XT
December 9, 2021, 11:32pm
568
You never know which brightly colored brick-lined path a thread might go down. You just need to walk down it, arm in arm with your friends, head held high and a song in your heart…
Babale
December 9, 2021, 11:38pm
569
That’s fascinating! There is also solid evidence that healthy wolf populations control coyote populations very effectively, but only when the wolves have access to wide ranges:
“This research shows that apex predators like dingoes and wolves need large, continuous territories in order to effectively control the balance of their ecosystems,” said lead author Thomas Newsome of Deakin University and the University of Sydney in Australia. “Humans need a greater tolerance of apex predators if we want to enjoy the environmental benefits they can provide.”
Only in the northern regions of Canada and parts of Alaska do wolves still roam across the large landscapes they once occupied. Elsewhere in North America, patchwork conservation efforts have brought wolves back in areas such as Yellowstone National Park, the northern Rockies, and eastern Washington and Oregon. Though wolves are on the upswing in these regions, their populations are likely too isolated to control the pervasive coyote and other small predators
This thread is so far off-topic now and generating more reports than the rest of the board combined. So I think it is time to shut it down.
And yes, I know some of you will think this is a terrible thing. Its not.