sign up and go to alert #365 to learn more and take action to help save Canada's grizzly bears.
When you sign up http://denlines.org you can send a beautiful message like the one below. That was written by denlines and signed by me.
Dear Premier Klein and Minister Coutts,
The grizzly bear is a Canadian icon, and nowhere is that more apparent than in Alberta. Visitors come to Alberta’s Banff National Park from around the world to enjoy the spectacular scenery and perhaps catch a glimpse of the great bear. In fact, 2001 was celebrated as The Year of the Great Bear throughout
western Alberta. And yet, only one year later, Alberta’s Endangered Species Conservation Committee (ESCC) recommended listing the province’s grizzly population as threatened, because of the small number of bears in Alberta, relative isolation and the lowest reproductive output in North America, excessive human-caused mortality, and habitat losses to human development and
activity.
I respectfully urge you to suspend the grizzly bear hunt immediately, support designating Alberta’s grizzly bear population as threatened, and implement an effective plan that will recover the province’s grizzlies.
Mounting evidence supports the threatened designation that was
recommended three years ago:
- The best recent estimates suggest a provincial population of about 700 independent bears, with approximately 215 of these on national park lands (this is even fewer than estimated by the ESCC when they recommended threatened status!)
- Seismic lines, roads, logging, motorized recreation and other human development continue to destroy and compromise grizzly habitat and encourage potentially lethal contact with humans in critical portions of grizzly range
- Nineteen eminent scientists, including Dr. Stephen Herrero, Dr. David Schindler, and Dr. J. Christopher Haney of Defenders of Wildlife recently urged you to list the province’s grizzlies as threatened before the bears emerge from their dens and,
- The Alberta Grizzly Bear Team has recommended suspending the hunt to speed recovery.
Time may be running out for Alberta’s grizzly bears. I hope you
will heed the recommendations of your own advisory committees
and the consensus of leading carnivore scientists. Now is the
time to suspend the hunt and begin to recover this truly threatened species. I look forward to your response to these concerns.
Sincerely,
Marcus Martin
Mar 28, 2005
How to Kill Wolves
This is a press release from www.defenders.org.
Nearly 400 wolves have been killed in Alaska under the barbaric aerial gunning program that began in 2003. Wolves can be gunned down from airplanes, or run to exhaustion and then shot point blank. The Alaska Board of Game has approved the destruction of up to 1,400 wolves. This will be the greatest wolf massacre in half a century.
Thanks to an outpouring of more than 6,000 comments from Defenders of Wildlife members, the Alaska Board of Game recently decided against opening up the world-famous McNeil River Bear Sanctuary and bordering state game refuge to brown bear trophy hunting. In addition, they excluded federal park and refuge lands from an aerial wolf killing program in interior Alaska. Unfortunately, they also expanded aerial and same-day wolf killing in one area, and increased the areas where hunters can use snowmobiles to pursue and kill wolves.
Please visit www.savealaskawolves.org to help with our continued efforts to stop aerial wolf killing, and listen to our weekly audio updates on what's happening in Alaska.
Mar 23, 2005
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
On March 16th the US Senate voted to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling. See how each Senator voted on this issue www.savearcticrefuge.org/sections/senatevote.html
Even if you are not a US citizen this should concern you. Follow the link www.savearcticrefuge.org to send a Senator your comments.
Mar 10, 2005
XFM Radio London England
"Claire Sturgess" will be featuring "some one turning" on Xfm this Wednesday March 30th, 10pm UK time.
1:00pm Pacific
3:00pm Central
4:00pm Eastern
www.xfm.co.uk
ARCTIC's new Electronic Press Kit on Sonicbids
Check it out! www.sonicbids.com/arctic with new photos by Wayne Hoecherl. You can see the new photos by clicking the Photo tab on the Sonicbids ARCTIC page.
