Can we learn to live with wolves again?

Can we learn to live with wolves again?

Taxidermist Edwin Carter, also termed a “naturist,” is seen in Breckenridge with a large wolf pelt taken in the Colorado Rockies.
At the White River Museum in Meeker in a glass case is the hide and head of a snarling wolf, his pelt dusty, his teeth yellow. He was the last wolf killed in Rio Blanco County. He stares out at us with glass eyes. Close to the pelt is an historic sheep wagon, a sarsaparilla machine and other pioneer artifacts.
The original book cover art from the 1929 publication of “The Last Stand of the Pack.” Note the snarling, aggressive wolf. In the 1920s, wolves were seen as vermin to be exterminated. Now biologists realize that wolves play a vital role in diverse ecosystems as a top-tier predator keeping prey species healthy and in check.
Bureau of Biological Survey hunter Bill Smith is seen with a chained wolf pup at the entrance to a wolf den. The pup was chained to attract its parents so they could be killed.
A howling wolf has a front paw caught in a leg trap. These traps are now illegal but can be used by federal trappers working for the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal Services Department.
A map shows were the last wolves were killed in Colorado and where historic wolf pelts can be found in the state’s museums. The map by Robert Garcia appears in the latest edition of “The Last Stand of the Pack,” by Arthur Carhart and edited by Andrew Gulliford and Tom Wolf.

Can we learn to live with wolves again?

Taxidermist Edwin Carter, also termed a “naturist,” is seen in Breckenridge with a large wolf pelt taken in the Colorado Rockies.
At the White River Museum in Meeker in a glass case is the hide and head of a snarling wolf, his pelt dusty, his teeth yellow. He was the last wolf killed in Rio Blanco County. He stares out at us with glass eyes. Close to the pelt is an historic sheep wagon, a sarsaparilla machine and other pioneer artifacts.
The original book cover art from the 1929 publication of “The Last Stand of the Pack.” Note the snarling, aggressive wolf. In the 1920s, wolves were seen as vermin to be exterminated. Now biologists realize that wolves play a vital role in diverse ecosystems as a top-tier predator keeping prey species healthy and in check.
Bureau of Biological Survey hunter Bill Smith is seen with a chained wolf pup at the entrance to a wolf den. The pup was chained to attract its parents so they could be killed.
A howling wolf has a front paw caught in a leg trap. These traps are now illegal but can be used by federal trappers working for the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal Services Department.
A map shows were the last wolves were killed in Colorado and where historic wolf pelts can be found in the state’s museums. The map by Robert Garcia appears in the latest edition of “The Last Stand of the Pack,” by Arthur Carhart and edited by Andrew Gulliford and Tom Wolf.