Video: Working with Ranchers to Protect Livestock and Wolves

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Defenders' Suzanne Stone and Roger Olson of the Wood River Project in Idaho demonstrate the proven, nonlethal techniques being used to successfully prevent wolf-livestock conflicts.

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Defenders Publication
A comprehensive guide that outlines a wide range of nonlethal methods that are working to reduce livestock losses to wolves.
Policy
Eighty percent of threatened and endangered species rely on privately owned land for their habitat needs and in the U.S. most of our private land is managed by farmers, ranchers and forest landowners.
Ocelot, © Erwin & Peggy Bauer / Wildstock
In the Magazine
Most funding for wildlife comes from the Farm Bill, which funds project like those that create habitat for ocelots.
Grizzly Bear, © Lisa Sidorsky
Defenders in Action
Bears die when they get into trouble with people’s garbage, livestock, when they are hit by cars and trains or illegally killed. By preventing these conflicts we can keep bears alive and on the road to recovery.