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Thread: The making of the dire Wolf

  1. #1
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    Default The making of the dire Wolf

    Apparently an USA company resurrected the dire wolf.
    3 specimens are living( for now, i am afraid )in a fenced off area.

    There is a great pride in resurrecting of the dire wolf.

    I kind of support the resurrection of some extinct animals( like the Dodo bird or the Tasmanian tiger per say ).
    They both went extinct at the fault of the modern man.


    I am afraid though -they made a wrong selection, brought back a super predator, which went out like 10.000 years ago,at "no ones"fault.


    Who needs a super wolf roaming around, with all the threat to humans ,and devastation on wildlife.
    Mature Nature will pay price for this.

    I am willing to place a bet ,that one day,we will face some "accidentally escaped "and reproducing dire wolf population in the Rockies(for starters).
    Last edited by gbk; April 8th, 2025 at 04:17 PM.

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    The plan it to release them , as soon as they have a breeding population.

  4. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by gbk View Post
    Apparently an USA company resurrected the dire wolf.
    3 specimens are living( for now, i am afraid )in a fenced off area.

    There is a great pride in resurrecting of the dire wolf.

    I kind of support the resurrection of some extinct animals( like the Dodo bird or the Tasmanian tiger per say ).
    They both went extinct at the fault of the modern man.


    I am afraid though -they made a wrong selection, brought back a super predator, which went out like 10.000 years ago,at "no ones"fault.


    Who needs a super wolf roaming around, with all the threat for humans ,and devastation on wildlife.
    Mature Nature will pay price for this.

    I am willing to place a bet ,that one day,we will face some "accidentally escaped "and reproducing dire wolf population in the Rockies(for starters).
    No disrespect but I think you may have seen one too many Jurassic park movies. Ya no one likes to see someone play god but telling one what they can and can't research is being a little god like. Sure there may be negative consequences but think of the positive ones. A means to control the feral hog epidemic or a control for CWD in an effected area. In any case I don't think the situation is as dire as you may think for as you said mother nature took 'em out once if they are truly doomed or a re-emergence only mother nature will decide.
    Time in the outdoors is never wasted

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    I don't know, it's kind of a slippery slope talking about keeping humble when it comes to science and technology; where's the limit? Everything has reverberations, to be sure, The Butterfly Effect, and whatnot. I don't see a super predator having a positive effect on local ecosystems, whatever those may be.
    What can I but enumerate old themes,
    First that sea-rider Oisin led by the nose
    Through three enchanted islands, allegorical dreams,
    Vain gaiety, vain battle, vain repose,
    Themes of the embittered heart, or so it seems.
    -- "The Circus Animals’ Desertion" by William Butler Yeats

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    Quote Originally Posted by MeghanOOD View Post
    . I don't see a super predator having a positive effect on local ecosystems, whatever those may be.
    Humans included?
    Time in the outdoors is never wasted

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    The ones they've created they expect to be 63 kg when full grown. 138 lbs. Isn't that smaller than a big gray wolf?

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    IMO releasing these critters in the wild is dumb. First of all they aren’t real Dire Wolves… just genetically modified to look like them. Secondly, what prey species will these be feeding on. Big dogs need a lot of food to eat. IMO they should be classed as an invasive species.
    A true sportsman counts his achievements in proportion to the effort involved and the fairness of the sport. - S. Pope

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    Quote Originally Posted by Sam Menard View Post
    IMO releasing these critters in the wild is dumb. .......... Big dogs need a lot of food to eat. ....IMO they should be classed as an invasive species.
    X2
    Better yet, they should be made" legally obligated "that the dire wolf can never breed ...everything else is an irresponsible nostalgia !
    Ignoring the facts that the ecosystem changed majorly in the past 10000 years is dumb..........bringing them back will create huge unwanted consequences.
    Last edited by gbk; April 8th, 2025 at 04:28 PM.

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    I wrote this back in 2019 - Kinda has a ring of truth now.

    News Release
    Admission of covert mammal reintroduction
    Ontario MNR admits to releasing Cougars, Wild boar and genetically enhanced Dire
    Wolves.
    April 1, 2019 10:00 A.M.
    Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry
    Ontario's Government for the People is releasing the pass secret details of the MNR Covert
    wildlife reintroduction plan started in 2003.
    "We're making it easier for Ontarians to know what was happening," said John Foole, MNR
    official. "This year, we tell the truth of what the Liberal Government made us do."
    It all began in early spring of 2004. The Liberal Government thought that a long term plan to get
    hunters out of the woods would be to release captured Western and unwanted pet cougars to
    try and create a viable breeding population. But it went wrong. The population began creating a
    highway through Eastern Ontario and killing horses, with this gone wrong the Government
    abandoned its idea. The solution was to introduce Wild Russian boars and maybe they could
    control the cougars as well come winter the Government thought they would perish.
    "Boars are reproducing" said MNR Official Foole. "Hunters are not scared and we need to
    control the boars as well as the hunters". The Government decided to pull out all the stops
    regardless of the environmental issues bringing back an extinct species, a super predator. We
    created and release a genetically enhanced Dire Wolf. This wolf will reach weights of
    100-150 kg (220-330 pounds). The first release site was the Bissett Creek area of
    Algonquin Park. These Wolves have now wreaked havoc on the critically endangered Algonquin
    Wolf leaving less than 3 remaining. Luckily these experiments have been put to an end, but the
    damaged has been done. These super Predators the Dire Wolf have been slowly taking over the park.
    The MNR is now suggesting all who enter carry a centre fire rifle loaded at all time.
    "This is about unenforceable registration of weapons that violates the rights of people to own firearms."—Premier Ralph Klein (Alberta)Calgary Herald, 1998 October 9 (November 1, 1942 – March 29, 2013) OFAH Member

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    It's not a dire wolf it's a Grey wolf hybrid.





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