The Ontario may soon decide whether or not to open up wolf and coyote hunting across more than 750,000km2 of northern Ontario.
Please remind them that wolves and coyotes shouldn't be blamed for moose declines, and ask them to abandon proposed changes that would:
The Ontario may soon decide whether or not to open up wolf and coyote hunting across more than 750,000km2 of northern Ontario.
Please remind them that wolves and coyotes shouldn't be blamed for moose declines, and ask them to abandon proposed changes that would:
Protecting moose means taking meaningful actions to halt climate change, ending the moose calf hunt, tightening adult moose hunting regulations and conserving ecosystem function at the landscape level.
If the Ministers remove mandatory reporting that was introduced in 2005, we'll never know how many wolf and coyote family packs will be torn apart under new regulations. Wolves and coyote live in family-based packs. Losing even one pack member can result in social breakdown and affect their collective survival.
There is no scientific justification for these changes. The Ontario government admits that more wolf hunting won't increase moose, and that eastern coyotes don't impact moose since they don't overlap in northern Ontario.
Ask the Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry and Premier Ford to stand by Ontario's Wolf Conservation Strategy and conserve these keystone species.
Photo: Michael J. McIntosh
Exercise your environmental rights and comment in support of wolf conservation, not hunting. We defeated these changes in 2015, now let's do it again! Comments are directed to the public input coordinators running the consultation, the Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry, the Premier and your MPP.