2007/2006
Story Archive
(Most recent stories listed first)
2009
Story Archive
2008
Story Archive
12/29/07: WYG&F
proposes wolf regulations
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
The Wyoming Game and Fish Department will be accepting
public comment on and hosting public information
gathering meetings to discuss changes to Wyoming
Game and Fish Commission regulations Chapter 21,
Gray Wolves Designated as Trophy Game Animals and
Chapter 28, Regulation Governing Big or Trophy Game
Animal or Game Bird Damage Claims....(Click on the link above
for the complete article)
12/21/07: Joggers
terrorized by Alaska wolf pack
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
A pack of wolves recently terrorized a group of
three women joggers and their dogs the Eagle River
area in Alaska. The group was more than a mile from
their vehicle and were absolutely terrified by the
encounter, with the wolves circling and coming closer,
chasing the group down the trail and attacking one
of the dogs. One of the women repeatedly used pepper
spray on the seven-member wolf pack. The Anchorage
Daily News has an article, along with a link to a
video interview shot by KTVA about the wolf encounter
which is well worth watching.....(Click on the link
above for the complete article)
12/21/07: Wolf
spotted in Colorado
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
The Estes Park Trail-Gazette is reporting that a recent sighting of a lone black
wolf in Rocky Mountain National Park has been deemed "credible." This
is simply
the latest sighting of several made in recent times. .....(Click
on the link above for the complete article)
12/21/07: Congressionsl
members oppose wolf delisting
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
Five members of the United States House of Representatives banded together to
write a letter to U.S. Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne opposing wolf delisting
in the Northern Rockies. The letter was signed by Representatives Nick Joe Rahall,
II, George Miller, Norm Dicks, Wayne T. Gilchrest and Jim Saxton.
.....(Click
on the link above for the complete article)
12/19/07: Alaska
wolf campaign moves forward
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
According to Alaskans for Professional Wildlife Management,
Alaska’s predator populations, including wolves,
continue to expand while moose and caribou herds
are being decimated. Alaska is trying to get these
predator populations under control, but animal rights
extremists have placed a measure on the ballot that
would ban aerial predator management. The Alaskans
for Professional Wildlife Management (APWM) are preparing
to wage an aggressive and winning campaign to defeat
this dangerous and well-funded ballot measure.....(Click
on the link above for the complete article)
12/18/07: Lawsuit
filed to keep Great Lakes wolves listed
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
On December 4, a U.S. district court granted the
Center for Biological Diversity
“friend of the court” status in a case seeking to retain protection
for gray wolves under the Endangered Species Act. The lawsuit challenges the
Bush administration’s most recent attempt to weaken and remove protection
for the wolf. “The gray wolf is gone from 95 percent of its range in
the lower 48 states,” said Amy Atwood, staff attorney with the Center. “Although
wolf numbers have increased in a few states, it is too soon to abandon their
recovery in the many states that have habitat where wolves could thrive once
again.”....(Click
on the link above for the complete article)
12/14/07: Feds
approve Wyoming Wolf Plan
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
It came as no surprise since federal officials helped to write the plan, but
state officials announced Friday that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has
approved Wyoming’s Gray Wolf Management Plan, calling it an “adequate
regulatory mechanism” that meets the requirements of the Endangered Species
Act.
Under Wyoming’s approved plan, after delisting the Wyoming Game and Fish
Department will assume management of wolves in that portion of the state where
wolves will be classified as trophy game animals. In the remaining portions of
the state, gray wolves will be classified as predatory animals. ....(Click on
the link above for the complete article)
12/11/07: Hoback
wolf pack confirmed
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service confirmed there
is a new wolf pack south of Jackson, between Jackson
and the Hoback Junction. A radio-collared female
wolf dispersed from the Buffalo Pack near Jackson
and settled south of town. The new pack will be referred
to as the Pinnacle Peak Pack. FWS's Ed Bangs reported: "At
this time we think the pack contains 5-6 wolves,
but subsequent monitoring will give a better estimate
of how many wolves are in the pack and what area
the pack uses."
The pack was discovered through collaboration with the Wyoming Game and Fish
Department and local land owners who reported repeated wolf sightings in the
area.
12/7/07: Bold
wolves harrass Alaska village
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
Bold wolves have begun altering human behavior in
an Alaska village. Last week the after-school skiing
program was cancelled because of safety concerns
due to the wolf presence in the area.
Additional adult supervision is now in place for recess on the playground, and
the note sent home to parents advises parents to escort children to their school
bus stops and to stay with them until they are safely on the bus. Wolves have
come into yards and killed dogs, and show no fear of humans. Now state wildlife
officials have organized a community meeting to discuss the situation with residents
of Two Rivers.....
(click on the link above for the complete article)
12/5/07: Escaped
captive wolf killed
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
The
180-pound escaped captive wolf roaming around southwestern
Idaho killing livestock has been killed by state
game officials. According to an Associated Press article, although Idaho Fish and Game officials
had hoped to tranquilize the wolf and capture it, it was shot after being found
with an injured leg.... (click on the link above for the
complete article)
12/2/07: Sheriff
told to hold fire on domestic wolf
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
The
Associated Press reports that an Idaho sheriff has
been told to "hold fire" on an escaped captive wolf,
for fear that a wild wolf could be mistakenly killed.
The AP article by John Miller quotes Owyhee County Sheriff Gary Aman's frustration
about the situation, since the escaped wolf has been killing livestock and is
what he called "a very, very aggressive, vicicous animal... (click on
the link above for the complete article)
12/2/07: Another
word on wolf compensation
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
The story of the attack on Stevie's mule was detailed
here a few days ago. Although USDA Wildlife Services
personnel confirmed that the damage to the mule was
caused by a wolf or wolves, a full year after the
event, Defenders of Wildlife sent Stevie a letter
denying his claim. Defenders was never on the scene,
never saw the mule, yet it claims its own experts
determined that the damages were consistent with
what could have been caused by a barbed-wire fence.
This, even though Wildlife Services experts had already
examined the ACTUAL ANIMAL and found it had been
attacked by a wolf or wolves. So what's up with this?....
(click on the link above for the complete article)
11/26/07: Defenders
denies compensation for wolf attack
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
In August 2006, a mule was attacked by a wolf or
wolves while in a pasture northwest of Pinedale.
Bonny, who is owned by Wolf Lake Outfitters, suffered
numerous wounds, including having the base of her
ears chewed up, gashes to her hocks and life-threatening
wounds to her stomach. A full year aftersubmitting
a claim to Defenders of Wildlife seeking compensation
for the wolf attack, the environmental group has
decided to deny the claim, saying they believe the
mule’s injuries weren’t sustained
during a wolf attack, but were consistent with a
barbed-wire fence.... (click on
the link above for the complete article)
11/20/07: Idaho
releases draft wolf plan
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Idaho Department of Fish and Game has developed a
draft wolf population management plan that includes
provisions for hunting wolves - in anticipation of
wolves in Idaho being removed from the endangered
species list.
Fish and Game is seeking public review and comments on the draft Idaho Wolf Population
Management Plan, which would guide post-delisting wolf monitoring, management.
... (click on the link above for the complete
article)
11/19/07: Canada
wolf in Idaho, Idaho wolf in Wyoming
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports that a wolf
collared in Alberta, Canada, is now located in Idaho.
The collar records the wolf's movements, but was scheduled
for release at the end of October. It stayed on the
wolf in Idaho for at least another week, but all indications
are that the collar has now dropped off the wolf and
is on the ground in Idaho, awaiting retrieval.
FWS also confirmed that another Idaho wolf has taken up residence in Yellowstone
National Park, proving connectivity between the wolf populations.
... (click
on the link above for the complete article)
11/19/07: Wolves
at Hoback Junction
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, last week wolf project
leader Mike Jimenez met with a ranch/outfitting family
whose private land is near a state elk feedground that
has been seeing 3-4 wolves repeatedly near Hoback Junction.
"The wolves seem a little bold and interested in their dogs, so rubber bullet
training and munitions were provided," FWS reported..... (click
on the link above for the complete article)
11/19/07: Eastern
coyotes linked to wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) New
research on tissue samples taken from 75 Massachusetts
coyotes has found that all contained varying degrees
of the genes of a wolf species found in southeastern
Canada and the genes of the western coyote, according
to a press account written by Stan Freeman.
One of the primary researchers now suggests that the Massachusetts coyote be
classified as a new species.... (click
on the link above for the complete article)
11/18/07: WYG&F
approves wolf plan
(By Wyoming Game & Fish) The
Wyoming Game and Fish Commission adopted a new wolf
management plan for Wyoming. Wyoming Game and Fish
Department Director Terry Cleveland said he hopes this
plan will be accepted by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service and lead to the removal of wolves from the
Endangered Species Act in the northern Rocky Mountains
in 2008.... (click on the link above for this story)
11/13/07: Wolf
recovery program focuses on hybrids
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Great Lakes wolf population has been delisted but now
scientists are revealing that the “saved” wolf
population isn’t what was there to begin with,
since what was saved were hybrids....
(click on the link above for this story)
11/12/07: "Wolves
in Russia" book released
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) "Wolves
in Russia: Anxiety Through the Ages" is written by
Will Graves and edited by Dr. Valerius Geist, Ph.D.
Here's what Gary Marbut, president of the Montana Shooting
Sports Association, had to say: "Wolves in Russia unmasks the Disneyesque view
of wolves propagandized in the U.S.
Wolves is a stunning, fact-laden account of pandemic and
devastating loss of livestock, game animals and human beings from wolf predation.
Any open-minded person who reads this book will grasp that wolves are a severe
threat to our way of life in Montana, and to the people who live here. It is
impossible to deny the centuries of recorded wolf predation impact documented
in Wolves in Russia. A Russian proverb from the book: "Wolves are not killed
because they are gray, but because they eat sheep.".... (click on the
link above for this story)
11/12/07: More
aggressive wolf control initiated
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Mike
Jimenez of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports
that if things seemed different in 2007, it’s
because they were: FWS was more aggressive at controlling
problem wolves this year, and the results are in the
numbers.
Throughout the years, there have been wolf packs that prey on livestock year
after year. This year, in those packs, FWS instructed USDA Wildlife Services
to get on those packs after the first attacks and take them out.
In 2006, 45 wolves were killed in control actions. So far this year, 55-60 wolves
have been killed in control actions.... (click on the link above for this
story)
11/1/07: Coroner
inquest determines man killed by wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) A
coroner's inquest in Saskatchewan has determined that
22-year old Kenton Carnegie of Ontario was indeed killed
in a wolf attack.... (click on the link
above for this story)
11/1/07: Rabid
wolf attacked sled dogs
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Anchorage Daily News reports today that a wolf killed
during an attack on sled dogs in an Alaska village
was rabid. Animal health officials are requesting that
any unvaccinated dogs in the village be euthanized....
(click on the link above for this story)
10/30/07: Wyoming
Wolf Plan comments available
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Wyoming Game and Fish Department has posted all the
public comments it has received on the latest version
of the state wolf management plan. To read the comments,
click on the link to the story.... (click
on the link above for this story)
10/30/07: Draft
Gray Wolf Plan Available
(By Wyoming Game & Fish) The Wyoming
Game and Fish Department will be posting all public
comments regarding its draft gray wolf management plan
on the department’s Web site on Monday, Oct.
29. The public comment period on the wolf plan expired Oct.
10. The department received 352 individual comments by
mail, fax or through the department’s new online
public commenting system... (click
on the link above for this story)
10/28/07: Wolves
attack sled dogs in Alaska village
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) A
pack of wolves entered a small village in Alaska, attacking
area sled dogs, leaving about six dead and mauling
nearly a dozen more. In related news, a new source in Finland
is reporting that wolves have killed an exceptional
number of dogs in
one community this fall. There are about 250 wolves in
Finland, and government officials have been taking extraordinary
measures this year to save reindeer herds from maurading
wolf packs, which have hit the herds hard this winter.
Herdsmen have brought the reindeer herds into protective
pens to begin expensive feeding operations, months ahead
of schedule, in order to save the animals..... (click on
the link above for these stories)
10/22/07: Denver
TV station examines wolf ad campaign
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) CBS4
Denver reporter Raj Chohan recently aired a piece examining
the new wolf ad campaign undertaken by the Natural
Resources Defense Council. The report shows clips from
the ad, then explains what parts are true, and what
parts are misleading.... (click on the link above
for this story)
10/22/07: Wolf
killed in Massachusetts
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) It
had been killing sheep on Massachusetts farms for at
least a month, but wildlife officials claimed it was
probably a dog. A farmer shot the sheep-killer last
week, and yes, it was a wolf - an 85 pound male.The nearest
known wild wolf population to the recent incident is
about 350 miles away in Canada. The complete story is on
South Coast Today... (click on the link above
for this story)
10/18/07: 50
Years of Wolf Research
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Scientists
have been studying the interactions and interdependence
of wolves and moose at Michigan’s Isle Royale
National Park for nearly half a century. In the late 1940s,
a pack of wolves made the treacherous trip across 15
to 20 miles of frozen waters of Lake Superior
to Isle Royale, located not far from the Canadian border.
There they found a wilderness island safe from hunters
and traffic and home to an abundant moose herd. The wolves
settled in to a self-contained ecosystem where they were
virtually the only predators and the moose were their primary
prey... (click on the link above for
this story)
10/11/07: Wolf
killed in Vermont
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) With
several wolves shot in the state in recent years, locals
in Vermont are wondering if wolves have returned to
their state. Wildlife officials often discount wolf
sightings in the area, and claim that when wolves are
shot, proving wolf presence, those animals are released
captives. Genetic tests on the latest confirmed wolf,
a 92-pound male, pose additional questions. Read
the Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department press release dated
October 9, 2007... (click on
the link above for this story)
10/10/07: A
shot-at wolf is an elusive wolf
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Sublette County Farm Bureau submitted comments on the
latest version of the Wyoming Game and Fish Department
plan to manage wolves once they are removed from U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service protection. The local livestock
organization's letter shoots holes in the state plan,
suggesting that producers are better off with federal
wildlife managers having the responsibilty to control
problem wolves, and using federal dollars to pay for
the wolf control program.... (click on the link above
for this story and to read the letter) 10/10/07: Defenders
aim to end aerial gunning
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Framed
as a proposal to end aerial gunning of wolves in Alaska,
proposed
legislation introduced in Congress would actually end
aerial gunning of almost
all wildlife throughout the nation. This is an important
bill, as aerial control of chronic problem wolves is
often the
only method to stop depredation problems.The bill, called “Protect
America’s Wildlife
Act” (PAW), it’s heavily backed by
Defenders of Wildlife... (click on the link above for
this story)
10/6/07: Montana
ranch hand kills wolf
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Two
stories about a Montana ranch hand killing a wolf near
the cattle.... (click on
the link above for this story)
10/4/07: Defenders
slams Wyoming wolf plan
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
"Defenders of Wildlife has long argued that delisting
the wolf would be an irresponsible decision because
of Wyoming’s bad management plan. Wyoming’s
plan, which has been released for public comment today,
is further evidence that the state is no where near
committed to the sustainable management of wolves.".... (click on the link above
for this story) 10/4/07: NRDC
unleashes “Call off the guns” campaign
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) As
part of the “save the wolf” campaign, the
Natural Resources Defense Council's Action Fund is
purchasing “Call off the guns” television
ads. Gunshots ring out, and the video cuts to black,
followed by onscreen text, “Censored for your
protection. Then again, you’re not the one who
needs protecting"....
(click on the link above for this story)
10/4/07: NRDC
takes on wolf issue
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Natural Resources Defense Council, a national environmental
group, has taken on the Rocky Mountain wolf as an action
issue. NRDC has established a website to generate letters
of opposition to the federal rule change proposed by
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The rule change
would allow wolf control to protect wildlife populations.
NRDC has a goal to generate 200,000 e-mails to FWS...
(click on the link above for this story)
9/25/07: Mid-year
estimate tops 1,500 wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) “Overall,
the Northern Rocky Mountain wolf population in 2007
will be higher, wolf control about the same, and confirmed
livestock depredations lower than that documented in
2006,” according to Ed Bangs of the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service. Bangs released the agency’s
mid-year wolf population estimate....All told, the
tri-state wolf population is estimated at 1,545 wolves,
in 179 packs, including 105 breeding pairs. The wolf
population is responsible for confirmed kills of 111
cattle, 185 sheep, 10 dogs and one “other.”...
(click on the link above for this story)
9/23/07: Enviros
claim thousands of wolves needed
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
Earthjustice, representing the Natural Resources Defense
Council, Sierra Club, Jackson Hole Conservation Alliance,
and the Humane Society of the Untied States, submitted
a comment letter to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
on the proposal to delist the Northern Rockies wolf
population, calling the proposal “ill-advised
and illegal.”
.. (click on the link above for this story)
9/11/07: Yellowstone
wolves well fed
(By Ryan Smith, University of Calvary
Express News) A biological scientist at the University
of Alberta has analyzed 774 wolf-elk kill sites
and concluded that spatial patterns of predation between
wolves and elk are more strongly influenced by landscape
features than by wolf distribution. The research
results were published recently in the academic journal
Ecology Letters... (click
on the link above for this story)
9/11/07: Environmental
assessment on wolf rules released
(By US Fish & Wildlife Service) The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service published an environmental
assessment to analyze the potential effects of proposed
revisions to the (10j) special regulations governing
the management of gray wolves introduced in the Central
Idaho and Yellowstone areas of the northern Rocky Mountains.
Public comments is being requested on the EA
at this time, and FWS is reopening the public comment
period on the proposed 10(j) special regulations. All
public comments for both the proposed 10(j) special
rule and the EA must be received by the Service by
October 11, 2007.... (click on the link above for
this story)
9/11/07: Two
Wolves Killed
(By Cat Urbigkit) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service reports that on September 7, ongoing wolf control
efforts were completed when USDA Wildlife Services
specialists killed wolves in three western Wyoming
wolf packs that had been preying on domestic livestock.
Two wolves were killed in the Upper Green River pack,
and in other control actions the same day, Wildlife Services
specialists removed an adult male and a yearling female
from the Gooseberry Pack; and a yearling female from the
Carter Mountain Pack. So far this year, federal wildlife
control specialists have killed eight wolves in the
Sublette County area. ..
(click on the link above for this story)
9/7/07: Wyoming's
Revised Wolf Management Plan open for public comment
(By Wyoming Game & Fish) The Wyoming
Game and Fish Commission authorized a 30-day
public comment period on the state's draft revised
gray wolf management plan. The revised plan will be
posted on the Wyoming Game and Fish Department's Web
site on Monday, Sept. 10. The comment period will end
Oct. 10. The commission also authorized the Wyoming
Game and Fish Department to conduct four public meetings
the week of Sept. 17 in Pinedale, Lander, Casper and
Cody. At each of the meetings, department personnel
will discuss the draft revised plan and accept written
comments. The meetings will run from 7 to 9 p.m. at the following
locations:
Pinedale: Sept. 17 -- Public Library Meeting Room;
Lander: Sept. 18 -- Lander Community Center;
Casper: Sept. 19 -- Casper WGFD Office, Pronghorn Room;
Cody: Sept. 20 -- Holiday Inn.... (click on the link above
for this story)
9/1/07: Elk
Effects
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
effect of wolf predation on elk is undergoing increased
scrutiny, and a new paper published in Science magazine
takes an interesting look at elk reproductive physiology
in response to wolves.Click on the link below to jump to
the article in the February 16, 2007 issue of Science
magazine, "Predation
Risk Affect Reproductive Physiology and Demography of Elk" by
Scott Creel, David Christianson, Stewart Liley, John A.
Whinney Jr.... (click on the
link above for this story)
9/1/07: Wyoming
plan maximizes wolf killing
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) A
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service field crew confirmed
eight pups (plus 4-6 adults) in the Gros Ventre wolf
pack. Trapping and collaring efforts for the Gros Ventre
Pack have been halted until forest fires subside and
access in to the area is possible... (click on the
link above for this story)
9/1/07: FWS
Promotes Intolerance of Wolves?
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) According
to a coalition of environmental groups, the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service’s proposal to change the
federal rules regarding non-essential experimental
wolves in the Northern Rockies will “significantly
set back wolf recovery.” The groups claim that there
is “no legitimate biological
justification” for the current proposal, which would
allow states to kill wolves when wildlife populations are
adversely affected by wolf predation.The groups claim that
rather than promoting recovery, FWS’s rule change
promotes intolerance for wolves... (click on the
link above for this story)
8/30/07: Gros
Ventre pack produces 8 pups
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) A
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service field crew confirmed
eight pups (plus 4-6 adults) in the Gros Ventre wolf
pack. Trapping and collaring efforts for the Gros Ventre
Pack have been halted until forest fires subside and
access in to the area is possible... (click on the
link above for this story)
8/30/07: Wolf
investigation sought
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Eight conservation
groups led by Forest Guardians requested a federal investigation
into allegations that a USDA Wildlife Services predator control
agent pointed a rifle at a New Mexico Game and Fish Department
biologist at the scene of the latest Mexican gray wolf killing
in the state. In their formal request to the USDA Inspector
General’s
Office, the groups argue that such serious claims of federal
misconduct cannot be left to local, anti-wolf authorities.....
(click on the link above for this story)
8/27/07: Idaho
group seeks wolf removal
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Idaho Anti-Wolf Coalition has refiled its petition
relating to wolf regulation in Idaho, seeking to remove
wolves from the state by whatever means necessary.
Throughout the state, petitions are being distributed
to circulators who will be collecting signatures to get
the initiative on the November 4, 2008 general election
ballot. IAWC must get 45,893 signatures of registered voters
by April 30, 2008. IAWC’s goal is 100,000 registered
voters....
(click on the link above for this story)
8/21/07: Eighteen
sheep dead
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)Federal
wildlife officials are investigating the death of 18
sheep on a Bridger-Teton National Forest grazing allotment.
According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, on
August 15, USDA Wildlife Services personnel rode into
to remote
sheep grazing allotment in the Wyoming Range near LaBarge,
to investigate 18 dead sheep that were suspected wolf kills.
FWS noted that a pair of wolves were in the area last
year. One of the wolves was an older female wolf that got
caught in a coyote trap last winter. The drag didn't hold
and escaped with the trap. The wolf was later euthanized
because of foot damage. The other wolf apparently remained
in the area where the sheep depredations occurred. Wolf control
efforts are pending results of the current investigation
to the sheep deaths... (click on the link
above for this story)
8/14/07: Groups
ask FWS to reconsider wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Earthjustice,
on behalf of the Natural Resources Defense Council,
Sierra Club, Jackson Hole Conservation Alliance, the
Humane Society of the U.S., and Help Our Wolves Live,
has submitted two separate letters to the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service. One letter urges the agency to reconsider
its proposal to remove wolves from protection under
the federal Endangered
Species Act. The other letter seeks to persuade the service
to withdraw a separate proposal to allow the killing
of up to 700 of
the estimated 1,300 wolves that live in Idaho, Montana,
and Wyoming before delisting... (click on the link above
for this story)
8/7/07: Wolf
population maintains numbers
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports that mid-summer
wolf pack counts in Wyoming are similar to or slightly lower
than in 2006...
(click on the link above for this story)
8/7/07: Two
wolves killed in Upper Green
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) On
July 28, USDA Wildlife Services confirmed four calves
had been killed by wolves in the Upper Green River
area. On July 31, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
confirmed two more calves killed by wolves in the Green
River Pack. On August 1, the two federal agencies removed
two wolves and control is ongoing to remove the entire
pack. Click on the story link above for other wolf depredations
around the state, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service...(click on the link above for this story)
8/5/07: Elk
feedground permitting examined
(By U.S. Forest Service) The Bridger-Teton
National Forest is proposing to authorize use and occupancy
of national forest sytem land for the Wyoming Game
and Fish Commission to maintain facilities and use
forest land in conjunction with its winter elk management
programs. Two actions are planned...
(click
on link for more on this story)
8/5/07: Twelve
Yellowstone wolf packs produce pups
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Monitoring
flights have picked up pups in all 12 Yellowstone National
Park wolf packs this year and so far pup survival looks
good through July, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service. Yellowstone National Park researchers also report
that the summer predation study is going well. Approximately
31 kills have been found from mid-May through mid-July.
The kills consisted of 20 bull elk, five cow elk, five
calf elk, and one mule deer. The results thus indicate
that rather than killing a lot of calves, wolves are preying
on a lot of bulls....
(click on the link above for this story)
8/5/07: Wyoming
wolf predations confirmed
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Dubois,
Meeteetse, Cody calves and cows hit by predators...
(click on the link above for this story) 8/5/07: Kayaker
survives wolf attack
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Victoria Times Colonist newspaper in British Columbia
reported that a kayaker had to fight
off a wolf intent on having him as prey on the remote
North Coast. A 31-year old kayaker was busy setting up
his tent on the beach when the female wolf attacked. The
kayaker fought the wolf, even dragging the fighting
duo to his kayak where he retrieved a knife and repeatedly
stabbed the animal. After the animal fled, the kayaker called
for help on a radio. He was rescued by resort workers
who also shot
and killed the wolf... (click
on the link above for this story)
8/1/07: Lock-out
used for wolf plan protest
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Oregon Cattlemen’s Association is supporting
a statewide private land-use-lock-out launched by its
Wolf Task Force Committee who is inviting all property
owners, livestock producers, hunters, and agriculture
and natural resource organizations to sign up and join
in with the Oregon Ranch Rescue project.... (click
on link for more on this story)
7/25/07: Details
of wolf compensation fund
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) In
1987, Defenders of Wildlife created a $100,000 fund
to compensate ranchers in the U.S. Northern Rockies
for verified livestock losses to wolves. The fund has
evolved over the years, and in the fall of 2000, became
the Bailey Wildlife Foundation Wolf Compensation Trust.
It’s important to note that not all ranchers
are reimbursed for their verified losses and not all
losses due to wolves can be verified. The Defenders
program is very limited in this regard... (click on
link for more on this story)
7/25/07: Details
of wolf compensation fund
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) In
1987, Defenders of Wildlife created a $100,000 fund
to compensate ranchers in the U.S. Northern Rockies
for verified livestock losses to wolves. The fund has
evolved over the years, and in the fall of 2000, became
the Bailey Wildlife Foundation Wolf Compensation Trust. It’s
important to note that not all ranchers are reimbursed for
their verified losses and not all losses
due to wolves can be verified. The Defenders program is
very limited in this regard...
(click on link for more on this story)
7/23/07: Oregon
wolf death under investigation
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is investigating the
discovery of a dead gray wolf in Union County, Oregon.
The animal had been shot, and was recovered on May
25, 2007, from a forested area north of Elgin. The carcass
was badly decomposed when first discovered, making
initial identification of the animal difficult.
Testing confirmed it was a mature female wolf, genetically
related to the wolf population in Idaho, and that it died
from a gunshot wound. FWS law enforcement agents are requesting
that anyone who may have information regarding the
death of this or
any other wolf contact them immediately at 503-682-6131.
This is the fourth confirmed wolf to have been found
in eastern Orgeon.... (click on link for
more on this story)
7/23/07: LaBarge
wolf kills calf
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports that on Thursday,
July 19, USDA Wildlife Services personnel confirmed
that an apparently lone wolf killed a calf on private
land near LaBarge. FWS has authorized Wildlife Services
specialists to kill the wolf.... (click
on link for more on this story)
7/14/07: FWS
re-opens wolf comment period
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service denied Wyoming’s petition
to amend the 1994 special rule to manage wolves in the northern
Rocky Mountains. FWS determined that the 1994 and 2005 10(j)
special rules, the proposed revisions to the 2005 10(j) special
rule published
on July 6, 2007, and past and ongoing wolf control efforts
already adequately address the concerns raised by the State
of Wyoming in its petition dated July 1, 2005... (click
on link for more on this story)
7/8/07: FWS
re-opens wolf comment period
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) In
response to a recently negotiated deal with Wyoming officials,
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has reopened the public
comment period on the proposal to designate a distinct
population segment of gray wolves in the Northern Rockies,
and to remove this population from Endangered Species
Act protections. The new proposal would include wolves
in northwestern Wyoming, outside the national parks,
in delisting. Comments on the updated proposal will be accepted
until Aug. 6. In addition, a public hearing on the proposal
will
be held July 17 at the Cody Auditorium, 1240 Beck Avenue
in Cody. FWS will first host an open house from 4:30-5:30,
with the public hearing to be held 5:30-8:30 p.m...(click
on link for more on this story)
7/8/07: FWS
proposes wolf rule revisions
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is accepting public comment
on proposed revisions for the rule governing wolf management
and control in the Northern Rockies. FWS proposes to define "unacceptable
impact" as
a state-determined impact to a wild ungulate population
or herd, with wolves as one of the major causes of the
population or herd not meeting established population or
herd management goals. The determination must be peer-
reviewed and reviewed and commented on by the public prior
to a final determination by FWS that an unacceptable impact
has occurred and that wolf removal is not likely to impede
wolf recovery.’ ... (click on link for more on this
story)
7/5/07: Park
County makes wolf argument
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Attorneys
for the Park County Commission filed the county’s
opening brief in the pending federal lawsuit over the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s rejection of the
Wyoming wolf management plan and petition to delist. While
FWS is critical of the Wyoming plan regarding predator classification
and unlicensed take outside the
core habitat around Yellowstone Park, that criticism is
unreasonable and arbitrary under the circumstances,” according
to Park County... (click
on link for more on this story)
7/5/07: Wolf
Coalition makes argument
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Wyoming Wolf Coalition has filed its opening brief in
the federal lawsuit over the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s
rejection of the Wyoming wolf plan last year. The coalition
consists of associations, private entities and political
subdivisions of the state, ranging from livestock groups
and sportsmen’s organizations, and from outfitters
and guides to county commissions and conservation districts.
The wolf coalition asserts in its brief, “By rejecting
Wyoming’s petition to delist, by rejecting the Wyoming
plan, and by refusing to issue a supplemental environmental
impact statement, [FWS] damaged the interests of the Wolf
Coalition members and have violated the Endangered Species
Act and the National Environmental Policy Act.” (click
on link for more on this story)
7/2/07: Hunter
Hunted: Wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) National
Geographic Wild has begun a “gripping new CSI-style
series” which examines “vicious animal attacks
on humans by wild creatures.” One of the series is
called “Hunter hunted: The
hunter becomes the hunted” in which “the brutal
death of a student points to the first ever wolf attack
fatality in North America. Closer analysis reveals that
experts may have been too quick to judge the predator ...” The
program aired several times in June. Check local listings
for more.
7/2/07: Predation
compensation examined
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Ranchers
rail that when it comes to problems with predators, compensation
isn’t the only important factor and certainly isn’t
the solution to the problem: controlling the problem animals
is critical. Three University of Montana wildlife biology
students conducted in-depth interviews with livestock producers
in four communities in three states, including Dubois and
Kaycee, Wyoming. What they learned is included in their
report, called, “Political and social viability of
predator compensation programs in the West.”... (click
on link for more on this story)
6/30/07: Predator
control is economical
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Predator
control can be controversial and unpleasant, but it is also
an economical practice when applied to benefit agriculture,
wildlife and human health. Three scientists authored a research
paper called “Economics of predation management in
relation to agriculture, wildlife and human health and safety.”....
(click on link for more on this story)
6/30/07: New
Mexico county fed up with wolf
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Catron County (New Mexico) Commission has determined
that a reintroduced Mexican wolf is a threat to humans
and has served the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service with
its notice of intent to remove the animal, since the
federal wildlife agency refuses to do so.... (click
on link for more on this story)
6/28/07: Get
to know Wildlife Services
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) USDA Wildlife
Services has a memorandum of understanding with USDI Fish
and Wildlife Service to handle on-the-ground wolf problems.
While FWS is the agency charged with protecting wolves and
is the decision-maker on when to take problem wolves out
of the population, it’s Wildlife Services that gets
called to control the animals. With decades upon decades
of experience in animal damage control, these guys are pros
at taking out problem wolves. If you’re a livestock
producer who is seeing wolves or sign of wolves and haven't
worked with Wildlife Services
before, get in touch with your local specialists and get
an agreement in place in advance. Wildlife Services must
have a written agreement with the landowner, authorizing
them to conduct control activities on private land. It’s
a short, simple form that can be completed in a couple
of minutes. There is no charge to the producer for their
services....
(click on link for more on this story)
6/28/07: Wyoming Wolf
lawsuit moves forward
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The State
of Wyoming recently filed its opening brief in U.S. District
Court for Wyoming in its continued battle with the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service for wolf delisting. On July 1, 2005,
the State of Wyoming filed a petition asking FWS to amend
the existing gray wolf management regulations,
but the federal agency has failed to make a decision on
that petition.... (click
on link for more on this story)
6/28/07: Wolf
killed in Big Horns
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Last Wednesday,
June 20, a two-year old male wolf was killed by an M-44 coyote
bait in the Bighorn Mountains near Ten Sleep, Wyoming. The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service does not acknowledge the presence
of wolves in this area, but every once in a while, one ends
up getting killed or is caught killing livestock. At least
one local sheep producer has reportedly experienced losses
to two wolves in recent weeks. Federal law enforcement agents
are investigating the death of the wolf. The U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service reports that after wolves from the Washakie
wolf pack killed a calf and a
cow near Dubois, USDA Wildlife Services personnel killed
two adult male wolves (on 6/20/07). Control is complete
at this time.
6/17/07: What's
up with wolves in Colorado?
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Colorado
is part of the gray wolf's native range, but wolves were
eradicated from the state by the mid-1930s. With the introduction
of wolves into neighboring states, some believe it is only
a matter of time before wolves start migrating into Colorado
from the north and south. In fact, several Yellowstone-area
wolves have already been discovered in that state... (click
on link for more on this story)
6/17/07: Long
Term Wolf Impact Unknown
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) According
to a paper written by three wildlife researchers, the long-term
ecological impact of the Yellowstone wolf reintroduction
program remains unknown. The paper, Yellowstone After Wolves,
was published in BioScience magazine. The paper notes that
in Isle Royale National Park, wolves completed eliminated
the coyote population, and had severe
impacts on the moose population. What’s in store
for Yellowstone? Read the paper to learn more... (click
on link for more on this story)
6/17/07: Wolves
and Humans Series
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The International
Wolf Center in Ely, Minnesota has produced a new “Wolves
and Humans” informational series of brochures to help
foster wolf/human coexistence, including a tip sheet for
avoiding conflicts with wolves and another on wolves that
have become habituated to humans, among the five in the current
series. The International Wolf Center encourages the reproduction
of these informational sheets for your personal use, or
for distribution to any audience.... (click
on link for more on this story)
6/15/07: A
Place for Wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Ever wonder
just what plans are in the works for wolf restoration efforts?
Last year Defenders of Wildlife issued its “blueprint” for
wolf restoration in the lower 48 states. Called “Places
for Wolves”, the plan outlines what this national environmental
group would like to see happen with wolf restoration... (click
on link for more on this story)
6/8/07: Friends
of the Northern Yellowstone Elk Herd slam feds
(By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Montana-based Friends of
the Northern Yellowstone Elk Herd (“Friends”)
has retained Cheyenne’s Budd-Falen law firm to
begin preparation of a wolf lawsuit. Back in the fall
of 2001, Friends filed a petition to delist Northern
Rocky Mountain wolves from the list of
federally protected species, which the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service summarily rejected. The State of Wyoming filed
a similar petition four years later, to which FWS noted
had some merit, but eventually rejected the state’s
wolf management plan. Now that dispute is pending in federal
court while FWS has also proposed to move forward with
delisting.... (click on link for more on this story)
6/8/07: Freudenthal’s
wolf plan (By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) In an attempt to ensure
that Wyoming is not left out of plans to remove gray
wolves from federal protection, Wyoming Governor Dave
Freudenthal recently transmitted a draft wolf management
plan to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that he
said is based on recent discussions with the agency. Actually,
FWS drafted the plan, submitted it through a state
legislator to the governor, who then approved it
and sent it back to FWS...(click on link for more
on this story)
6/7/07: Outfitter
talks of wolf impact (By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Terry Pollard of Bald Mountain Outfitters
in Pinedale, Wyoming, gives observations about wolf
activity and the impact on elk during 2005 and 2006
near their hunting camp in the Little Sandy area and
the
Wind River Mountains...(click on link for more
on this story) 6/7/07: WWGA
not pleased with wolf deal (By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The Wyoming Wool Growers
Association is none too pleased with the wolf deal
Governor Dave Freudenthal negotiated with the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service. In a statement released
by WWGA executive Bryce Reece, the organization expressed
extreme disappointment in Freudenthal's decision...(click
on link for more on this story)
6/6/07: Idaho
Wolf Kills Domestic Elk (and other Idaho Wolf news) (By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Last week in May, an elk
rancher reported to the Idaho Department of Fish and
Game and the U.S. Department
of Agriculture's Wildlife Services that a wolf had
gotten inside a domestic elk pen south of Tendoy in
eastern Idaho and killed an elk. The Endangered Species
Act, however, does not consider domestic elk and deer
as livestock,
and officials initiated no response. The individual was
told that shooting at the wolf was illegal. But he would
have to chase the wolf out of the pen using nonlethal methods,
because no wild animal, especially a listed species, can
be held in captivity...(click on link for more on this
story)
6/5/07: Avoiding
Wolf/Dog Conflicts (By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The Idaho Fish and Game Department
has issued a caution to recreationists
headed to the mountains with their family dogs, noting that "with
the growing
wolf population in the backcountry, they may be heading into
trouble." IF&G notes that while
it's impossible to completely eliminate wolf/dog
conflicts in wolf habitat, precautions when walking dogs
or hunting with
hounds include...(click on link for more
on this story)
5/25/07: Governor
optimistic about wolf negotiation (By
Governor Freudenthal's Office) On Thursday, May 24, Gov.
Dave Freudenthal transmitted a draft wolf management
plan to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that is
based on recent discussions with the agency. Freudenthal
commended the Fish and Wildlife Service’s
efforts to weave both Wyoming’s 2003 wolf management
plan and the state’s 2007state legislation into a
federal rule leading to the delisting of the gray wolf
from the Endangered Species List... (click on link for more
on this story)
4/25/07: Three
Wolves Killed (By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Kill order issued
on three more. On April 9, USDA Wildlife Services
personnel confirmed a calf had been killed by wolves near
Daniel, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
in an area that has had repeated depredations over the last
several years. FWS requested Wildlife Services remove the
three wolves seen frequenting the area. The next day, on
April 10, Wildlife Services killed the three wolves, including
two males and one female... (click on link for more
on this story)
4/6/07: New
Wolf Rules in the Works (By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Wolf
Recovery Coordinator Ed Bangs reported this
week that he has been working on a proposed modification
to the 2005
experimental population 10j rule that would make it
easier for states and tribes
with approved wolf management plans to remove (kill)
wolves that were
impacting wild ungulate populations.... (click on link
for more on this story)
4/4/07: Wyoming
has its own timeline for Wolf management (By
Governor Freudenthal's Office) Wyoming will pursue its
own time line when considering revisions to the state’s
wolf management rules, Governor Dave Freudenthal said
in a letter today to U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Regional Director Mitch King... (click on link for
more on this story)
4/3/07: Alaska
Wolf Bounty Halted (By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Restraining
order blocks $150 boundy to kill wolves as part
of
predator control program An Alaska Superior
Court judge issued a temporary restraining order
blocking the state from paying
a $150 bounty to permittees who kill wolves as part
of the predator control programs. The decision is
a result of a motion filed by Defenders of Wildlife,
the Alaska Wildlife Alliance and the Alaska Chapter
of the Sierra Club earlier in the week that challenged
the legal authority of the state to issue bounties...
(click on link for more on this story)
4/1/07:
Wolf News Roundup (By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Defenders of Wildlife, the
Alaska Wildlife Alliance and the Alaska Chapter of
the Sierra Club have asked the Alaska Superior Court
to shut down the state’s $150-per-wolf bounty
program, pointing to the 1984 repeal of Alaska's bounty
laws. The environmental groups allege that the state
has no current legal authority to implement the bounties...
(click on link for more on this story)
3/23/07: Effects
of Wolves on Elk (By
Wyoming Game & Fish Department)
A detailed look at the effects that wolves are having
on elk populations in northwestern Wyoming. In the
report, department biologists analyzed statewide elk
population data from 1980 through 2005... (click on link
for more on this story)
3/21/07: Wolf
population continues to increase (By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The wolf population
in Wyoming in 2006 included at least 311 wolves and
was a 23-percent increase from the year before, according
to a new report issued by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service... (click on link for more
on this story)
3/9/07: Wolf
control costs calculated (By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) At an early March, 2007, meeting
of the Green River Valley Cattlemen’s Association
in Pinedale, Rod Krischke of Wildlife Services gave
a report of his agency’s activities in Sublette
County for the last year... (click on link for more
on this story)
3/6/07: Wolves
cause feedground problems (By
Wyoming Game & Fish Department, Pinedale Online)
Wolves have been disrupting the Wyoming Game and Fish
Department’s feedground operations in northwest
Wyoming again this winter. In the past several weeks,
Game and Fish personnel at feedgrounds have become
increasingly frustrated with the wolf activity and
their lack of ability to deal with the predators... (click
on link for more on this story)
3/2/07: Governor
signs Wolf Management Bill (By
Governor Freudenthal's office, Pinedale Online) Governor
Freudenthal signed the wolf-management bill HB213, "Game
and fish-wolf management," also
known as House Enrolled Act 123, into law on March
2, 2007... (click on link for more
on this story)
3/2/07: Wolf
spat in court (By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale
Online!)
While attention remains focused on
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s wolf delisting
proposal and the federal agency’s rejection of
Wyoming Governor Dave Freudenthal’s demands relating
to wolves and wildlife, the state’s lawsuit against
FWS over its failure to delist wolves continues, with
bickering occurring even in the court... (click on link for
more on this story)
2/13/07: Wolf
delisting planned for most of Wyoming (By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Wolves will remain
federally protected as a “non-essential, experimental” population
in a small portion of northwestern Wyoming, while wolves
in the remainder of the state will be delisted and
removed from federal protection, under a federal plan
just unveiled... (click on link for more
on this story)
2/11/07: Pinedale
Plan Proposes Wolf Protectons (By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Although federal
rules promulgated when wolves were reintroduced into
Yellowstone National Park as a non-essential experimental
population promised that no federal land use restrictions
would be needed outside the national parks to protect
wolves, the draft Pinedale Resource Management Plan
environmental impact statement seems to reneg on that
commitment... (click on link for more
on this story)
2/2/07: Luthi
nominated second in command at FWS (By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) U.S. Senator
Craig Thomas praised President Bush’s intention
to appoint Randall Luthi to be Deputy Director of
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Thomas sought
Luthi’s appointment with the White House. As
Deputy Director, Luthi will be responsible for ensuring
the enhancement of fish, wildlife, and plants and their
habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people...
(click on link for more on this story)
1/29/07: LaBarge
Wolf Killed (By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
U.S. The U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service reported that on
January 24, an uncollared adult wolf was caught in
a coyote trap on a private ranch near LaBarge. The
trap
drag
did not hold and the wolf ran off with the trap. The
trapper notified FWS. FWS’s Mike Jimenez and his
crew “went to
the area, tracked the wolf, and tranquilized a very old,
gray, female wolf,” FWS reported. The wolf had
severe foot injuries from being held in the trap for
several days, as well as extremely worn teeth; some teeth
were worn down to the gum line. Due to the severity of
the injuries to its foot, the wolf was euthanized, the
agency reported... (click on link for more
on this story)
1/26/07: Planning
for Wolf Hunts (By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale
Online!)
If the Idaho Fish and Game Commission has it’s way, the Idaho Legislature
will amend state law to include a provision so that it would cost $26.50 for
a tag to hunt wolves in Idaho once they are removed from the endangered species
list.
The commission plans to ask the legislature to change state statutes to allow
the commission to authorize wolf hunts, so if wolves are removed from the endangered
species list the department would be prepared to set hunts and sell tags. The
federal government has said it plans to initiate the delisting process this month.
An actual hunting season on wolves could be months or years away depending on
the outcome of that process.
1/25/07: Planning
for Wolf Hunts (By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
On Thursday, January 25, commissioners approved recommended
changes
to three
statutes
that would
authorize
the commission
to issue tags and set fees. The commissioners also agreed
to ask for up to 10 special commissioners' wolf tags,
and to set the price of a resident wolf tag at $26.50
and a
nonresident tag at $256. Hunters
also must purchase an Idaho hunting license.
For the changes to be approved this year in time for the
possibility of wolf delisting this fall, the proposed
changes
must be submitted as proposed legislation by early February.
Meanwhile, Fish and Game officials are working
on a wolf hunting and species management plan under
the guidelines
of the Idaho Wolf Conservation and Management Plan that
would reduce wolf numbers in areas of conflict and try
to stabilize numbers across the rest of the state. Any
hunting seasons must be approved by the commissioners.
Large carnivore coordinator Steve Nadeau has assembled
a planning team that includes the Fish and Game wildlife
staff members and wolf specialist. The public will be involved
at various levels throughout the planning process.?Fish
and Game officials expect to have a final plan for hunting
delisted wolves in Idaho ready for Commission approval
in November.
Idaho has never had a hunting season on wolves. In 1995,
a federal reintroduction program brought 35 wolves to Idaho.
Today, officials estimate about 650 wolves in 71 packs,
and 41 or more breeding pairs inhabit Idaho.
1/23/07: Northern
Yellowstone elk numbers down (By Cat
Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) It appears, once again, that
wolves are responsible for dropping numbers in the Northern
Yellowstone elk population.
The Northern Yellowstone Cooperative Wildlife Working Group
conducted its annual winter survey of the northern Yellowstone
elk population on Dec. 30.
The Northern Yellowstone elk herd winters between the northeast
entrance of Yellowstone National Park and Dome Mountain/Dailey
Lake in the Paradise Valley. This year’s count of
6,738 elk was similar to the count of 6,588 elk in March
2006, but significantly lower than the 9,545 elk counted
in January 2005.
" This decrease in counted elk likely reflects the
continuing effects of predation by wolves and other large
carnivores, as well as decreased detection of elk within
Yellowstone due to anti-predation behaviors such as smaller
group sizes, increased dispersion of groups, and increased
use of forested habitats, making them more difficult to
locate," said P.J. White, biologist for Yellowstone
National Park, in a press release.
" It appears that elk distribution has changed in
recent years with elk numbers north of Yellowstone Park
leveling off at between 3,200-4,000 elk, while elk numbers
wintering inside the park may be decreasing," according
to Tom Lemke, biologist for Montana Fish, Wildlife and
Parks.
" In an effort to reduce hunter mortality on female
elk, FWP has reduced the number of antlerless Late Elk
Hunt permits over the last several years. For the last
2 years only 100 antlerless permits have been issued," said
Lemke. "At the current level of harvest, recreational
hunting has very little impact on elk numbers in a population
of several thousand animals. Hunting has basically been
removed as a significant factor regulating northern Yellowstone
elk numbers."
The state elk plan calls for a winter population objective
of 3,000-5,000 elk north of Yellowstone with 2,000-3,000
of those animals wintering on or near the state-owned Dome
Mountain Wildlife Management Area. In the last 4 years,
an estimated total of 3,200-4,000 elk have wintered in
the area with 2,100-2,800 elk using the Dome Mountain WMA.
By the end of this winter, biologists expect elk numbers
north of the park to remain within management objectives.
In contrast, during the late 1990s, 5,300-8,600 elk wintered
north of the park with 3,500-4,500 elk in the Dome Mountain
area. Approximately two-thirds of the elk observed during
the count were located within Yellowstone National Park,
and the remainder were located north of the park boundary.
Biologists used three fixed-wing aircraft to count elk
through the entire northern range during the one-day survey.
1/23/07: Inquest
into wolf mauling (By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) There will be a coroner’s inquest
into the death of a 22-year old man, Kenton Carnegie, who
died in November 2005 due to a wolf attack in northern Saskatchewan.
The inquest will be held Feb. 5-9 in the Court of Queen’s
Bench in Prince Albert, according to newsdurhamregion.com.
1/23/07:
Wolves in Canada (By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
CBC News North reports that
an increase in wolf presence around the town of Iqaluit, Candada, led government
officials to alert school officials to issue a warning
to parents and students. The news accounts note that hunters and trappers believes
the wolves are coming in close out of hunger and pose a threat to humans, both
children and adults. 1/20/07: Sublette
County statute changes on wolf tags (By Cat
Urbigkit, Pinedale Online) The quagmire over future
plans for
the management
of wolves
in Wyoming shows no sign of easing, and although state
and federal officials keep talking, each side seems to
be showing few signs of actually listening to the other...
For permission to reprint Cat's articles and photos (one-time,
non-exclusive) posted here, please contact Cat
Urbigkit at Pinedale Online.
1/15/07:
Wolves in Armenia
(By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) A wolf has been attacking
villagers in Armenia, according to news accounts posted
by ArmeniaNow.com reporters.
At least four people were attacked in the southern village
of Brnakot before the wolf moved on to two other villages,
attacking several more people in the process. Although
a hunting party was organized by police, when the wolf
entered a house and attacked a man in the town of Sisian,
another man killed the animal by beating it with his
rifle. The wolf had attacked a total of seven people
who were treated in hospitals.
The Armenia Rescue Service director was quoted as reporting
that no cases of wolf attacks had been reported in the
republic for three or four years.
1/10/07:
Idaho wolf in Wyoming
(By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service reports that on Jan. 8, wolf project leader Mike
Jimenez responded to a call
from a coyote trapper who had incidentally captured an
uncollared female pup from the Washakie pack near Dubois,
Wyoming. The wolf was collared and released on site.
Two days later, the same trapper notified FWS that he
had captured an adult black breeding male wolf. The wolf
was wearing an ear tag indicating it had been born in
2003 near Boise, Idaho. Both wolves appeared to be in
good shape, FWS reported. The federal wildlife agency
now plans to monitor these wolves to confirm their pack
affiliation.
1/10/07:
Biggest wolf killed
(By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) According to international
news accounts, a gray wolf weighing 80kg (176 pounds) was
shot and killed in northwestern
Bulgaria by a hunter. This is the biggest wolf ever recorded.
A hunter (Slavcho Slavchev) shot the wolf, estimated to
be six years old, while waiting for other game. The news
account noted that Bulgaria has one of the largest game
populations in Europe and is home to more than 2.500 wolves.
If the weight is confirmed, it will beat out the past record
of 174 pounds on a wolf taken in Alaska in 1939.
12/29/06:
Delisting
(By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online)The U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service is going to be prepared to move forward with delisting,
either with or without
Wyoming.
According to a press release from Idaho Governor Jim Risch,
FWS Director Dale Hall told him that FWS is preparing a
two-pronged approach for delisting wolves in Idaho and
Montana. One approach includes Wyoming, if the legislature
approves a new management plan in the upcoming session,
and the other excludes Wyoming “if no progress is
made.”
Idaho and Montana have had management
plans in place for wolves in those states that have far
exceeded recovery
goals. FWS rejected Wyoming's management plan and the
issue
is now being litigated. Hall told Risch that FWS would publish a notice in the
Federal Register by the end of January 2007 to begin
the process that will remove federal protection for wolves
in Idaho and Montana under the Endangered Species Act
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