Hunters and farmers in Greece are demanding the right to cull wolves after one attacked a child on a beach last month, warning that the protected species is multiplying in the wild.
The animal “grabbed” the five-year-old girl by the waist as she played on a beach in the Halkidiki Peninsula, northern Greece, her mother told Skai TV.
A bystander drove the wolf off by throwing stones, but it later followed the girl and her mother to their apartment yard, she said.
Photo: AFP
Greek hunters have long maintained that the wolf population in Greece is much greater than estimated, increasing the threat to hunting dogs and livestock.
“Where I go hunting, there are wolf sightings almost every day,” said Stelios Thomas, a 60-year-old from Thessaloniki who ventures out about 50km east of the city.
“I am now afraid to go to the mountain. They have eaten many dogs and livestock lately. There are attacks almost every day,” he said.
Local officials said they were laying traps in the area, but that if the animal could not be captured, it would be killed.
Yorgos Iliopoulos, a biologist and wolf expert with the environmental non-governmental organization Callisto, said the wolf involved appeared to be unusually accustomed to humans.
“This animal evidently either found food in this area, or was erroneously fed by a human as a cub,” Iliopoulos said. “Its behavior cannot be reversed and it is better to remove it, preferably through capture.”
The Thessaloniki-based organization aims to study, protect and manage the populations and habitats of large carnivores such as bears and wolves, and other endangered species.
Callisto last year helped remove a young wolf from the Greek police academy in Amygdaleza, near Athens.
The young male was collared and released in the foothills of Mount Parnitha, where wolves have returned after a six-decade absence.
From his studies on the Parnitha wolves, Iliopoulos said that the packs in the area “are attracted by the dead bodies of farm animals or dogs.”
According to a six-year study by Callisto, the wolf population in Greece is estimated at 2,075.
Their range is also spreading, Iliopoulos said.
“Wolves are now in Attica,” the region surrounding Athens, and in the southern mainland “there has been a resurgence in the Peloponnese over the past two or three years,” he said.
“Some individuals crossed the Isthmus at Corinth and dispersed into the Peloponnese. Last winter, we confirmed the presence of a breeding wolf pack in the Taygetos [mountain] region,” he added.
The abandonment of agriculture in the mountains and increased availability of prey such as wild boar and deer have help the wolf population rebound, he said.
“Similar trends are seen with all large mammals in Greece and Europe,” he said.
Sightings of bears in inhabited areas have also increased in the Greek countryside.
An 80-year-old man in Zagori, northwestern Greece, last week was injured by a brown bear that entered his garden looking for food.
Wildlife group Arcturos estimates there are between 550 and 900 bears in Greece, an increase over the past two decades, but still not high enough to lift hunting restrictions.
Bears commenced approaching inhabited areas in Greece about a decade ago, but authorities have long neglected to set up rapid response teams, the group said in a July statement.
“The Greek countryside is not what it was 20 years ago, and so it would be impossible for bears to be the same, too,” Arcturos general director Alexandros Karamanlidis said.
Callisto spokesperson Iason Bantios called the bear sightings “a manageable phenomenon that should not cause panic.”
“It requires adequate operational organization, proper planning and targeted action protocols,” Bantios said.
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