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         Wolverine Wildlife:     more books (21)
  1. Demon of the North by Peter Krott, 1959
  2. A bibliography on the wolverine, Gulo gulo (Fish and wildlife bulletin) by Vivian A Banci, 1982
  3. Ecology of wolverines in northwest Alaska: Report to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service by Audrey J Magoun, 1981
  4. Lynx, wolverine, and fisher in the western United States: Research assessment and agenda by John Weaver, 1993
  5. Wildlife in Peril: The Endangered Mammals of Colorado : River Otter, Black-Footed Ferret, Wolverine, Lynx, Grizzly Bear, Gray Wolf by John A. Murray, 1987-05
  6. Wolverine: Global Jeopardy (World Wildlife Fund) (Vol. 1, No. 1, December 1993) by Marvel Comics, 1993
  7. Wolverine demography and ecology in southcentral Alaska: Project outline and phase I progress report by Howard N Golden, 1993
  8. Ecology of wolverines in an arctic ecosystem: Progress report by Audrey J Magoun, 1980
  9. Wolf and wolverine density estimation techniques by Earl F Becker, 1992
  10. Wolverine - A Look Into the Devils Eyes by Mark Allardyce, 2000-09-05
  11. Bounty Hunter, The by Marian Flandrick Bray, 1992-06
  12. Kristin's Wilderness: A Braided Trail by Garrett Conover, 2006-02-15
  13. A wolverine management strategy for British Columbia (Wildlife bulletin) by David F Hatler, 1989
  14. The Big Five by Magnus Elander, Staffan Widstrand, et all 2002

1. Banner2b
wild Northern Rockies. American Wildlands is working hard to protectthese wildlife populations. Wolverine. The wolverine is the
http://www.wildlands.org/l_wolverine.html
Lands Program Northern Rockies Wildlife Species Below is detailed information on wildlife that depend on the wild Northern Rockies. American Wildlands is working hard to protect these wildlife populations. Grizzly Bear Wolves Lynx Wolverine ... Elk Wolverine The wolverine is the largest member of the family Mustelidae (weasel, ferret, martens), though its appearance is bear-like. The wolverine is a heavily built animal, immensely strong for its size and capable of killing animals larger than itself. Known for their feistiness, members of the mustelidae family are often known as fearless. The wolverine was historically distributed throughout the northern part of the lower 48 southward to the northernmost tier of the United States from Maine to Washington State. It extended south along the Sierra-Cascade axis through Oregon into the southern Sierra Nevada in California and along the Rocky Mountains into Arizona and New Mexico. Today wolverine populations in the United States seem to be extensions of Canadian populations. There are known populations that exist in Idaho and Montana. What do wolverines look like?

2. Wolverine Animal Photo
HOME BASIC_W - wolverine wildlife. search find the most popular books, videos and DVDs on wolverine wildlife.
http://www.comte-annonces.com/next-harry-potter-book.htm

3. College Basketball Website Links
wolverine wildlife Webpages. Wolverine Foundation wildlife. Misc. Sports HealthSites. IWantVitamins.com ** Click 'Misc. Sports Health Sites' for links
http://www.mhoops.com/library/maize/links.shtml
Links List
April 12, 2003
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Fab Five - Unlimited Timeouts Fab Five Tribute Maize Rage Paul's Michigan Basketball ... WolverineFans.com Click 'Michigan Related Websites' for more links: Link Categories Michigan Basketball Related National Sports Sites Unofficial Independent Mens Basketball Teams NCAA Information Pages of Interest Sports Server NCAA Statistics Coaching and Development Misc. College Basketball Websites Women's Basketball Websites NBA, Pro, and Foreign Sites Websites for Kid's Misc. Sports Health Sites Message Boards Arizona Sports EXCHANGE! Basketball Discussion Board for Referees SpreadingHope.org Bball Message Boards Switchboard Basketball Recruiting Websites If you're interested in recruiting, you'll want to check out the recruiting search engines . Besides men's basketball, there are also search engines for women's recruiting, football recruiting, and online newspaper prep pages. Recruiting Rules: Regarding the Internet 2002-2003 NCAA recruiting manual National Sports Sites Yahoo College Basketball Click 'National Sports Sites' for more links: Michigan Basketball Related National Sports Sites Unofficial Independent Mens Basketball Teams NCAA Information Pages of Interest Sports Server NCAA Statistics Coaching and Development Misc. College Basketball Websites

4. ADF&G's Wildlife Notebook Series: Wolverine
Home to the 'Alaska wildlife Notebook Series' publication.
http://www.state.ak.us/local/akpages/FISH.GAME/notebook/furbear/wolverin.htm
Notebook Home Search Contact Us
Wolverine
The wolverine , a relative of the mink and weasel, is the largest terrestrial member of the family Mustelidae. Also known as devil bear, carcajou, or woods devil, its scientific name is Gulo gulo The wolverine is valued by Alaskans as a fur resource and as a symbol of wilderness. Its fur is commonly used for parka trim and hoods because of its beauty and durability and because the guard hairs of wolverine fur resist frost accumulation. General description: The long dense fur of the wolverine is generally dark brown to black with a creamy white to gold stripe running from each shoulder along the flanks to the base of the tail. It has a thick body, short legs, short ears, and a broad flat head. The wolverine is primarily a scavenger and has large teeth and powerful jaws to crush bones and eat frozen meat. Adult males generally weigh 20-45 pounds (9-20 kg) while adult females weigh 15-30 pounds (7-14 kg). Its non-retractile claws are long and curved. Wolverines are primarily found in the wilder and more remote areas of Alaska. They are solitary creatures throughout most of the year. Wolverines are active at any time of day, year round. They have tremendous physical endurance and can travel up to 40 miles a day in search of food. Because of their great endurance and strength, wolverines have become a center of folklore. However, its fierce reputation has often been exaggerated. They have been known to steal furbearers from traps and to damage cabins, but these tales can normally be traced to individuals in some situations and not to the species as a whole. Wolverines will rarely attack any predator larger than itself, like a wolf or a bear. Instead, they will try to avoid these animals. Wolverines will fiercely defend a food source or its territory against other wolverines or smaller predators.

5. Wildlife Status Reports - Alberta Sustainable Resource Development
wolverine status in Alberta, Canada
http://www3.gov.ab.ca/srd/fw/status/reports/wolv
No frames copy here

6. Fish And Wildlife Service Petitioned To List The Wolverine As Threatened Or Enda
group has petitioned the U.S. Fish and wildlife Service to list the wolverine as a threatened or endangered species.
http://www.r1.fws.gov/news/2000/2000-144.htm
Welcome Message Visitor Directory News Releases Employment ... Back to the Pacific Region Home Page U.S. FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE
134 Union Boulevard
Lakewood, Colorado 80225
September 7, 2000
Contacts: Chuck Davis (303) 236-7400 ext 235
Diane Katzenberger (303) 236-7917 ext 408
Fish and Wildlife Service Petitioned to List the Wolverine as Threatened or Endangered
An environmental group has petitioned the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to list the wolverine as a threatened or endangered species. On August 15 the Service's Regional Director in Denver provided a response letter acknowledging receipt of the petition, but indicated the agency will not be able to begin work on a preliminary finding on the petition until funds and staff become available. The wolverine petition was filed by the Biodiversity Legal Foundation (BLF) of Louisville, Colorado. The federal Endangered Species Act provides citizens the opportunity to petition the Service to make administrative findings as to whether a species should be listed. A preliminary finding is to be made in 90 days "to the maximum extent practicable." However, the Service's funding for ESA listing activities is limited by congressional appropriations forcing the agency to assign priorities to its listing workload. Administrative petitions are given a low priority, unless the Service determines that the petition provides justification for emergency action to protect a species.

7. DRAFT SUMMARY COMPLETE FOR RECOVERY OF LYNX AND WOLVERINE
wolverine has been completed and is being released to the public. Developed cooperatively by the Colorado Division of wildlife,
http://www.dnr.state.co.us/cdnr_news/wildlife/98020295321.html
Release date: DRAFT SUMMARY COMPLETE FOR RECOVERY OF LYNX AND WOLVERINE
DENVER After more than six months of development by a team of state and federal biologists, a Draft Conservation Strategy for statewide recovery of lynx and wolverine has been completed and is being released to the public.
Developed cooperatively by the Colorado Division of Wildlife, the U.S. Forest Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Park Service, the Conservation Strategy lays the foundation for a possible return of the elusive forest carnivores to the southern Rockies. Both are on Colorado's list of endangered species, and neither has been spotted in the state in more than 20 years.
"The Fish and Wildlife Service is encouraged by this proactive, multi-agency effort to recover these species in the southern Rockies," said Ralph Morgenweck, Regional Director of the Service's Mountain-Prairie Region.
"This science-based strategy is one important part of our effort to secure a future for lynx and wolverine," said Rocky Mountain Regional Forester Lyle Laverty. "And it's the first step in a comprehensive process that will involve the public. We want interested citizens to know they have plenty of opportunity to participate in this process."
Comments will be accepted until Mar. 15.

8. Wildlife... The Caribou
wolverine is one of the rarest mammals. They live in a wide variety of habitats from forested valleys to alpine and arctic tundra where there is abundant wildlife
http://www.goals.com/thayer/gota/wildlife/wolverine.htm
The Wolverine (Gulo gulo) Although popular opinion tells us the wolverine is a blood thirsty, ravenous monster of the forest its reputation isn't completely deserved. The wolverine is not a hunter of large animals such as caribou or grizzlies. Its relatively small size and solitary habit would make it difficult to bring down adult large animals. The wolverine is a scavenger and gets most of its food from the clean up of moose and caribou kills. It has impressive teeth and powerful neck muscles with which to crush bone and tear flesh, even frozen flesh. The wolverine is one of the rarest mammals. They live in a wide variety of habitats from forested valleys to alpine and arctic tundra where there is abundant wildlife to support its scavenging habits. Liters are normally small with 2 to 4 kits being born during January to March. Wolverine fur is highly valued because it doesn't allow frost to form and has been a favorite for outdoor fur ruffs.

9. Banner2b
mountain lion, wolverine, and seven species of ungulates including the moose, bighornsheep, bison, mule deer, and elk. These majestic wildlife populations
http://www.wildlands.org/l_wildlife.html
Lands Program Wildlife and Wild Places in the Northern Rockies The Northern Rockies is the last best place for wildlife!
Nowhere in the lower 48 States is there a greater abundance of large and small wildlife species as there are in the Northern Rockies. The Northern Rockies are fortunate to still have the full range of wildlife species that have roamed these lands and evolved here for a millennia, including- grizzly bears gray wolves lynx mountain lion ... wolverine , and seven species of ungulates including the moose, bighorn sheep, bison, mule deer, and elk . These majestic wildlife populations make the Northern Rockies region truly unique and special. (click above to link to pages with detailed information on these wildlife species). Index of Lands Program Pages
American Wildlands
info@wildlands.org

Home Page

10. Wolverine - Wildlife Status Reports - Alberta Sustainable Resource Development
Petersen, S. 1997. Status of the wolverine (Gulo gulo) in Alberta. Alberta EnvironmentalProtection, wildlife Management Division, wildlife Status Report No.
http://www3.gov.ab.ca/srd/fw/status/reports/wolv/body.html
Status of the Wolverine
Gulo gulo
in Alberta
Stephen Petersen
Alberta Wildlife Status Report No. 2 March 1997
Published by:
Publication No. T/364
ISBN: 0-7732-5124-3
ISSN: 1206-4912 Series Editor: David R. C. Prescott
Illustrations: Brian Huffman
For copies of this report, contact: Information Centre - Publications
Alberta Environment Main Floor, 9920 - 108 Street Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T5K 2M4 Telephone: (780) 422-2079 OR Communications Division Alberta Environmental Protection #100, 3115 - 12 Street NE Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2E 7J2 Telephone: (403) 297-3362 This publication may be cited as: Petersen, S. 1997. Status of the Wolverine ( Gulo gulo ) in Alberta. Alberta Environmental Protection, Wildlife Management Division, Wildlife Status Report No. 2, Edmonton, AB. 17 pp. Table of Contents Alberta Sustainable Resource Development Fish and Wildlife Status Reports Home ... Top of Page

11. The Wolverine Foundation - Main Menu
Under the current wildlife Act, wolverine can be trapped for fur by GHL and Trapping Licence holders only.
http://www.wolverinefoundation.org/
To skip the art presentation and go directly to the site map click here
We are pleased to present "Breakfast on Goose Mountain" by
Jeff Cain
This wolverine illustration was drawn February 17, 2003.
It is dedicated to TWF Director Howard Golden,
wildlife biologist and coordinator of a wolverine field study in the
Eastern Talkeetna Mountains of South Central Alaska, 1991-2002.
The artist had the honor of working with Howard
during two winters of wolverine research. To view and purchase Jeff's wildlife artwork, please visit his website at:
www.tundra-art.com
Jeff Cain Click here to enter The Wolverine Foundation Web Site

12. Alaska Guide To Wildlife Diseases & Parasites
It is important to report wildlife diseases law to waste, destroy, abandon or allowto spoil the meat of big game, other than bear, wolf, or wolverine; and the
http://www.state.ak.us/adfg/wildlife/region5/guide/intro.htm
REGION 5: Home Site Index Search Contact Us Table of Contents Introduction Skin (external)
Contagious ecthyma

Papillomas (Warts)

Samson hair loss in foxes

Moose fly
...
Lice
Head
Nose bots

Lumpy jaw
Internal Organs
Alveolar hydatid disease

Liver tapeworm cysts

Tularemia
Cystic hydatid disease ... Lungworms Muscle Muscle tapeworm cysts Trichinosis Sarcocystosis General Rabies Abscesses Brucellosis Exertional myopathy ... Acknowledgements
A Field Guide TO COMMON WILDLIFE DISEASES AND PARASITES IN ALASKA
INTRODUCTION Although most wild animals in Alaska are healthy, diseases and parasites can occur in any wildlife population. Some of these diseases can infect people or domestic animals. It is important to keep track of wildlife diseases, so changes can be seen and steps taken to reduce their impact. The information in this field guide should help hunters:
  • recognize sickness in an animal before they shoot, identify a disease or parasite in an animal they have killed, know how to protect themselves from infection, help wildlife managers monitor wildlife disease and parasites.
The diseases in this booklet are grouped according to where they are most often seen in the body of the animal: skin, head, internal organs, muscles, general.

13. ARCTIC ANIMALS - Polar Bear, Caribou, Musk Ox, Wolverine, Arctic Fox, Lemming, G
ARCTIC wildlife. How animals are adapted to live in the Arctic. polar bear caribou- musk ox - wolf - wolverine arctic fox - ermine - lemming - arctic hare
http://www.saskschools.ca/~gregory/arctic/Awildlife.html
ARCTIC
WILDLIFE
How animals are adapted to live in the Arctic
polar bear - caribou - musk ox - wolf - wolverine
arctic fox - ermine - lemming - arctic hare
arctic ground squirrel - birds - whales - harp seal - walrus ANIMALS that live on LAND POLAR BEARS spend most of their time on the pack ice or in the water, where they can hunt their favorite food - the ringed seal. The white fur helps the bear sneak up on seals that are laying on the ice packs. If the bear sees a seal's breathing hole, it waits by the hole and drags the seal out as soon as its head appears. In the summer it is harder to catch seals, so before summer comes, the bears eat as much as they can to get fat, then live off the fat in their bodies. Females dig dens in the snow where they hibernate during the worst part of the winter. The cubs are born in the den. polar bear waits for a seal *** more about the POLAR BEAR CARIBOU are members of the deer family. They move across the Arctic in large herds. Caribou eat moss, lichen and green plants. For the winter they go to the forests of the south where trees give them protection from the wind and the snow. In the spring the caribou leave the forests and go to the tundra to have their calves. A baby caribou is able to stand and walk an hour after it is born. It can run when it is a day old. The baby has enemies like wolves, bears and eagles. *** more about the CARIBOU
THE MUSK OXEN have thick overcoats of shaggy long straight hair that hang down to the ground. Their undercoats are thick brown fleece. Some of the coat is shed in the summer. They huddle together in groups for protection and to keep warm. When wolves attack, the musk oxen form a circle around the calves. The adults face outward and use their sharp horns for defence.

14. THE WOLVERINE - Information (Canadian Animals, Arctic Wildlife)
THE wolverine. The wolverine is not related to the wolf or the bear. Thewolverine eats mice, rats and other small mammals, birds and eggs.
http://www.saskschools.ca/~gregory/animals/wolverine.html
THE WOLVERINE
The wolverine is not related to the wolf or the bear. It is a member of the weasel family. This animal is found throughout Canada, including the Arctic region. The wolverine eats mice, rats and other small mammals, birds and eggs. In winter, when snow covers the ground, it eats reindeer and and other large prey. Often it lets other animals do the hunting. Then it chases the hunter away by showing its teeth and growling fiercely. Then the wolverine is left to eat the kill. It will fight other wolverines to defend its territory. Like the skunk, it has a strong-smelling fluid called musk
which it uses to warn others to stay away.
The thick coat of brown fur protects it from the freezing cold temperatures. Its large feet help it move across the soft snow. There are five long sharp claws on each foot.
Wolverines are not fast movers, so they do not chase or stalk their prey. But they are good climbers and often rest in trees. They pounce on their prey from trees or rocks.
The female has one litter every two or three years. She digs out a den in a snowdrift, or a tree hollow or under a rock. Two are three "kittens" are born.

15. Drafting A New Wildlife Act: Conservation For Today And Tomorrow - Wolverine Tag
wolverine Tags Under the current wildlife Act, wolverine can be trappedfor fur by GHL and Trapping Licence holders only. One tag
http://www.nwtwildlife.rwed.gov.nt.ca/legislation/wildlifeact2001/manage13.htm

Minister's Message

New Wildlife Act

The Next Step

Land Claims
...
Wolf Tags

Wolverine Tags
Harvest Information

Harvest Methods

Baiting

Harassment
... Comments Some Options: 1. Continue to allow wolverine to be hunted by resident and non-resident hunters. 2. Continue to allow resident and non-resident hunters to hunt wolverine but reduce the total number of tags available. 3. Remove wolverine from the list of animals that can be hunted by resident and non-resident hunters. Continue to allow wolverine to be trapped for fur. 4. Manage the hunting of wolverine by resident and non-resident hunters on a regional or area specific basis. Wolverine Tags
Under the current Wildlife Act , wolverine can be trapped for fur by GHL and Trapping Licence holders only. One tag can be issued to each resident and non-resident hunter each year to hunt wolverine. The majority of wolverine harvested in the NWT are harvested by Aboriginal people for sale as fur or for personal use. The estimated annual revenue from the sale of tags and trophy fees for wolverine to resident and non-resident hunters is approximately $15,000, although less than 5% of the wolverine tags sold result in a successful hunt. What We Heard: Some individuals suggested wolverine should not be available for harvesting by resident or non-resident hunters. Two major outfitting associations and some individual outfitters requested longer and more diverse seasons and greater access to tags for wolverine.

16. Defenders Of Wildlife - Wildlife - Wolverine
of wildlife together with Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund, Northwest Ecosystem Alliance,and the KlamathSiskiyou Wildlands Center . The wolverine (Gulo gulo
http://www.defenders.org/wildlife/new/meso/wolverine.html
Select Wolves Dolphins Bears Birds Sea Otters Polar Bears Manatees Bison
Groups Seek To Restore Wolverines:
Lawsuit Aims To Spur Federal Action To Conserve Rare Wilderness Species Full Text of Wolverine Lawsuit Wolverine Fact Sheet - Alaska Department of Fish and Game ... Meso-Carnivores Home
Wolverines once ranged across the northernmost tier of the United States, from Maine to Washington and south into the Adirondacks, the Rocky Mountains and far as south as Arizona and New Mexico, and the Sierra Nevada, Cascade and Siskiyou Mountains.

17. Defenders Of Wildlife Condemns Endangered Species Listing Moratorium
effect on four petitions on individual species for which Defenders of wildlife iscurrently seeking listing under the ESA the wolverine, the cerulean warbler
http://www.defenders.org/releases/pr2000/pr112200.html
November 22, 2000 Contact: newsroom@defenders.org Defenders of Wildlife Condemns Endangered Species Listing Moratorium Washington, DC – The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) and the U.S. Congress have "engineered a phony budget shortfall" that FWS claims will prevent it from considering new species for protection under the Endangered Species Act (ESA), according to Defenders of Wildlife President Rodger Schlickeisen. An internal memorandum from FWS Director Jamie Clark ordered the service’s field offices to immediately stop work on any new endangered species listings through September 30, 2001, citing budget pressures. "The FWS has the money available to do what they must under the law, but Congress and the Service engineered a phony budget shortfall to try to shirk some of those duties. There are wildlife species in dire trouble right now that don’t have time for these budget gymnastics. Animals such as the wolverine, the cerulean warbler, wolves in the southern Rocky Mountains, the New England cottontail rabbit, and other species are the real losers in this bureaucratic game, along with the hundreds of thousands of Americans who’ve fought to protect them," said Schlickeisen. The FWS claims that lawsuits over designation of "critical habitat" for endangered species have left it without the resources to consider new species for listing as "endangered" or "threatened." In its budget request for FY2000, however, the FWS asked for a low cap of $1,000,000 on activities to designate critical habitat, despite existing and potential court orders that would require FWS to significantly exceed that amount. Furthermore, the Service has a budget of more than $122 million for work on overall ESA issues, much of which should be available to do the core work of listing species.

18. Fish And Wildlife Service Petitioned To List The Wolverine As Threatened Or Enda
An environmental group has petitioned the US Fish and wildlife Service tolist the wolverine as a threatened or endangered species.
http://mountain-prairie.fws.gov/pressrel/00-22.htm
The Mountain-Prairie Region NEWS RELEASE U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
134 Union Boulevard
Lakewood, Colorado 80228
September 1, 2000
Contacts: Chuck Davis (303) 236-7400 ext 235
Diane Katzenberger (303) 236-7917 ext 408 Fish and Wildlife Service Petitioned to List the Wolverine as Threatened or Endangered Six environmental groups have petitioned the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to list the wolverine as a threatened or endangered species. On August 15 the Service's Regional Director in Denver provided a response letter acknowledging receipt of the petition, but indicated the agency will not be able to begin work on a preliminary finding on the petition until funds and staff become available. The wolverine petition was filed by the Biodiversity Legal Foundation (BLF), the Predator Conservation Alliance, Defenders of Wildlife, Northwest Ecosystem Alliance, Friends of the Clearwater, and the Superior Wilderness Action Network. The federal Endangered Species Act provides citizens the opportunity to petition the Service to make administrative findings as to whether a species should be listed. A preliminary finding is to be made in 90 days "to the maximum extent practicable." However, the Service's funding for ESA listing activities is limited by congressional appropriations forcing the agency to assign priorities to its listing workload. Administrative petitions are given a low priority, unless the Service determines that the petition provides justification for emergency action to protect a species.

19. Mountain-Prairie Region
Friends of the Clearwater, and Superior Wilderness Action Network filed a petitionwith the US Fish and wildlife Service to list the wolverine as threatened or
http://mountain-prairie.fws.gov/wolverine/
Mountain-Prairie Region WOLVERINE
NEWS AND INFORMATION
Wolverine line drawing by Wayne Lewis On July 11, 2000, the Biodiversity Legal Foundation, the Predator Conservation Alliance, Defenders of Wildlife, Northwest Ecosystem Alliance, Friends of the Clearwater, and Superior Wilderness Action Network filed a petition with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to list the wolverine as threatened or endangered throughout its historic range. In accordance with the Service's Listing Priority Guidance, work will not commence on a preliminary petition finding until funds and staff become available. The petition, and the Service's acknowledgement, is available below for viewing and/or downloading.

20. Education Planet Environment,Animals,Mammals (Wildlife),Wolverine Lesson Plans
0 Maps, 0 Videos, Find 'wolverine' books. 0 Supplies, 0 Online Courses. Categorymatches for 'wolverine'. Home/Environment/Animals/Mammals (wildlife) wolverine (1).
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