Reintroducing top predators to areas they had been run out of, has helped in so many areas. If we can stop shark finning, imagine the difference that would make to our oceans and reefs.
Some ranchers are complaining that the wolves are taking their cattle, however when scientists look at the data from before and now, there was no increase in the percentage of cattle being lost by ranchers, but the wolves do scavenge the cattle that died from other causes.
And then taxpayers reimburse ranchers for livestock lost to predators, all on the rancher's word of course, and I believe we pay way more than the animal lost was worth, not to mention most of these 'losses' were actually scavenged. It's called scapegoating, and lying.
Nature fixed itself in about 20 years...amazing that humans have been trying for thousands of years now and still haven't quite figured out how to get it right...
Did you miss the part about how the wolves were "reintroduced"? Humans fixed nature by reintroducing a part of the designed ecosystem that had been removed previously.
@@matterman2003 I agree, if you mean they should not have deliberately killed off the wolves. I have no problem with humans being in Yellowstone of course, but hunting wildlife to extinction is normally not a good thing.
@@patrikpersson9364 your right that’s exactly what those lazy , pot bellied ranchers did in Yellowstone just so they could raise beef prices. Blame the wolf because that’s easier than maintaining their own ranches. Easier to let them graze play god wipe out a species so they can profit. . You can’t see your own dick let alone a wolf track . No use trying to educate the uneducated to actually understand wolf behaviour..And you know that collar that’s around their necks . That’s for research, yes to educate not to shoot. And yes we did send you bigger wolves from here in Alberta but to shoot it and call it trophy hunting truly is Sad. Word for today CONSERVATION. Try it just maybe the next generation can actually enjoy these magnificent animals.
@@hyenaboy7504 The mooses are now extinct in Yellowstone. There were around 2.000 of them when wolves were planted. Today they are gone. Just one thing of many, that has gone wrong in this fantasyworld of ignorance, called Yellowstone succesfull administration. But…….dream on.
@@offtherecordxx >"Pat Murphy: Maybe they should let some wolves loose in Chicago...." >"Robert Weisman: That's the best comment you can think of?" >"rube dawgg: @Robert Weisman it was pretty funny." I took it to mean that in the end, there will be more beavers in Chicago.
Seeing between 14 and 41 wolves. The definitive number might be from NatGeo, which reports, "between 1995 and 1997, wildlife officials reintroduced 41 wolves to Yellowstone." So it seems there were multiple partial releases.
@@RipperYou " Although reintroduction of predators can reverse effects of their loss [8,9], this reversal will not occur when the loss of predators from food webs gives rise to an ecosystem state that is resilient to the effects of predator restoration" - In this case it was not resilient, since the deers or whatever had to chenge their behavior, allowing plants to grow, and also reduced their number. Etc. So no resilience.
Could it be that fast? If you are taking these statements at face value it sounds like 100 years or more of change, especially in relation to erosion & rivers. Some of these conclusions must be extrapolations, though that doesn't make them less true
Thanks for bringing up the real story. Every sp. on earth makes it a better place for all and without them the humans can't survive, it will get extinct one day.
Yes, this is true, but deer also play a part in the ecosystem, and, just like anything in the ecosystem, too populated and underpopulated can lead to interesting resultd
I just got out of the hospital and I'm so sick and this s*** dirty filthy hole I was in the hospital for 8 days and hours nights I'm sick I'm sick and no one's helping me 358 our net boulevard Rochester New York 14619 and also Strong memorial 601 Elmwood avenue and all the adjacent property all of Earth
@@hyenaboy7504 - The moose are now extinct in Yellowstone (2.000 individuals before) and the elk population has dropped with 95%. In reality, Yellowstone is obviously out of control. Clearly fantasies/propaganda/lies.
🧝🏻♀️And this is why I say wolves are mystical and magical creatures in my opinion… Guided through ancestry and spirit guides I believe they’re very powerful strong and I never knew how much is true within my feelings of such a great animal and you really personally know or have been around but would love love love to this is why I hope they stay in peace become bigger and larger overtime never to lose its spotlight🤟🏻🥰🥰🥰🥰
but.... the wolves were added by humans... not God, the point is that the ecosystem wasnt in harmony(the way God had made it) but with the arrtificial addition of wolves, the ecosystem became more diverse and increased the vegetation and balance.
all you people that want to hunt and kill these beautiful animals should read this,I am tired of trophy hunters, wish we could put them in a pen and let the animals hunt them.....
What's left of the true GOP ("Republicans", those who stand for our republic), is the only thing standing between the USA and neo-communist totalitarianism.
"Nature is amazing", yes, but only because God, the Creator, made it that way. Things like this are perfect evidence of highly intelligent design. Do not worship the creation, worship the One who made it all. Not just that; God's original creation was perfect with no death or suffering needed, either for humans or for animals. Yet God foreknew we would rebel and thus engineered systems like this, capable of thriving even in a cursed world where death and suffering have become the norm.
but.... the wolves were added by humans... not God, the point is that the ecosystem wasnt in harmony(the way God had made it) but with the arrtificial addition of wolves, the ecosystem became more diverse and increased the vegetation and balance.
@@tuscanyiscol god created it and man reinctroduced wolves improving the ecosystem as a whole. please think about what youre saying before youre saying it.
@@tuscanyiscol yes but I just think it's stupid people are out here thanking God for something that someone fixed about god's unstable ecosystem. I'm not saying we're the most eco friendly group but in this situation god is to blame for the previous ecosystem.
This is a beautiful video but it took something away from credibility when they kept referring to the wolves chasing deer. Those were elk they are chasing.
They didn't mention how the wolves that were introduced were the larger, more aggressive Canadian wolves. They also decimated the populations of the native grey and timber wolves. The bright side, they breed voraciously, so there are more to kill
Matthew, I'm currently reading The Rise of Wolf 8. a book about the reintroduction of wolves in Yellowstone. The book features Wolf 8 as a central character. There were no grey or timber wolves at all in Yellowstone prior to the reintroduction of the wolves from Canada. The native wolves were all shot by park rangers with the last wolf being killed in 1926. Not sure why you would want to kill wolves. They're gorgeous animals and they keep the ecosystem in balance. This is pretty well documented. An additional note - park services estimates that wolf tourism to the park is worth at least $35 million a year to the economy of the neighbouring towns.
@@VillageTechnologies ”Ecosystem in balance”? The moose are now extinct in Yellowstone (2.000 individuals before) and the elk population has dropped with 95%. Yellowstone is dead, if the park administration doesn’t act soon. The ecosystem in Yellowstone is capable of handling maximum 10 wolves, they got over 100. The park administration lies, like all wildlife parks, everywhere, have always done.
Thats easily the best example of one action snowballing into the ultimate conclusion ive ever heard. Absolutly fascinating.
Reintroducing top predators to areas they had been run out of, has helped in so many areas. If we can stop shark finning, imagine the difference that would make to our oceans and reefs.
Some ranchers are complaining that the wolves are taking their cattle, however when scientists look at the data from before and now, there was no increase in the percentage of cattle being lost by ranchers, but the wolves do scavenge the cattle that died from other causes.
Gerard Trigo they say wolves do 1% of all livestock killing in the world
they need to learn to live with them , as we do in Canada ,
I agree with this statement, people need to learn how to deal with things around them. They need to find a mental homeostasis that they can adapt to
That’s true
And then taxpayers reimburse ranchers for livestock lost to predators, all on the rancher's word of course, and I believe we pay way more than the animal lost was worth, not to mention most of these 'losses' were actually scavenged. It's called scapegoating, and lying.
Good work!
thanks for this video because im doing this for my homework to present to my class! thanks!
That is so amazing!
That is really awesome!
This is why carnivores are important to the ecosystem.
Nature fixed itself in about 20 years...amazing that humans have been trying for thousands of years now and still haven't quite figured out how to get it right...
Did you miss the part about how the wolves were "reintroduced"? Humans fixed nature by reintroducing a part of the designed ecosystem that had been removed previously.
@@TruthSword7 Humans just should have stayed out of it from the beginning and nothing would have needed to be fixed.
@@matterman2003 I agree, if you mean they should not have deliberately killed off the wolves. I have no problem with humans being in Yellowstone of course, but hunting wildlife to extinction is normally not a good thing.
Humans are also animals and are part of nature.
@@mzenji yes but we are also the only ones that have massive amounts of control over everything else
0:11 THAT AINT NO DEER!
THATS AN ELK.
Have you even seen an elk? That's not an elk.
Isak Hemmingsson I think he is talking about the second clip
CHILLS.
How extraordinary!
Wow!
Thanx tp wolves love them🌹❤
thats so cool
Beautiful
I think nature is so amazing
Amazing! ' When there's a better balance between prey and predator, there's possibility of more species thriving.'
That's what everybody hopes for!
Dreams and lying propaganda are always amazing…
@@patrikpersson9364 your right that’s exactly what those lazy , pot bellied ranchers did in Yellowstone just so they could raise beef prices. Blame the wolf because that’s easier than maintaining their own ranches. Easier to let them graze play god wipe out a species so they can profit. . You can’t see your own dick let alone a wolf track . No use trying to educate the uneducated to actually understand wolf behaviour..And you know that collar that’s around their necks . That’s for research, yes to educate not to shoot. And yes we did send you bigger wolves from here in Alberta but to shoot it and call it trophy hunting truly is Sad. Word for today CONSERVATION. Try it just maybe the next generation can actually enjoy these magnificent animals.
@@patrikpersson9364 What "dreams and lying propaganda" are you talking about? I don't think ecosystems are "dreams and lying propaganda".
@@hyenaboy7504 The mooses are now extinct in Yellowstone. There were around 2.000 of them when wolves were planted. Today they are gone. Just one thing of many, that has gone wrong in this fantasyworld of ignorance, called Yellowstone succesfull administration. But…….dream on.
They were GOOD BOYS
this is amazing
Maybe they should let some wolves loose in Chicago....
That's the best comment you can think of?
@@offtherecordxx it was pretty funny.
@@offtherecordxx
>"Pat Murphy: Maybe they should let some wolves loose in Chicago...."
>"Robert Weisman: That's the best comment you can think of?"
>"rube dawgg: @Robert Weisman it was pretty funny."
I took it to mean that in the end, there will be more beavers in Chicago.
Seeing between 14 and 41 wolves. The definitive number might be from NatGeo, which reports, "between 1995 and 1997, wildlife officials reintroduced 41 wolves to Yellowstone." So it seems there were multiple partial releases.
Yes.
So this is why you'd want 14 wolves.
Cool
Nature's balance.
here from science class
same
@@shutupsiya3428 Ms.winchell???
A good example of the Butterfly Effect!
This answers the question.
Who are we to change Gods Creation also, the one Commandment for Man only “Thou Shall Not Kill” here’s Proof❤️🙏🏽
An amazing story if true (and I hope it is). What is the source of the information?
@@RipperYou " Although reintroduction of predators can reverse effects of their loss [8,9], this reversal will not occur when the loss of predators from food webs gives rise to an ecosystem state that is resilient to the effects of predator restoration" - In this case it was not resilient, since the deers or whatever had to chenge their behavior, allowing plants to grow, and also reduced their number. Etc. So no resilience.
Could it be that fast? If you are taking these statements at face value it sounds like 100 years or more of change, especially in relation to erosion & rivers. Some of these conclusions must be extrapolations, though that doesn't make them less true
Thanks for bringing up the real story. Every sp. on earth makes it a better place for all and without them the humans can't survive, it will get extinct one day.
We need wolves back everywhere, not just the west or Yellowstone, but back to their former habitat. The wolves were really screwed by humans.
So they built a self sustaining farm area.
I am sure that the coyote lobbyists have something to say about this.
Keep in mind, It was the unconstrained deer population that originally caused the ecological destruction.
Yes, this is true, but deer also play a part in the ecosystem, and, just like anything in the ecosystem, too populated and underpopulated can lead to interesting resultd
? deer make good meat so I reckon they would've been fair game (hunting)
Can you hunt in national parks?
The wolves also brought jazz back to the working man and cured aids.
To everyone saying the wolves are "invasive: get a dictionary and look up the word "invasive", since you don't know what it means.
I just got out of the hospital and I'm so sick and this s*** dirty filthy hole I was in the hospital for 8 days and hours nights I'm sick I'm sick and no one's helping me 358 our net boulevard Rochester New York 14619 and also Strong memorial 601 Elmwood avenue and all the adjacent property all of Earth
This needs to happen in Africa. Lions are endangered, and the ecosystem is going to hell.
oof
🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
All species except for humans bring good to the earth.
is it possible to get the full doco
Dream on, it’s fantasies.
@@patrikpersson9364 What is?
@@hyenaboy7504 - The moose are now extinct in Yellowstone (2.000 individuals before) and the elk population has dropped with 95%. In reality, Yellowstone is obviously out of control. Clearly fantasies/propaganda/lies.
@@patrikpersson9364 If the moose ARE extinct, it will be because of humans, not wolves.
@@hyenaboy7504 MG, stupidity really has a name……
There's no hunting allowed in yellowstone National Park. So they introduced the other hunters.
This is exactly why we need wolves, everyone.
Thanks to one man the park is at its peak again
surely its thanks to the 14 wolves, the person who reintroduced the wolves didnt do much.
🧝🏻♀️And this is why I say wolves are mystical and magical creatures in my opinion… Guided through ancestry and spirit guides I believe they’re very powerful strong and I never knew how much is true within my feelings of such a great animal and you really personally know or have been around but would love love love to this is why I hope they stay in peace become bigger and larger overtime never to lose its spotlight🤟🏻🥰🥰🥰🥰
Goddamn I almost started tearing up watching this
How strange. You're tearing up at God's creation and damning Him at the same time. Not a good look.
@@TruthSword7 you’re judging when you should be leaving it up to your god. Not a good look either mate
@@parkerstroh6586 How do you figure? Jesus taught to judge with right judgment, not hypocritical judgment. Jesus is my God. Who is yours?
@@TruthSword7 can you give me a verse?
@@parkerstroh6586 Matthew 7:5. Take the beam out of your own eye, so you can see clearly to remove the splinter from your neighbor's eye.
Omkl
هل من شخصآ هنا من بني يعـرب 🥴
God is amazing! He created the world to be in balance!
but.... the wolves were added by humans... not God, the point is that the ecosystem wasnt in harmony(the way God had made it) but with the arrtificial addition of wolves, the ecosystem became more diverse and increased the vegetation and balance.
@@averiltallack5665 Humans did not invent or create wolves. Humans killed off the wolves to begin with, and only later tried to undo that damage.
Another Human MISS MANAGED PROGRAM and with all that EDUCATION ? ! HUMMMMMMM !
all you people that want to hunt and kill these beautiful animals should read this,I am tired of trophy hunters, wish we could put them in a pen and let the animals hunt them.....
There's sustainable hunting and then there's hunting to extinction. Two very different things.
Better yet just get rid of the GOP
What's left of the true GOP ("Republicans", those who stand for our republic), is the only thing standing between the USA and neo-communist totalitarianism.
The wolves devastated the environment, by killing all the deer and elk! Now hunters are not allowed to hunt no more
How can a native species devaste the environment? By your logic, the environment would have been devastated thousands of years ago.
An excellent video with awful audio.
Wolves rock!!! Amazing how one animal can affect the ecological balance of Yellowstone.
“It all started with the wolves hunting deer….”
and then shows a clip of a wolf hunting a cow elk…
"Nature is amazing", yes, but only because God, the Creator, made it that way. Things like this are perfect evidence of highly intelligent design. Do not worship the creation, worship the One who made it all. Not just that; God's original creation was perfect with no death or suffering needed, either for humans or for animals. Yet God foreknew we would rebel and thus engineered systems like this, capable of thriving even in a cursed world where death and suffering have become the norm.
Death is part of life what are you talking about? So animals didn’t use to eat each other?
This showed How God is amazing who created and designed the nature
God created it and man is destroying it. We need to change our relationship with this beautifull blessed earth before it is too late!
God bless
but.... the wolves were added by humans... not God, the point is that the ecosystem wasnt in harmony(the way God had made it) but with the arrtificial addition of wolves, the ecosystem became more diverse and increased the vegetation and balance.
@@tuscanyiscol god created it and man reinctroduced wolves improving the ecosystem as a whole. please think about what youre saying before youre saying it.
@@averiltallack5665 Man killed the wolves. Man destroys thousands of miles of habitat every year, and we are running out, very fast.
@@tuscanyiscol yes but I just think it's stupid people are out here thanking God for something that someone fixed about god's unstable ecosystem. I'm not saying we're the most eco friendly group but in this situation god is to blame for the previous ecosystem.
Ain't nun but God
aint nun but humans reintroducing wolves and improving the unstable ecosystem created by "god"
@@averiltallack5665 You're very confused. Humans are the ones who destabilized the ecosystem in the first place by killing the wolves.
This is a beautiful video but it took something away from credibility when they kept referring to the wolves chasing deer. Those were elk they are chasing.
Elk are a type of deer. Moose are also deer.
They didn't mention how the wolves that were introduced were the larger, more aggressive Canadian wolves.
They also decimated the populations of the native grey and timber wolves. The bright side, they breed voraciously, so there are more to kill
Matthew, I'm currently reading The Rise of Wolf 8. a book about the reintroduction of wolves in Yellowstone. The book features Wolf 8 as a central character. There were no grey or timber wolves at all in Yellowstone prior to the reintroduction of the wolves from Canada. The native wolves were all shot by park rangers with the last wolf being killed in 1926. Not sure why you would want to kill wolves. They're gorgeous animals and they keep the ecosystem in balance. This is pretty well documented. An additional note - park services estimates that wolf tourism to the park is worth at least $35 million a year to the economy of the neighbouring towns.
@@VillageTechnologies ”Ecosystem in balance”? The moose are now extinct in Yellowstone (2.000 individuals before) and the elk population has dropped with 95%. Yellowstone is dead, if the park administration doesn’t act soon. The ecosystem in Yellowstone is capable of handling maximum 10 wolves, they got over 100. The park administration lies, like all wildlife parks, everywhere, have always done.
They’re dogs. You don’t kill dogs. Dogs rule.