Program areas at International Wildlife Coexistence Network
Wood river wolf project collaborative promotes the Coexistence of livestock and wolves by proactively using nonlethal measures to prevent depredation. The project began in 2008 as a field study in wood river valley, Idaho and was founded by suzanne stone. Since that time, the project has demonstrated that nonlethal methods are at least 3.5 times more effective than traditional lethal control measures to minimize livestock and wolf mortalities.
The International Wildlife Coexistence conference brought together scientists, indigenous leaders, advocates, educators, livestock owners, and others to share respective research and information about coexisting with Wildlife around the world.
Share expertise and resources - iwcn shares informational and educational resources through conferences, webinars, videos, articles, publications, blogs, and social media. The organization collaborates with scientists,agricultural managers, researchers, ethicists, economists, government specialists, educators, indigenous leaders, and technical engineers who provide their expertise. This team of professionals help create new ways for communities to live with Wildlife. Many times this involves team members connecting directly with specific communitites to work out resolutions enabling Wildlife to coexist with the community.