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Highlights

WOLVES KEEP FORESTS NUTRIENT RICH

The downed prey of wolves found to create hotspots of forest fertility.
by JEREMY HANCE, Mongabay.com

Researchers from Michigan Technological University found that when wolves take down their prey—in this case moose—they do more than simply keep a check on herbivore populations. The corpses of wolf-hunted moose create hotspots of forest fertility by enriching the soil with biochemicals. Due to this sudden up-tick in nutrients, microbial and fungal growth explodes, in turn providing extra nutrients for plants near the kill.

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News and Evnets

WOLF-BORN HYDATID DISEASE: FACT VERSUS FALLACY

by TERRI ADAMS, The Prairie Star
There's an uproar over wolves carrying the disease, but they're not the only ones

OUTFITTERS BACK OFF CALL FOR MORE WOLF TURF

Federal Agency, wolf protest participants at odds over 'facts.'
by CORY HATCH, Jackson Hole News & Guide

WOLVES KEEP FORESTS NUTRIENT RICH

The downed prey of wolves found to create hotspots of forest fertility.
by JEREMY HANCE, Mongabay.com

WITH WOLVES IN WOODS, EVERYTHING IS CONNECTED

It is useful to be reminded that the wolf plays a useful and legitimate role on the landscape.
by GREG TOLLEFSON, Missoulian.

BIOLOGIST’S FINDINGS SHOW FOREST DIVERSITY, HEALTH INFLUENCED BY WOLVES

Remove the wolf...everything changes, top to bottom, right down to the dirt.
by MICHAEL JAMISON, Missoulian

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