Replacing the missing links
Tags: WILDLIFE reintroduction; ENDANGERED species
Related Articles
- Towards an Endangered Species Reintroduction Paradigm. Reading, Richard P.; Clark, Tim W.; Kellert, Stephen R. // Endangered Species Update;Jul/Aug2002, Vol. 19 Issue 4, p142
Reintroduction programs are becoming increasingly more common, but most fail. We suggest that one reason for this lack of success is a narrow focus on biological and technical aspects of the reintroduction challenge to the exclusion of other important elements. We provide a more holistic...
- Throwing Canis Lupus to the Wolves: United States v. McKittrick and the Existence of the Yellowstone and Central Idaho Experimental Wolf Populations Under a Flawed Provision of the Endangered... Dinger, Daniel R. // Brigham Young University Law Review;2000, Vol. 2000 Issue 1, p377
Analyzes the wolf reintroduction efforts in the United States' (US) Yellowstone National Park and the Rocky Mountain in Alaska. History of wolves in the US; Endangered Species Act of 1973; Role of the Wyoming Farm Bureau Federation versus Babbitt case in the halting of the efforts of wolf...
- Wolves: Conservationists celebrate endangered species act success story. // International Wildlife;Nov/Dec98, Vol. 28 Issue 6, p6
Reports on plans to reduce federal involvement in wolf management programs in the United States. Success of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 in protecting wolves and restoring populations to the Yellowstone region and central Idaho; Removal of Endangered Species Act protection for gray wolves...
- THE "WHOLLY SEPARATE" TRUTH: DID THE YELLOWSTONE WOLF REINTRODUCTION VIOLATE SECTION 10 (J) OF THE ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT? Brown, Elizabeth Cowan // Boston College Environmental Affairs Law Review;Spring2000, Vol. 27 Issue 3, p425
Focuses on the reintroduction of the gray wolf into Yellowstone Park and central Idaho. Description of a typical wolf pack; Details on the 1973 Endangered Species Act; Overview of the Northern Rocky Mountain Recovery Plan; Lawsuits which have interpreted the legality of the gray wolf...
- The condor flies again. Heim, B. // Boys' Life;Feb1992, Vol. 82 Issue 2, p14
Reports on news and information about the environment and the animal kingdom. California condors are being put back in the wild; The decline in 6,000 kinds of bird species and 1,000 are in danger of extinction; Danger that the Florida panther could become extinct.
- BECOMING FERRET-FRIENDLY. Brown, Chris // E: The Environmental Magazine;Mar/Apr2005, Vol. 16 Issue 2, p25
Reports on the improvement of the population of endangered ferret of North America, as of March 2005. Factor that contributed to the endangered status of ferrets; Significance of the reintroduction of ferrets into the wild to their reproduction.
- New Digs for the Ferret? Cohn, Jeffrey P. // Americas;Jan/Feb2002, Vol. 54 Issue 1, p16
Focuses on a multinational program aimed at introducing an endangered species called black footed ferrets in the grasslands of Chihuahua, Mexico. Physical and genetic description of the species; Actions taken by wildlife services in releasing captive ferrets to the wild; Overview of how ferrets...
- NEW CHANCE FOR FERRETS? Aschwanden, Christie // International Wildlife;Sep/Oct2001, Vol. 31 Issue 5, p38
Reports on conservation efforts for the endangered black-footed ferret by the United States with help from Mexico. Breeding of ferrets at the National Black-Footed Ferret Conservation Center in Wyoming; Release of ferrets in northwestern Chihuahua, Mexico; Planned restoration of ferret habitats...
- Panther diary. Osofsky, Steven A. // Natural History;Apr88, Vol. 97 Issue 4, p50
The Florida panther, a subspecies of cougar, also known as puma or mountain lion, is now listed as endangered. When one was hit by a truck, then captured and brought to the veterinary hospital, the author spent seven weeks healing him before releasing him again to the wild.


