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Science
WILD EUROPE
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NORWAY'S WOLVES: With so few people and so much space, why did Norway kill its last breeding wolf pack last year?

Monday 8 July 2002 9.00pm

Wonderful, wild, mountainous Norway is ideal wolf habitat. In the past it was home to thousands of wolves, but today there are just thirteen.

Grey Wolf
The Grey Wolf

Last year, a government-organized cull from helicopters removed a whole pack of eight animals, leaving no intact breeding families in the whole country and going against the government's own policy. In the first programme of this new series, Lionel Kelleway travels to Norway to find out why.

In the late 19th-century, wolves were eradicated in Norway as a pest species. In the 1980s, when a pair that had made its way from Finland began to breed in southern Norway, sheep farmers were already contending with bears, lynx and wolverine eating their sheep. Wolves were the final straw. Hunters, too, protested loudly against the growing wolf population. Wolves ate their dogs and ate the moose they loved to hunt.
Lionel Kelleway and..... examine a moose kill by a wolf
Lionel Kelleway (right) is shown a moose killed by a wolf

Both hunting and farming lobbies are powerful in Norway, so wolves are a political hot potato and feelings run high. But by talking to scientists, hunters and sheep farmers, and by confronting the Minister responsible for wolf policy in Norway, Lionel gets a fascinating insight into the very real struggles and concerns that lie behind the headline-grabbing debate. And, as wolves increase in number and range right across Europe, this is a debate that more and more countries will have to face up to.

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