Dear Friend,
With just one gunshot, an innocent wolf is orphaned. Stop the slaughter and
protect our planet: Donate $27 and help us reach our $4,060 goal by 11:59pm.
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[[link removed]]A helpless wolf pup frantically scrambles through the snow, leaving tiny red
pawprints and her mother’s mangled body behind her. With just one shot from a
trophy hunter’s gun, her family has been decimated and she is orphaned. This innocent pup has just left her den for the first time, and now she is
running for her life in fear of meeting the same fate as her mama. Friend, don’t let trophy hunters continue tearing apart
wolf families: Donate $27 before midnight to help us reach our $4,060 goal to
help protect vulnerable wolves and the planet.
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Left without her mother’s protection, this baby wolf pup is susceptible to
starvation, hypothermia, and predation. What’s more -- she could meet the same
fate as her mother, or worse. The states that border Yellowstone still have no safeguards to help protect vulnerable gray wolves from vicious trophy hunters and their
inhumane practices!
The clock is ticking for wolves, who still occupy less than 10% of their
historic range -- but thanks to members like you, we’re confident we can protect
wolves and the planet before the loss is too great. But we’re facing intense
pushback from trophy hunters and Big Oil lobbies fighting to brutally murder
these precious creatures for sport and take over their homelands for profit.
That’s why wolves need your help now more than ever!
Don’t let trophy hunters continue to sacrifice innocent wolves for the sake of
corporate greed. Donate $27 or more now to protect wolves and the planet!
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will go through immediately:
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[[link removed]]The news is eye-opening: only 6,000 wolves remain in the lower 48 states -- and the slaughter shows no signs of stopping. A recent report found that
poaching is a substantial threat to wolves, especially during state-sanctioned
hunts. But it’s not enough for trophy hunters to simply kill vulnerable wolves
-- this hunting season, wolves are suffering some of the most vicious hunting
practices we’ve seen.
Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming allow some of the most horrific hunting practices, like choking wolves to death in snares, running them over with snowmobiles, and even
dynamiting nursing wolf mothers and pups in their dens! Baby wolf pups who manage to survive longer than their mothers are left
orphaned and alone in the world to suffer from starvation, hypothermia, and
predation.
Although some states offer protections for wolves, these precious canines aren’t
bound by state lines. They often roam into neighboring states like Wyoming,
where it’s legal to hunt them at any time, even without a permit. Even wolves in Yellowstone aren’t safe from the slaughter -- the park recently
lost a record high of 25 wolves, leaving only 89.
What’s worse -- trophy hunters are actively pushing against protections for
these helpless creatures! Montana and Idaho have passed laws legalizing
helicopter chases, and the Biden administration has gone so far as to file an appeal to remove some
critical protection for wolves, which could push this vulnerable species closer
to extinction. Friend, how long will we let this pattern continue?
These vicious hunting practices can’t continue. Rush your $27 donation and help
us reach our $4,060 goal by midnight tonight!
If you've saved your payment information with ActBlue Express, your donation
will go through immediately:
Donate $5/month immediately
[[link removed]] Donate $27 immediately
[[link removed]]Last year, three baby wolf pups were born to the only wolf pack left in
Colorado. The pups were suspected to be the first wolves born in Colorado in 80 years. Protected by the state, they were a symbol of hope for repopulation efforts.
But the second they set their tiny paws onto Wyoming soil, they became fair game
for trophy hunters to legally murder, even without a permit.
Sure enough, three mangled, bloody young wolf carcasses were found across Wyoming state
lines.
Wolves are intelligent creatures that are vital to their ecosystems. They help
keep elk and deer populations in check, allowing other plant and animal species
to flourish. The remains of their kill redistribute nutrients and feed
scavengers. But their recovery is under threat as states in the northern Rockies
refuse to grant them ESA protections, and others are selling off the public
lands they live in, shrinking the areas where they can be safe.
These attacks on ESA protections are signaling the demise of many beloved and
iconic creatures like our wolves. We don’t have much time to protect America’s
wolves before they disappear forever. Friend, your membership gift today can help save wolves
from these vicious attacks and protect the future of our planet. But we are
facing pushback from private trophy-hunting interests and Big Polluters, and we
need to step up our efforts before it’s too late. Will you donate $27 or more
before the loss is too great?
Protect the remaining wolves from greedy private interests. Donate $27 before
the clock strikes midnight and help us reach our $4,060 goal for wolves and the
planet.
If you've saved your payment information with ActBlue Express, your donation
will go through immediately:
Donate $5/month immediately
[[link removed]] Donate $27 immediately
[[link removed]]Standing with you,
Raena Garcia
Fossil fuels and lands campaigner,
Friends of the Earth
Contact Us:Friends of the Earth U.S.
Washington, D.C. | Berkeley, CA
1-877-843-8687
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