Activists fight Kootenay wolf cull - Action News
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British Columbia

Activists fight Kootenay wolf cull

Animal rights activists in the Kootenays say the provincial government is wrong for killing wolves to save the dying southern Purcel caribou herd.

Biologists say just 15 caribou remain in southern Purcell herd

Animal rights activists in the Kootenays are criticizing the provincial government for killing wolves to save a dying caribou herd.

The Ministry of Forestsplans to move 40 cariboufrom a healthy herd in the Dease Lake area, about 250km south of the B.C.-Yukon border. The animals will join the southern Purcell herd near Cranbrook.

Officials hope the transplanted caribou will boost the dwindling southern Purcell herd. Provincial biologists say there are just 15 caribou left in the area.

To ensure the transplanted caribou survive, the government will likely kill some of their natural predatorswolves and cougars.

Shelley Black, who runs the Northern Lights Wildlife Wolf Centre, says that's a terrible plan.

"Culling species to increase another, which our province seems to do quite regularly, is silly," said Black. "We are trying to make people aware the wolf isn't a threat to us it's a very important predator."

Black has started a petition to stop the wolf kill.

But even government biologists concede if the transplanted caribou have any chance at survival, some of their predators have to be destroyed.

With files from the CBC's Bob Keating