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Rocky Mtn Squid

EL CID SQUID
Veteran
It Started With Just 14 Wolves. Then, Yellowstone Changed in Ways We Never Predicted

It Started With Just 14 Wolves. Then, Yellowstone Changed in Ways We Never Predicted

384-yellowstone-wolves-reintroduction-0_1024.jpg


A new study shows the impact of the "most celebrated ecological experiment in history".

Yellowstone isn't just a supervolcano. It isn't just a national park. It's also a science lab, even if it doesn't really look like one.

And not just any science lab, either, but the site of the "most celebrated ecological experiment in history", according to a new study.

In a broad overview of over 40 years of research at Yellowstone National Park, University of Alberta ecologist Mark Boyce looks at how a reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone that began in 1995 ended up having vast ecological ripple effects beyond what anyone could have envisaged at the time.

"Yellowstone has benefited from the reintroduction of wolves in ways that we did not anticipate, especially the complexity of biological interactions in the park," explains Boyce.

The wolves were not always so popular.

In 1872, when Yellowstone was first designated as a national park, there was no legal protection for any of the existing wildlife within it, and over the decades to come, mass culling programs killed thousands of wolves, resulting in what was widely regarded as a successful extirpation (localised extinction) within Yellowstone by 1926.

This forced removal, however, had unintended consequences for the park.

In the absence of the deadly apex predator, the local elk population flourished, with booming numbers leading to mass overgrazing that resulted in widespread deterioration in a number of plant species, in turn causing land erosion and various knock-on effects on other animals.

Within a scant timeframe of only years, the elk had replaced the wolf as the face of Yellowstone's ecosystem issues, but it wasn't until decades later that calls to reintroduce the wolf were finally heard and acted upon.

"Eventually, in 1995, 14 wolves from Alberta were released in Yellowstone, supplemented by another 17 Canadian wolves in 1996," Boyce writes in his paper.

In the space of five years, these 31 individuals multiplied into numerous, distributed wolfpacks.

They thinned the elk and thus helped to bring about an ecological phenomenon known as a trophic cascade – a reduction of predation (in this case, of elk eating plants) that triggers changes for other diminished or affected species throughout an interconnected food chain.

In the case of Yellowstone, Boyce says the woody plants willow and cottonwood in particular sprang back thanks to reduced elk, as did bison, possibly thanks to less competition from elk.

Overall, this demonstrates a trophic cascade that he describes as being "among the most significant advances in conservation biology of this century".

A much-loved YouTube video that's been watched almost 40 million times tells the same story, although it's also been criticised for oversimplifying the complex ecosystem interactions. Still, it's definitely an inspirational viewing:

[YOUTUBEIF]ysa5OBhXz-Q[/YOUTUBEIF]

But did it really happen like the video makes out?

Ever since the wolf reintroduction narrative became a kind of 'ecosystem restoration' trope in popular science, numerous studies and commentators have pointed out it's not quite that simple.

These voices argue elk weren't as affected as we might have thought, and say the restoration is nowhere near complete.

"It's a really romantic story," Utah State University ecologist Dan McNulty told AccuWeather in April.

"It's a story about a world that doesn't really exist."

From this point of view, we're doing ourselves a scientific disservice if we get too wrapped up in the 'wolf saviour' stereotype, because there's a lot more going on in Yellowstone ecologically.

"We now know that elk are tougher, and Yellowstone more complex, than we gave them credit for," wildlife ecologist Arthur Middleton from UC Berkeley wrote in The New York Times in 2014.

"By retelling the same old story about Yellowstone wolves, we distract attention from bigger problems, mislead ourselves about the true challenges of managing ecosystems, and add to the mythology surrounding wolves at the expense of scientific understanding."

That's a good point to bear in mind, but from the seasoned, sober perspective of Boyce's multi-decade research, there's no denying wolves did help to shape a trophic cascade in Yellowstone National Park – a transformation made possible by essentially removing another dangerous animal from the equation: us.

"We would have never seen these responses if the park hadn't followed an ecological-process management paradigm," Boyce says, "allowing natural ecological processes to take place with minimal human intervention."

The findings are reported in Journal of Mammalogy.


Source : https://www.sciencealert.com/how-31-wolves-transformed-yellowstone-in-ways-nobody-could-ever-have-predicted-national-park-wolf-reintroduction-trophic-cascade


RMS

:smoweed:
 

Rocky Mtn Squid

EL CID SQUID
Veteran
Adventure-seeking canine befriends family of bears

Adventure-seeking canine befriends family of bears

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When voyaging through Russia’s wild frontier, one might do well to avoid getting too close to huge bears – that is unless you’re a mischievous pup with the ability to charm your way into their trust.
The bizarre moment when a dog was able to frolic around safely with a group of bears has been captured by a drone operator near the village of Ust-Kamchatsk in Kamchatka.


[YOUTUBEIF]5dHz3BfeJdA[/YOUTUBEIF]


Source : https://www.rt.com/news/441832-dog-wrestles-russian-bears/


RMS

:smoweed:
 
R

Robrites

View Image

When voyaging through Russia’s wild frontier, one might do well to avoid getting too close to huge bears – that is unless you’re a mischievous pup with the ability to charm your way into their trust.
The bizarre moment when a dog was able to frolic around safely with a group of bears has been captured by a drone operator near the village of Ust-Kamchatsk in Kamchatka.


[youtubeif]5dHz3BfeJdA[/youtubeif]


Source : https://www.rt.com/news/441832-dog-wrestles-russian-bears/


RMS

:smoweed:


I used to have a dog like that....could make friends with just about any critter. Brought a pair of coyotes back one time and a moose another. The moose like him but chased me...
 

shithawk420

Well-known member
Veteran
I never did like that fucking wierdo.what kinda freak Jack's off and doesn't even try to fuck? She is kinda hot after all.fucking weirdos.shes a crazy bitch too.now that I think about it kinda makes sense.wierdos gonna wierdo
 

Rocky Mtn Squid

EL CID SQUID
Veteran
Judge Rejects Monsanto’s Bid to Overturn Glyphosate Conviction but Reduces Damages

Judge Rejects Monsanto’s Bid to Overturn Glyphosate Conviction but Reduces Damages

Why Am I Not Surprised....? :fsu:


monsanto-dewayne-Johnson.jpg



Earlier this week (October 2018) San Francisco Superior Court Judge Suzanne Ramos Bolanos rejected Monsanto’s appeal to overturn the jury verdict which found that glyphosate in the herbicide RoundUp causes cancer.

Judge Bolanos had earlier hinted that she might overturn the jury’s verdict, and eliminate the $250 million in punitive damages.

While denying Monsanto’s attorneys their request for a new trial, Judge Bolanos did reduce the punitive damages from $250 million to $39 million, the same amount (39 million) that was awarded to the plaintiff, Dewayne Johnson, who is not expected to live much longer due to his cancer diagnosis.

Judge Bolanos also stated that if Dewayne Johnson and his attorneys did not accept the reduction in punitive damages, that she would order a new trial.

Johnson’s lawyers said in a statement that the “reduction in punitive damages was unwarranted” and that his legal team, Baum Hedlund and the Miller Firm, was “weighing the options.” (Source.)

Bayer, now the parent company for Monsanto, stated that they would file another appeal of the jury’s verdict.

Source: https://healthimpactnews.com/2018/judge-rejects-monsantos-bid-to-overturn-glyphosate-conviction-but-reduces-punitive-damages-from-250-million-to-39-million/


RMS

:smoweed:
 

Rocky Mtn Squid

EL CID SQUID
Veteran
Handcuffed woman steals police car right in front of officers

Handcuffed woman steals police car right in front of officers

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Police in Oklahoma have released a shocking video of a woman who evaded arrest for stealing a car... by stealing the cop car she was put in by the very officers who pulled her over.
Angie Frost was arrested by officers of the Tulsa Police Department on suspicion of stealing a car in March. After being cuffed and placed in an officer’s car, she managed to maneuver her hands out from behind her back as officers searched the stolen car. She then slid over to the driver’s seat, before turning on the engine as officers watched in shock.

"She's trying to steal your car," an officer says. The flummoxed cops attempt to unlock the doors of their own vehicle as Frost simply drives away.

[YOUTUBEIF]NOe5U6B8dbM?ecver=1[/YOUTUBEIF]


However, the 36-year-old soon abandoned the cop car and attempted to flee on foot. Police caught her and led her to another patrol car.

Frost was charged with larceny of an automobile, possession of a stolen vehicle, escape from arrest, resisting arrest, and driving with a suspended driver’s license. She pled guilty to four counts in May and was sentenced to three years in prison.

Police bodycam footage taken from before Frost is placed in the patrol car shows her insisting that she didn’t know the car she was driving was stolen, adding she thought it belonged to a friend. She also offered to help officers with information about drugs and other criminal activity, and claimed she was already working with detectives to share information with them. ar. She can be heard crying, “I told you guys I didn’t steal that car.”

Source: https://www.rt.com/usa/442067-handcuffed-woman-steals-cop-car/


RMS

:smoweed:
 

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