The Swiss Wolf Group’s latest study indicates that 98 wolf packs were active in Alpine regions between May 2017 and April of this year, 23 more packs than the previous year. Four of the packs are roaming in Switzerland – two in canton Valais and one each in Graubünden and Ticino – amounting to between 30 and 40 animals.
The increase is more dramatic than in previous years, when the wolf population had grown by between 10 and 15% annually, according to the Swiss Wolf Group. The organisation said this change indicates new “exponential growth” among the Alpine wolf population.
Wolves were nearly extinct in Europe before the first ones began reappearing in the Alps and in Switzerland in the mid-1990s.
The 30-40 wolves currently living in Switzerland are protected under the Council of Europe’s Bern Convention, a binding international legal agreement. Wolves may only be hunted if they kill more than 25 farm animals within a month.
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Should an area in south-western Switzerland be a predator-free zone? A local initiative wants to eliminate protected species like wolves.
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Finance minister wants Swiss banks to hold more equity
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Telecoms sector kept Swiss competitions regulator busy in 2023
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40,000 signatures against animal testing in Switzerland
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Switzerland should do away with “restrictive” animal testing and should become a model for innovative, effective, and pain-free scientific research.
More than 45,000 signatures in favour of federal funding for UNRWA
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Big, yes, but bad? Carnivore divides Swiss opinion
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Emotions run high whenever this elusive creature appears. As wolves make a comeback in Switzerland, they spark feelings of awe and fear.
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