Latest News

Wolves to lose 'strictly safeguarded' status in Europe

Wolves in Europe will be less safeguarded from searching from 2025, after a majority of European countries on Tuesday accepted a proposition to downgrade their status due to their growing number and their effect on farming and farming livestock.

Wolves' status will be reduced as of March 7 to secured. from strictly secured under the Bern Convention on the. Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Environments, in a. relocation condemned by animal well-being groups.

Previously wolves have actually been protected from being deliberately. hunted or captured unless they posture a serious hazard to. animals or health and wellness.

Under their brand-new status, any exploitation of wolves shall. be controlled in order to keep the populations out of threat,. successfully a far lower limit for hunting them.

The EU Commission proposed the modification, condemned by. environmentalist groups, in 2015 as growing wolf numbers led. to conflicts with regional farming and searching communities and. calls for steps to prevent attacks on livestock.

Crucial news for our rural communities and farmers. We. require a well balanced technique in between the preservation of wildlife. and the protection of our incomes, EU Commission President. Ursula von der Leyen stated in a declaration after the vote.

Von der Leyen, whose own pony was eliminated by a wolf in 2022,. had advised member states last year to act where. essential.

Animal welfare groups consisting of the International Fund for. Animal Well-being condemned the choice.

Today's choice represents a hazardous step in reverse for. biodiversity and sets a distressing precedent for wildlife. conservation in Europe, it stated.

The modification will go into effect on March 7 unless a minimum of a. third of the 46 member states of the Council of Europe item,. the Bern Convention said.

(source: Reuters)