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News From 91.3 KUWS
Wolf hating waning as many surveyed say wolves should be protected
 
4/25/2005

Wolves are still scary to people. but a new survey says most folks no longer think wolves should be exterminated. Mike Simonson has the story.

A Northland College Sociology professor in Ashland has finished a five year study of what people think about wolves in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Minnesota. After decades of bounties, poisoning and trapping, the last wolf in Wisconsin was killed when it was hit by a car in 1960 near Cornucopia. Wolves were temporarily annihilated.but have recovered to the point of being down-listed from endangered species to threatened. More than 600 people in Michigan and Wisconsin responded to a survey about wolves done by Northland College Sociology Professor Kevin Schanning. He says people from both states feel the same way: 62% think there's reason to worry about wolves being dangerous, and only 20-percent think killing a wolf is wrong. But Schanning says 57% think wolves should be protected. "The general public in both states are saying 'I'm not exactly sure how to manage them but managing them by euthanising them or somehow killing them doesn't seem to be very accepted." Schanning says this survey shows people appreciate wolves as a natural part of things. "When you ask people about 'are wolves the symbol of the beauty and wonder of nature? Do we need wolves to help manage the eco-system'. 75%-80% responded are saying 'yeah, we need wolves. They're a part of our state now and we need to manage them, we need to protect them." A judge's ruling is keeping wolves in Wisconsin on the endangered species list, but federal officials want to see wolves moved to a less urgent "threatened" level. 120 wolf packs roam Wisconsin.mostly in the northwoods area north of Highway 8.

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