After a tough struggle, the federal states with large wolf populations have agreed on criteria for the shooting of so-called problem wolves, but have left a lot of leeway for the regional organization. As the Ministry of Agriculture and the Environment of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern announced in Schwerin on Wednesday, wolves can be shot if they have repeatedly killed livestock such as sheep or goats and come within 1000 meters of the paddock of the attacked herd again. This is one of the preconditions for a rapid cull that the Wolf Working Group agreed on at its meeting on Wednesday. Representatives of the federal states of Lower Saxony, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, Brandenburg and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania were involved.
"The aim of the WG Wolf was to define the new criteria for wolf removal as uniformly as possible and to enable uniform administrative action for this special form of species protection exemption for wolf removal in the federal states," explained Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania's Environment Minister Till Backhaus (SPD). In the talks, they had "largely reached a common denominator" and had kept their promise to define the framework for the accelerated removal of "harmful wolves" by the start of the grazing season. However, the federal states could adapt the regulations according to their specific circumstances.