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Mass Wolf Killings Shock Italy's National Park
23 Apr
Summary
- 18 wolf carcasses discovered in Italian national park within a week.
- Investigation points to deliberate poisoning, with bait found near dead wolves.
- WWF calls killings the most serious crimes against wildlife in a decade.

An investigation is underway after the carcasses of 18 wolves were found in Italy's Abruzzo, Lazio and Molise national park within a single week. Authorities confirmed the discovery of eight wolves in recent days, adding to ten found the previous week, along with three dead foxes and a buzzard. This grim discovery is being labeled the most serious crime against wildlife in Italy in the last ten years by conservation groups. Initial findings suggest deliberate poisoning, with park rangers discovering suspected poisoned bait near several deceased wolves, indicating a potential pattern across different areas of the park.
The ongoing investigation is a grave concern, especially given that the park is home to the critically endangered Marsican bear. Prosecutors are treating the killings with utmost seriousness, stating that both bears and wolves are symbolic of the region. Conservation organizations, like the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), have condemned the acts as cowardly and criminal, highlighting the devastating impact on biodiversity and public safety. They also pointed to a recent EU decision to downgrade the wolf's protection status as potentially contributing to such incidents.