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Does Sweden have room for its wolves?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 April 2009

Stephen Mills
Affiliation:
Church Cottages, Forest Hill, Oxford OX9 1ED, UK.
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Just before Christmas 1985 wolf researchers in Sweden made a particularly ugly discovery: the ritually mutilated corpse of an 18-month-old pup. It had been shot and scalped, its ears removed and a hind leg cut off. Then, in February 1986, another young wolf was chased along a forest track by a car, which smashed its back legs and killed it. These are merely the latest incidents in an irrational anti-wolf campaign, which is threatening the species's tentative come-back in Scandinavia. The author, who has worked extensively with Scandinavian conservationists since 1971, describes the plight of Sweden's wolves and explains why it is important to protect them.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna and Flora International 1987

References

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