Joe Buczek is manager of digital content and promotion at CBS Detroit. He previously worked at WWTV, the Grand Traverse Insider, the Leader and the Kalkaskian, the Oakland Press and the Morning Sun.
A wolf was lethally removed by National Park Service staff on Isle Royale. The wolf was killed after growing to reliant on human food, sometimes dragging away storage and backpacks from campsites.
ISLE ROYALE, MI - In what is believed to be the first National Parks action of its kind on Isle Royale, park officials said today they had to kill one of the island’s wolves after it became too ...
ISLE ROYALE — The National Park Service killed a wolf on Isle Royale that became reliant on visitors' food and showed signs of habituation. The wolf was one of two "problem wolves" with an "escalating ...
ISLE ROYALE, Mich. (WXYZ) — Isle Royale National Park officials had to kill a wolf that was becoming too conditioned to human food and displayed "escalating ...
ISLE ROYALE, MI - Isle Royale National Park officials have given a few more details about the wolf that had to be killed earlier this month after it was involved in an increasing number of concerning ...
A wolf was lethally removed from Isle Royale National Park after reports of movement into human campgrounds to obtain food. The park removed one of at least two wolves that were seen dragging food ...
Isle Royale National Park has taken lethal measures to remove one of two problem wolves due to the escalating number of reports from park visitors. According to a press release provided by Isle Royal ...
The Wolf-Moose Project on Isle Royale has been ongoing since 1958. This picture was taken in 1992. Around 30 wolves currently roam Isle Royale, a remote island in Lake Superior, while the moose ...