The Day

Tourists told not to visit Wyo. after a man hit wolf then took it to a bar

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(AP) — As Yellowston­e National Park in Wyoming opens for the busy summer season, wildlife advocates are leading a call for a boycott of the conservati­ve ranching state over laws that give people wide leeway to kill gray wolves with little oversight.

The social media accounts of Wyoming’s tourism agency are being flooded with comments urging people to steer clear of the Cowboy State amid accusation­s that a man struck a wolf with a snowmobile, taped its mouth shut and showed off the injured animal at a Sublette County bar before killing it.

While critics contend that Wyoming has enabled such animal cruelty, a leader of the state’s stock growers associatio­n said it’s an isolated incident and unrelated to the state’s wolf management laws. The laws that have been in place for more than a decade are designed to prevent the predators from proliferat­ing out of the mountainou­s Yellowston­e

region and into other areas where ranchers run cattle and sheep.

“This was an abusive action. None of us condone it. It never should never have been done,” said Jim Magagna, executive vice president of the Wyoming Stock Growers Associatio­n and a Sublette County rancher who has lost sheep to wolves.

Wolves are federally protected as an endangered or threatened species in most of the U.S. but not the Northern Rockies. Wyoming, Idaho and Montana allow wolves to be hunted and trapped, after their numbers rebounded following their reintroduc­tion to Yellowston­e and central Idaho almost 30 years ago.

The wolf allegedly was run down, shown off and killed within the predator zone.

Saharai Salazar is among outof-staters changing their travel plans based on what allegedly happened Feb. 29 near Daniel, a western Wyoming town.

The Santa Rosa, Calif., dog trainer posted on the state’s tourism Instagram account that she would not get married in Wyoming next year as planned. The post was among hundreds of similar comments, many with a #boycottwyo­ming hashtag on social media in recent weeks.

“We have to change the legislatio­n, rewrite the laws so we can offer more protection, so they can’t be interprete­d in ways that will allow for such atrocities,” Salazar said in an interview.

Wyoming’s rules have long invited controvers­y but are unlikely to harm the overall population because most of the animals in the state live in the Yellowston­e region, said wolf expert and former U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service wolf biologist Ed Bangs.

Bangs said the incident of the wolf brought into the bar was a “sideshow” to the species’ successful recovery. The predator zone is made up largely of open landscapes that generally don’t support wolves, he said.

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