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2009 Story Archive
(Most recent stories listed first)
2008
Story Archive
2007/2006
Story Archive
12/30/09: Montana
summarizes wolf hunt
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Montana Fish Wildlife & Parks officials
have issued a report summarizing the state's first fair-chase
wolf hunting season. It contains a lot of interesting information
about harvested animals.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.) 12/30/09: Man
fined $25K for poaching wolf
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A 37-year old man was fined $25,000 for illegally
poaching a wolf in Michigan. He was also ordered to perform
20 days of community service, be subject to six months of probation,
and he lost his hunting privileges for two years.... (Click on the link above for the complete story.)
12/23/09: Wyoming
wolf data
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has data
showing wolf population growth over time in Wyoming outside
of Yellowstone National Park from 2000 to 2009, the number
of wolf packs and breeding pairs in Wyoming from 1999 to 2009,
and confirmed livestock depredations in Wyoming from 2000 to
2009.... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.) 12/23/09: Helicopter
landings in wilderness allowed
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The USDA Forest Service has issued a decision
memo authorizing the Idaho Fish and Game Department to land
helicopters in the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness
to support gray wolf capture and collaring. Although not the
first time helicopter use has been authorized to assist in
wildlife management, the issue is expected to generate considerable
controversy since it involves wolves. The decision memo was
issued Dec. 22, 2009.... (Click on the link above for the complete story.) 12/23/09: Wolf
death tally passes 500
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Associated Press reports that wolf deaths
in the tri-state area of Montana,
Idaho and Wyoming is more than 500 in 2009. That number includes
wolves
killed in response to livestock depredations and other control
actions, as well as
wolves killed in hunting seasons in Montana and Idaho.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
12/23/09: Montana
issues kill order on six wolf packs
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Montana Standard is reporting that
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks has authorized federal animal
damage control officials to kill wolves in six packs in western
Montana in response to livestock depredations.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.) 12/23/09: Fourth
Idaho wolf hunt area closes
(By Idaho Fish and
Game press release) The wolf season has closed as of Friday,
December 18, in the Palouse-Hells Canyon zone in north Idaho
where the limit of five wolves has been reached. The closure
affects big game management units 8, 8a, 11, 11A, 13 and 18.
Elsewhere in the state wolf seasons remain open. But two additional
zones are nearing the harvest limits. Idaho Department of Fish
and Game set wolf harvest limits by 12 zones. The season closes
in each zone when the limit for that zone is reached, or when
the statewide limit of 220 wolves is reached, or on March 31,
whichever comes first.... (Click on the link above
for the complete story.)
12/13/09: Paper
argues against delisting wolves
(By Valdosta State
University News) Valdosta State University (Georgia) Biology
Professor Dr. Brad Bergstrom recently authored a paper titled "The
Northern Rocky Mountain gray wolf is not yet recovered," which
was published in the December issue of BioScience, the journal
of the American Institute of Biological Sciences. The timely
article with political undertones focuses on a controversial
issue at the interface of science and public policy -- specifically
the May 2009 removal of the Northern Rocky Mountain gray wolves
of Idaho and Montana from Endangered Species Act (ESA) protection.
Bergstrom, lead author and conservation committee chair for
the American Society of Mammalogists (ASM), said he believes
the de-listing was premature, not based on the best science
and influenced by pressure from area ranchers, elk hunters
and state legislatures..... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
12/10/09: Idaho
closes wolf death investigation
(By Idaho Fish and
Game press release) The Idaho Fish and Game has concluded its
investigation into the deaths of six juvenile wolves on national
forest land north of Fairfield. Fish and Game conservation
officers found the partially decomposed wolves on Friday, August
21. Necropsies have been performed. But the cause of death
remains undetermined. The necropsy analysis done by the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service wildlife forensic laboratory in Ashland,
Ore., did not find evidence of poison. The wolves were not
shot or otherwise physically injured. Tissue samples tested
positive for canine parvo virus, but the results were inconclusive.
They were found in a remote area within 400 yards of each other
in various stages of decomposition, and all six died within
a few days of each other. An adult female with a radio collar
was located in the area and observed on September 3. She appeared
to be in good physical condition.... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
12/10/09: Two
more Idaho hunt areas near quotas
(By Idaho Fish and
Game press release) As of Monday, December 7, the statewide
hunter wolf harvest in Idaho was at 119 wolves. Harvest information
is updated as soon as it is reported. Wolf hunters are reminded
to check the harvest limit in the wolf hunting zones they intend
to hunt. Idaho Department of Fish and Game set wolf harvest
limits by 12 zones. The wolf season has been extended to March
31, 2010. Hunters who pursue wolves after December 31, however,
need a 2010 wolf tag and hunting license. Seasons remain open
until March 31 or until the limit for a wolf management zone
is reached, or when the statewide limit of 220 wolves is reached,
whichever comes first..... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
12/8/09: Briefs
filed in federal wolf lawsuit in Montana
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Montana wildlife officials and other interests
(including the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation) have filed briefs
in a federal court in Montana arguing against continued federal
protection for wolves.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.) 12/8/09: Montana
issues kill order on wolf pack
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Montana wildlife officials have issued a
kill order for the Mitchell Mountain wolf
pack after the pack killed at least four guard dogs on separate
occasions in the
last few months on private property north of Helena.
... (Click on the link above for the
complete story.)
12/8/09: Montana
moves wolf hunt proposal to spring
(By Montana Fish,
Wildlife and Parks) The Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks
Commission will postpone consideration of next year's wolf
hunting season until spring to allow more time for public comment.
The commission was set to consider a wolf hunting season proposal,
among several other big game and upland bird hunting proposals
for 2010-11, on Thursday, Dec. 10, in the Old Supreme Court
Chambers at the Montana State Capitol in Helena. By moving
the wolf discussion closer to spring, and after the commission's
considers other big game seasons, the commission feels they
will have more time and space to properly consider the wolf
hunting issue..... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.)
12/8/09: Mexican
wolf recovery at crossroads
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Associated Press writer Susan Montoya Bryan
recently wrote an article "Wolf recovery at crossroads
in the southwest," detailing the problems that are been
encountered in this recovery program involving a very small
federally protected wolf population.....
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
12/7/09: Did
imported wolves bring new parasite?
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service notes
that a new research paper reports that the parasite, the tapeworm
Echinococcus granulosus, has now been detected in Montana and
Idaho for the first time. It is apparently widespread through
the wolf population, and has now spread to elk, deer, and at
least one mountain goat. The researchers ponder whether this
tapeworm arrived in the region through the importation of wolves
from Canada, or whether it was already here, but undetected.
The paper was published in the Journal of Wildlife Diseases.....
(Click on the link above for the
complete story.) 12/7/09: FWS
releases depredation numbers
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports
that as of the first week of December 2009, these are Wyoming's
depredation numbers: A total of 195 sheep were killed, with
14 wolves killed in responding control actions. Thirty-seven
sheep were killed in the Upper Green, along with six wolves;
113 sheep and three wolves in the Big Horn Mountains; and 45
sheep and five wolves in the Dog Creek area of the Snake River
country. Twenty-one head of cattle were killed in eight areas,
with 16 wolves killed in control actions. All but about 10
of the cattle were killed in various areas of Sublette County.
In addition, seven dogs were killed by wolves in Wyoming so
far this year..... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
12/4/09: Sweden
opens first wolf hunt in 45 years
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) With a wolf population estimated at less
than 220 animals, Swedish officials are preparing to allow
the first wolf hunt in the country in 45 years. With quotas
to be set this month, an estimated 20 to 40 wolves will be
available for harvest.... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.) 12/4/09: Montana
considers wolf archery season
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Montana wildlife officials are considering
allowing wolves to be harvested in an archery-season hunt in
2010.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
12/2/09: Thirty
wolf packs roam Wyoming
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service just provided
a new estimate of Wyoming's minimum wolf population. FWS reported: "As
of November 2009, preliminary estimates for Wyoming outside
Yellowstone National Park (YNP) are >200 wolves in >30
packs (19-21 breeding pairs). Inside YNP there are approximately
116 wolves in 14 packs (6 breeding pairs)."... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
11/29/09: Ban
on aerial gunning sought
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Wild Earth Guardians is once again seeking
an end to the aerial gunning of predators. The technique used
this time is the submission of a "petition for executive
order and rulemaking banning aerial gunning and poisoning activities
of native wild carnivores on federal public lands" to
United States President Barack Obama, and several cabinet and
agency heads in the Obama administration.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
11/25/09: Wyoming
wolves kill three hounds
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Montana wildlife officials shut down the
state's wolf hunt on November 16th as quotas were either reached
or nearing the limit.... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
11/21/09: Montana
ends wolf hunt
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Montana wildlife officials shut down the
state's wolf hunt on November 16th as quotas were either reached
or nearing the limit.... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.) 11/21/09: Idaho
extends wolf hunting season
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Idaho Fish and Game Commission on Thursday,
November 19, extended wolf hunting seasons in all Idaho wolf
zones not already closed to March 31. Harvest limits and other
restrictions were not changed. The seasons would be extended
to March 31 in the Panhandle, Palouse-Hells Canyon, Selway,
Middle Fork, Salmon, Southern, and South Idaho zones, which
had been set to close December 31. The seasons already were
set to close March 31 in the Lolo and Sawtooth zones.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
11/17/09: Wolf
attack in India injures 17
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Seventeen people were injured in a wolf attack
in India, according to news reports. The wolf, which may have
been rabid, was subsequently killed.... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.)
11/17/09: FWS
reaches deal on Mexican wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Seventeen people were injured in a wolf attack
in India, according to news reports. The wolf, which may have
been rabid, was subsequently killed.... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
11/13/09: Wyoming:
FWS decision not based on biology
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) State of Wyoming and Park County officials
issued a joint opening brief challenging the federal decision
not to delist wolves in Wyoming. The opening brief was filed
in the U.S. Federal District Court in Cheyenne in early November.
The brief asserts that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service allowed
political and public relations considerations, and speculative
concerns about potential future lawsuits, to influence its
decision.... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
11/13/09: Wolf
Coalition: FWS flip-flops
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Wyoming Wolf Coalition also filed an
opening brief in the federal court case in Wyoming challenging
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service decision not to delist wolves
in Wyoming. WWC says “The decision of the United States
District Court for the District of Montana and the subsequent ‘flip
flop’ by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service
represent politics at its worst, as well a complete and total
rejection of the only valid ‘science’ that has
been generated on the subject." The brief argues that
there is nothing in the record "that undermines or otherwise
warrants a departure from delisting the gray wolf population
in Wyoming, and it is unlawful for the FWS to change its mind
based upon political influences rather than scientific evidence."..
(Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
11/13/09: Wolves
killed more Idaho livestock 2009
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Wolves have killed more livestock in Idaho
this year than in year's past, according to a federal animal
damage control official... (Click on the link above
for the complete story.) 11/11/09: Idaho
hunters harvest 98 wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) There have been 98 wolves harvested in the
Idaho fall wolf hunt, with two of the
state's 12 wolf hunt areas now closed as quotas have been reached.
There are
still another 122 wolves left to harvest under the quota system.....
(Click on the link
above for the complete story.)
11/11/09: Montana
hunters tag 61 wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Montana hunters have harvested 61 wolves
in the state's fall hunt, with another 17 wolves remaining
available for harvest under the state's quota system.... (Click on the link
above for the complete story.)
11/10/09: Wolf
stalking impacts on elk
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Wolves impact the way prey animals live
their lives, according to a Montana researcher, who noted that
the pressure from being stalked is forcing changes in elk behavior,
such as being alert and watching for predators more, and grazing
less. Pregnancy rates are decreasing as well. The researcher
indicates that the same could happen to livestock herds under
pressure from wolf predation..... (Click on the link
above for the complete story.)
11/6/09: FWS
tallies wolf conflicts 2009
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports
that Based on preliminary reports through October 30, 2009,
a total of 21 cattle, 183 sheep, and 4 dogs were recorded as
confirmed wolf kills, and 29 wolves were killed in subsequent
control actions in Wyoming.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
10/31/09: Enviros
seek judgment in wolf case
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Since a federal court judge has indicated
a coalition of environmental and animal rights groups will
probably prevail in their lawsuit seeking to have wolf delisting
in the Northern Rockies null and void, the groups have now
filed a motion for summary judgment with the court..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.) 10/31/09: Coyotes
kill Canadian woman
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) News reports from Nova Scotia provide accounts
of a fatal attack on a human by
coyotes. The 19-year old woman, a rising music star, was attacked
and later
died of her injuries
.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
10/31/09: Regional
wolf news
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) There have been 81 wolves taken in the Idaho
wolf hunt this fall, with a quota of
139 remaining. All 12 hunt areas remain open. Montana's wolf
hunt involves a statewide quota of 75 wolves in three hunt
areas. So far, 36 wolves have been harvested, with a quota
of 42 remaining.... (Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
10/25/09: Funding
wolf management
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The cost of wolf management when wolves are
removed from federal protection is an issue that states will
have to deal with. Whether there will be federal assistance
is in question, but states with wolf hunts are getting some
revenue from the sales of wolf tags. .... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.) 10/25/09: Idaho
hunters harvest 76 wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Hunters in Idaho have harvested 76 wolves
in this fall's hunt, with another 144 remaining under the quota
system in the state's 12 hunt areas. None of the hunt areas
have closed because quotas have been met, but several are getting
close..... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.) 10/25/09: Rancher
protests wolf policies
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A Montana rancher has withdrawn his lands
from a public hunting program in protest of Montana's wolf
management policies.... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.) 10/25/09: Wolf
hunt insights
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Billings Gazette provides details about
the Montana wolf hunt, such as 7 of 9 hunters noted that there
were other wolves with the ones they shot. Four of the hunters
were with outfitters.... (Click on the link above
for the complete story.)
10/22/09: Wolves
hit Montana ranch, again
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Montana ranch that lost more than 120
domestic rams to wolves this summer was recently subject to
more wolf depredation..... (Click on the link above
for the complete story.)
10/22/09: Defenders
targets wolf hunt
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Defenders of Wildlife is targeting the wolf
hunt in Montana, attempting to generate opposition, while raising
money in the process...... (Click on the link above
for the complete story.)
10/20/09: Wyoming
wolf count updated
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Although the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
will have its official year-end wolf population count later
this year, the federal agency recently provided an updated
estimate. FWS estimates there are about 190-200 wolves in Wyoming
outside of Yellowstone National Park in about 27 packs, including
about 20 breeding pairs. A total of 34 wolves have died in
Wyoming in 2009, including 29 in control actions and 5 which
are under investigation.... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.) 10/20/09: Washington
State looks at wolf management
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife
has issued a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) titled: “Wolf
Conservation and Management Plan for Washington”. The
draft plan establishes conservation/recovery objectives for
downlisting and delisting the species, and identifies strategies
to address conflicts and achieve recovery. This draft plan
and DEIS incorporate recommendations and suggestions from public
scoping comments, peer review comments, WDFW reviews and the
Wolf Working Group recommendations..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
10/16/09: Wolf
predation on livestock in Greece
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) In a new paper entitled, "Wolf Depredation
on Livestock in Central Greece," researchers studied wolf-livestock
conflict in central Greece by investigating patterns of 267
verified wolf attacks on livestock for 21 months. Wolves attacked
adult goats 43% and cattle 218% more than expected, whereas
sheep 41% less than expected from their availability. Wolves
killed less than four sheep or goats in 79%, and one cow or
calf in 74% of depredation events, respectively. We recorded
higher attack rates during wolf post-weaning season. Wolf attacks
on strayed, or kept inside non predator- -proof enclosures,
sheep and goats, were on average two to four times respectively
more destructive than those when livestock was guarded by a
shepherd. Sheepdog use reduced losses per attack. Optimal sheepdog
number ranged from 3 to 9 animals depending on flock size.
Losses per attack were positively related to the number of
wolves involved. Total losses per farm were positively correlated
with the size of livestock unit but percentage losses per capita
increased with decreasing flock size. Management implications
to mitigate livestock depredation are discussed..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.) 10/16/09: Study
looks at wolf population decline
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The European Journal of Wildlife Research
includes an 11-page paper entitled "Historical dynamics
of a declining wolf population: persecution vs. prey reduction" by
J. Fernandez and N. Ruiz de Azua. Researchers investigated
demographic and spatial distribution parameters of the population
to determine whether direct persecution or prey availability
was responsible for the observed population decline.... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
10/13/09: Montana
and Idaho wolf update
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service) Fifty-one wolves have been harvested in Idaho's wolf
hunting season, with wolves taken in all but one of the 12
hunt areas of the state. Eleven wolves have been harvested
in Montana's wolf hunting season.... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.) 10/13/09: Wyoming
wolf update
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service) Wyoming Gray Wolf Recovery Status Report - WYOMING
WOLF WEEKLY for October 5 through October 9, 2009. Updates
on Delisting Litigation Status, Monitoring, Control, Research,
Law Enforcement and other information. On 10/3/09, WY Wildlife
Services confirmed a calf killed by wolves in the Upper Green
River drainage. The USFWS requested Wildlife Services to remove
3 wolves form the Green River Pack..... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
10/5/09: Idaho,
Montana wolf hunt update
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) As of October 5, 2009, hunters have harvested
26 wolves in the Idaho wolf hunt, with the taking of 193 more
wolves possible statewide. Wolves have been taken in 9 of the
state's 12 hunt areas. Each area has its own quota. There was
also one wolf illegally killed in the state. In Montana, hunters
have harvested 11 wolves, with the taking of another 42 wolves
possible..... (Click on the link above
for the complete story.)
10/5/09: Researcher:
Yellowstone wolves different
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Yellowstone National Park wolf biologist
Doug Smith recently told a crowd in
Cody that wolves in the Yellowstone region behave differently
than wolves in
other areas, and the differences appear to be related to whether
the animals are
protected.... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
10/5/09: Oregon
rancher caught in middle
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Oregon rancher Curt Jacobs authored an editorial
on OregonLive.com about how
he's caught in the middle of the wolf debate.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
10/2/09: FWS
estimates 25-27 Wyoming wolf packs
(By
Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service has issued its rough estimate of
the minimal number of wolves, packs and breeding pairs of
wolves that exist in Wyoming. As of October 2, 2009, FWS
estimates Wyoming has more than 317 wolves, including at
least 180 within the state, outside of Yellowstone National
Park, and at least 137 wolves in the park.
Wyoming (outside YNP) has 25-27 packs (including
18-20 breeding pairs), according to FWS,
in addition to the 12 packs within YNP (including
7 breeding pairs).
... (Click on the link above for the complete story.)
10/2/09: To
Kill a Wolf video about wolves and ranching
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Click on the link below to watch "To
Kill a Wolf - Wolves and the Ranching
Community" on LIFEONTERRA.com
.... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
10/2/09: Idaho
parachutist shoots at wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) An Idaho sheep producer shoots at wolves
from his motorized parachute, but later learns his actions
were illegal..... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.) 10/2/09: Four
dogs killed by wolves in Idaho
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Idaho news outlets are reporting that four
hunting dogs were recently killed by a pack of Idaho wolves....
(Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
10/1/09: Three
wolves killed north of Cody
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Three wolves have been killed north of Cody
in federal control actions after the animals attacked cattle
on a public land grazing allotment in the Shoshone National
Forest. The aftermath of the attack was photographed and described
by a hunter in a widely-distributed e-mail.... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
9/30/09: Effects
of B.C. wolf culling program
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Vancouver Sun has an interesting article
claiming that the British Columbia government's wolf control
program resulted in "monster hybrids" roaming the
region.... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.)
9/27/09: Wyoming
Wolf update
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service) Wyoming Gray Wolf Recovery Status Report for Sept
21 through Sept 25, 2009.... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
9/27/09: Alaska
hunter attacked by rabid wolf
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) TThe Associated Press reports that a hunter
in Alaska is recovering after being
attacked by a rabid wolf.....
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
9/24/09: Wolf
tags generate revenue
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Billings Gazette reports that the first
wolf of the new Montana wolf hunting season has been harvested.....
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
9/24/09: Wolf
killed in Big Horns
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports:
"
Idaho Department of Fish and Game reported as of 9/17/09, 5
wolves (one illegally killed in a closed area) were taken in
Idaho. The total statewide quota for Idaho is 220 wolves. IDFG
has sold 15,403 resident wolf licenses (@ $11.50 each = $177,134.50)
and 283 non-resident wolf licenses (@ $186.00 each = $52,638.00)
that raised $229,772.50 for the state." ...
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
9/18/09: Distemper
in Yellowstone wolf pups
(By Yellowstone
National Park) Since wolves were reintroduced in Yellowstone
in the 1990s, there
have been
three years when the pup survival
rate was extremely low: 1999, 2005, and 2008. Canine parvovirus
was believed to be the cause of the wolf pup deaths in 1999
and 2005. That was because parvovirus is known to cause a high
mortality rate in domestic dogs, and was suspected in the high
death rate of wolves at Isle Royale National Park in Michigan
in the early 1980s. Results of newly published research point
to canine distemper as the cause of the low pup survival rates.......
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
9/16/09: First
Montana wolf taken in hunt
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Billings Gazette reports that the first
wolf of the new Montana wolf hunting season has been harvested.....
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
9/16/09: Great
Lakes wolves back under federal protection
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Wolves in the Great Lakes region are now
back on the endangered species list..... (Click on the link above for the complete story.)
9/16/09: Idaho
considers new wolf tag
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Idaho wildlife officials may auction off
a wolf tag to raise money for wildlife
conservation. .....
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
9/16/09: Montana
wolf tags bring in $167K
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Missoulian is reporting that Montana
and Idaho have each raised about
$167,000 in sales of wolf tags. ......
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
9/15/09: Wolf
advocates call for hurried schedule
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Earthjustice, representing the environmental
interest that have filed a federal lawsuit opposed to wolf
delisting,
has now asked the court for an expedited court schedule.......
(Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
9/14/09: Four
wolves killed in Upper Green
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service gave their weekly
Wyoming wolf report for September 7 through September 11, 2009.
Wildlife Services confined a yearling steer was killed in the
Upper Green River drainage, north of
Pinedale, WY. The Green River Pack has a chronic history of
livestock depredation and has killed >4 cattle this summer.
The pack Control was completed on 9/4/09 when Wildlife Services
removed 4 wolves. The report also has news on delisting litigation
status......
(Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
9/14/09: Wolf
injunction denied
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The federal judge in Montana considering
the environmental and animal rights advocates' request for
an injunction to halt
wolf hunting seasons in Idaho and Montana has denied their
request. The court ruling is based on the legal standard of
irreparable harm. The court ruled that while individual wolves
may be harmed, the population will not. The court noted: "assuming
that the taking of a single animal is not the standard, there
is no basis to find irreparable harm that would justify a preliminary
injunction in this case." But the judge, Donald Molloy,
indicated that the environmentalists will probably eventually
win the lawsuit, based on the claim that it was improper to
delist wolves in two of the three states that constitute the
distinct population segment. The court noted: "Having
done so, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service cannot delist part
of the species below the level of the distinct population segment
(DPS) without running afoul of the clear language of the Endangered
Species Act." Malloy wrote that the Service cannot delist
in an arbitrary and capricious manner, such as distinguishing
a natural population of wolves based on a political line, not
the best available science. Molloy opined that the Plaintiffs
appear to have demonstrated a likelihood of success on the
merits..... (Click on the link above
for the complete story.)
9/7/09: Quiet,
smooth start to Idaho wolf hunt
(By Idaho Fish
and Game) Idaho's first wolf hunts began September 1. Three
wolves were taken. Wolf hunters are required to report kills
within 24 hours and show the skull and pelt to Idaho Fish and
Game authorities within five days. Idaho began selling wolf
hunting tags for the first time August 24. More than 11,200
tags were sold in one week. Hunters must report a kill within
24 hours. Zones close to hunting immediately when the harvest
limit in each zone is met.... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.)
9/5/09: Wyoming
wolf update
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service gave a
report of the latest news on wolf activity in the Big Horn
Mountains, Upper Green River drainage, Dubois, Yellowstone
National Park, Idaho, and Oregon..... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.)
9/4/09: Wolf
advocates ask Obama to step in
(By Idaho Fish
and Game) Actor/activist Ashley Judd is at it again. She has
once again teamed with Defenders of Wildlife to create a wolf
video, this one urging President Obama to "stand up for
Idaho's wolves."..... (Click on the link above for the
complete story.)
9/4/09:
Three
wolves killed in Idaho hunt
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Idaho's first wolf hunts began September
1 with few hunters afield and reports of three wolves taken.
Deputy
Director Jim Unsworth noted that the successful hunters followed
the rules and that the system for reporting harvest worked
smoothly. Idaho began selling wolf hunting tags for the first
time August 24 but no glitches in the licensing system were
reported despite a one-week volume of more than 11,200 tags
sold. So far, two wolf harvest reports have come from the
Lolo wolf hunting zone and one from the Sawtooth zone. These
are the only zones of the 12 Idaho wolf zones to open September
1 and are the zones where the impact of wolves on elk herds
are documented to be particularly severe. Two other zones
open September 15 and the rest on October 1. A harvest limit
of 220 wolves has been set for Idaho..... (Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
9/2/09: Idaho
wolf video
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Idaho Fish and Game Department has developed
an excellent video documenting why it is ready to manage wolves.
Click on the link below to watch..... (Click on the link above for the complete story.)
9/1/09: Elk
foundation intervenes
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation filed a
friend of the court brief in the Montana federal court last
week in attempt to help ensure that wolves in Montana and Idaho
aren’t placed back under federal protection, and advocating
that proposed wolf hunts in those states be allowed to move
forward. RMEF argued that wolves are no longer endangered and
wolves should be managed by the appropriate state agencies.....
(Click on the link
above for the complete story.)
9/1/09: Idaho
wolf hunt begins today
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Although environmental and animal rights
advocates argued in a federal courtroom in Montana Monday afternoon
that wolves should be protected, Idaho's fall wolf hunting
season begins today, Sept. 1..... (Click on the link above for the complete story.) 8/31/09: Eighteen
wolves killed in control
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A total of 18 wolves have been removed in
control actions in Wyoming from January through August 28,
2009 in response to depredations on livestock. Six wolves were
removed from the Black Butte Pack, north of Pinedale, for killing
37
sheep,
1 yearling
steer
and
injuring
1 guard dog. Five wolves were removed from the Dog Creek pack
south of Jackson after killing more than 45 sheep and 3 guard
dogs. Two wolves were removed from the Absaroka Pack after
killing 2 adult cows...... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
8/31/09: Dozen
dogs killed by wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) At least a dozen hunting dogs have been killed
by wolves in Wisconsin in the last month. The hunting dogs
are hounds that are used to pursue black bears..... (Click on the link above
for the complete story.)
8/31/09: Defenders
raising money for wolf fight
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The legal director of Defenders of Wildlife
sent out an emergency fundraising email August 28th seeking
support for their legal efforts to stop wolf hunts in Idaho
and Montana. "On Monday, we’ll have just a few hours
to convince a federal judge to stop irresponsible wolf hunts
in Idaho (scheduled to begin Tuesday!) and Montana (scheduled
to start September 15th). Unless we prevail, hundreds of wolves
could be killed with many pups left orphaned to starve to death
over the cold winter months,” Mike Senatore wrote. He
asks supporters to make an emergency donation now to help support
the organization’s efforts to save these wolves and other
imperiled animals. Donations can be made online or via phone.....
(Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
8/28/09: Friends
of Animals calls for boycott
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The animal rights group Friends of Animals
has called for an Idaho potato boycott because Idaho Governor
Butch Otter supports the hunting of wolves. "As long as
Idaho is in the business of killing wolves, the nature-respecting
public should stop buying potatoes there." Look for potatoes
grown in Maine, Colorado, North Dakota, Oregon, Washington
and other states.".... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
8/26/09: Everything
to know about MT wolf hunt
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A federal judge in Montana has agreed to
a hearing on Monday, August 31, 2009 to allow environmental
and animal rights groups to argue why wolf hunts shouldn't
be held in Montana and Idaho this fall. The groups have asked
the court to impose an injunction, halting the hunts......
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
8/25/09: Wolf
hunt injunction hearing Aug. 31
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A federal judge in Montana has agreed to
a hearing on Monday, August 31, 2009 to allow environmental
and animal rights groups to argue why wolf hunts shouldn't
be held in Montana and Idaho this fall. The groups have asked
the court to impose an injunction, halting the hunts......
(Click on the link above
for the complete story.) 8/25/09: Six
dead wolves found in Idaho
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) News accounts report that the deaths of six
juvenile wolves are being investigated by Idaho wildlife officials.
The carcasses of the six were discovered north of Fairfield
on national forest lands..... (Click on the link above for the
complete story.) 8/25/09: Montana
wolves kill 120 domestic rams
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Montana, Fish Wildlife and Parks reports
that a pack of wolves hit a herd of domestic rams, called "bucks" in
a private pasture near Dillon, Montana, last week, and the
number of dead sheep is estimated at 120, leaving only about
a dozen alive..... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.) 8/25/09: Sales
brisk for $11.50 wolf tags
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Idaho Fish and Game officials report sales
are brisk for wolf tags for the fall hunt
season. Resident tags cost $11.50. Non-resident tags cost $186.00.
Environmental and animal advocacy groups have requested an
injunction to stop
the hunt.... (Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
8/24/09: Wyoming
wolf depredations continue
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Wyoming Wildlife Services reported wolf depredation
activity for August, 2009. Confirmed wolf kills of calves and
adult cattle, lambs and adult sheep, several livestock guard
dogs, and a pet dog have been reported.... (Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
8/24/09: Groups
seek wolf hunt injunction for MT, ID
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Environmental groups, represented by the
Montana-based Earthjustice legal advocacy group, filed a motion
for a preliminary
injunction to block fall wolf hunting seasons proposed by Montana
and Idaho. The plaintiffs "seek a preliminary injunction to
reinstate Endangered Species Act ("ESA") protections
for gray wolves to prevent the intentional and unnecessary
killing of 330 wolves that is scheduled to begin this fall.".....
(Click on the
link above for the complete story.)
8/20/09: Defenders
to sue to stop Idaho wolf hunt
(By Defenders of
Wildlife) In response to the announcement by the Idaho Fish
and Game that they will begin to allow regulated hunting
of gray wolves beginning September 1st, Defenders of Wildlife
announced they, and other conservation groups, will most likely
file a request for a preliminary injunction to temporarily
restore federal protections to the regional wolf population
until the court reaches a final decision in the plaintiffs’ pending
legal challenge to the delisting. Defenders of Wildlife issued
a media release saying these actions combined threaten the
recovery of the still vulnerable regional wolf population in
the Northern Rockies. ....
(Click on the link above for the complete story.) 8/20/09: Wyoming
wolf update
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service issued
an update report for control and monitoring of wolf activity
in the Daniel, Hoback and Jackson areas. A pack of 4-6 wolves
has been in the Daniel area since last winter with one calf
kill reported. Wolves reported killing numerous sheep and three
guard dogs in the Hoback drainage. Wolves reported harassing
horses and a mule in the Upper Green River drainage near residences.
Some wolves in the Jackson area have been observed to have
mange. At least 16 packs have produced pups this year. Litter
sizes have ranged from 4 pups to a record high of 12-15 pups
produced in 2 (possibly 3) litters in the Buffalo Pack....
(Click on the
link above for the complete story.) 8/20/09: Wolf
talk in Jackson August 25
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Wolf Biologist
Mike Jimenez will discuss wolf biology, predator-prey relationships,
wolf-livestock conflicts, and the current wolf population status
and legal challenges, at the National Elk Refuge in Jackson
on Tuesday, August 25. His talk begins at 5:30 p.m. and will
take place at the Jackson Hole & Greater Yellowstone Visitor
Center (located at 532 North Cache)...
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
8/19/09: Idaho
hunters may harvest 220 wolves
(By Idaho Fish
and Game) On August 17th, the Idaho Fish and Game Commission
set harvest limits for Idaho's first public wolf
hunting season this fall. Fish and Game models indicate Idaho
now has at least 1,000 wolves. The population increases at
a rate of about 20 percent a year, without hunting. The commissioners
adopted a strategy that would help meet the state's wolf population
objective, as outlined in the 2008 Idaho Wolf Population Management
Plan. Hunters will be allowed to take up to 220 wolves in the
fall and winter of 2009. Wolf tags will go on sale at 10 a.m.
August 24, 2009, at all license vendors. A resident tag costs
$11.75, and a nonresident tag costs $186. In 1995 and 1996,
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service introduced 35 wolves to
central Idaho. Since then they have increased in numbers and
expanded their distribution. Fish and Game has a responsibility
to manage those wolves in balance with their prey and their
habitat - just as the agency manages other fish and wildlife
species. As with other species, hunting seasons on wolves would
be part of managing the population. The commissioners set harvest
limits for each of the state's 12 wolf management zones. When
the limit is reached in a zone, the season would close in that
zone. Commissioners want to manage the wolf population toward
the 2005 level of 520 wolves through regulated hunting (five-times
higher than the federal recovery goal). ... (Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
8/11/09: Wyoming
wolves killing sheep, cattle, dogs
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports
on livestock killed by wolves in the Upper Green river drainage...
(Click on the link above for the
complete story.)
8/8/09: Bighorn
wolf trapping halted
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Buffalo Bulletin reports that efforts
to trap wolves that have been killing sheep in the Bighorns
have come to a halt. ... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
8/8/09: Swiss
wolf attacks on sheep
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Recent wolf attacks on sheep in Switzerland
are bringing media attention to efforts to co-exist with the
protected predator... (Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
8/7/09: Wolves
killing sheep, cattle
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports
of wolves killing 25 sheep and a yearling steer and injuring
a guard dog north of Pinedale in July. ... (Click on the link above for the complete story.)
8/4/09: Montana
wolf hunt update
(By Montana Fish,
Wildlife and Parks) Montana’s Fish, Wildlife & Parks
will offer licenses for sale beginning Aug. 31 for the state’s
first regulated wolf hunting season. In July, officials set
the statewide harvest quota at 75 wolves for hunting seasons
that are set to open Sept. 15 in select backcountry, or wilderness,
areas. Licenses will be valid within three specifically defined
wolf management units. Hunters must obtain permission to hunt
on private lands. The wolf-hunting season, however, could still
be blocked by groups that recently sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service to prevent wolf delisting. Such legal challenges prevented
wolf delisting and a 2008 hunting season and could affect the
sale of wolf hunting licenses this year. FWP intends to join
the court proceedings in defense of the delisting decision
at the appropriate time..... (Click on the link above
for the complete story.)
7/27/09: Wolf
pack south of Lander
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service) The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service issued their
weekly Wyoming Gray Wolf Recovery Status Report for July 20-24,
2009. The information is from the USFWS Wyoming Wolf Recovery
Project Leader out of Jackson, Wyoming.
The report gives delisting litigation status, monitoring and
control updates, law enforcement actions, research news, and
outreach and education updates..... (Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
7/27/09: Fifteen
wolf packs with pups in Wyoming
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!)
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports that efforts to
confirm wolf reproduction in Wyoming are ongoing this summer.
According to FWS, the following 15 packs have denned and produced
pups in Wyoming (outside YNP) in 2009. In the Pinedale Region,
they are located in the areas of the Green River, Black Butte,
and the Rim....
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
7/27/09: Mastiffs
and wolves in Spain
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Both mastiffs and wolves are making a comeback
in Spain. The article link includes about a dozen great photographs
of the livestock guardian dogs at work with cattle, sheep and
goats, as well as the wolves living in the mountains of Spain....
(Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
7/22/09: Wolf
reintroduction proposed for Scottish Highlands
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Science Daily reports that researchers are
proposing "a major experiment" involving the reintroduction
of wolves into a test site in the Scottish Highlands. The experiment
would be conducted in attempt to control the red deer population.
Although called red deer in Scotland, these animals are similar
to Rocky Mountain elk...
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
7/22/09: Wyoming
wolf update
(By U.S. Fish &
Wildlife Servic) Wyoming Gray Wolf Recovery Status Report for
July 6 through July 10, 2009:
USFWS reports (past weekly and annual reports) are available
online. Weekly reports for Montana and Idaho are produced by
those States and can be viewed on the Montana Fish, Wildlife
and
Parks and Idaho Department of Fish and Game websites. All weekly
and annual reports are government property and can be used
for any purpose. The Rocky Mountain Wolf Recovery 2008 Annual
Report is also available online...
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
7/22/09: Elk
change behavior with wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!)
ScienceBlog has an interesting report about how elk have changed
their behavior in response to wolves. The Montana State University
research found that elk behavior has changed so much that elk
herds are having fewer calves... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.)
7/16/09: Montana
wolf update
(By Montana Fish,
Wildlife and Parks
) Wolf Program Activities and Related Information,
July 3 – July 10, 2009 Contributors to the Montana
Wolf Weekly are Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks (FWP), Universities,
USDA Wildlife Services
(WS), the National Park Service (NPS; Glacier NP; Yellowstone
National Park will be reported in the Wyoming Wolf Weekly),
US Forest Service, Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes,
and the Blackfeet Nation. Highlighted activities relate to:
monitoring, wolf – livestock interactions, outreach
and education, research, law enforcement, and other miscellaneous
topics of public interest. The Weekly Report will be available
on each Monday, covering the previous week. .....
(Click on the
link above for the complete story.)
7/13/09: Wolves
kill dogs in Wisconsin
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Wolves have killed four dogs in Wisconsin
in the last week, according to state wildlife officials. The
dogs, which were killed in separate incidents in two counties,
were being trained for bear hunting..... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.)
7/13/09: New
wolf pack on Idaho-Washington border
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Images captured on a remote camera devise
indicates that there is now a pack of wolves inhabiting Pend
Oreille County along the Idaho/Washington border. .... (Click on the link above for the complete story.) 7/13/09: Montana
sets 75-wolf quota
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks Commission
met recently and set a 75-wolf quota for the fall hunting season....
(Click on the link above for the
complete story.)
7/1/09: Who
is paying for the wolves?
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Montana Cattlemens Association ran this
full page ad in The Missoulian this past weekend supporting
wolf delisting.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
7/1/09: The
Great Lakes wolf deal
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reached
a lawsuit settlement agreement with wolf advocates that has
placed gray wolves in the Great Lakes region back under federal
protection. All restrictions and requirements in place under
the Act prior to the delisting will be reinstated... (Click on the link
above for the complete story.) 7/1/09: Wolves
hit sheep in Big Horns
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Buffalo Bulletin (Buffalo, Wyoming) has
an article detailing the impacts of recent wolf attacks on
sheep in the Big Horn Mountains... (Click on the link
above for the complete story.)
6/29/09: Wolf
status report 6/26/09
(By US Fish and
Wildlife Service) US Fish and Wildlife Service reports (past
weekly and annual reports) can be viewed online . Weekly reports
for Montana and Idaho are produced by those States and can
be viewed on the Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks and Idaho
Department of Fish and Game websites. All weekly and annual
reports are government property and can be used for any purpose.
.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
6/29/09: Wolves
in Finland
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Gray wolves have expanded their range to
include western and southern Finland, after a 100-year absence.
With expanded wolf range has come expanded livestock depredations.
A research project focused on this conflict was published in
the journal Biodiversity and Conservation..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
6/29/09: Origin
of Great Lakes wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The ongoing debate over the origin of wolves
in the Great Lakes region, and whether the current wolf population
is comprised of hybrid animals, continues with a new paper
published in the journal Molecular Ecology. The paper entitled, "Origin
and status of the Great Lakes wolf," is the name of the
paper by S. KoblmÜller, M. Nord, R. Wayne and J. Leonard....
(Click on the link above for the
complete story.)
6/25/09: Coyote
and wolf interactions
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Researchers studying coyote and wolf interactions
in Yellowstone National Park have published results in the
Canadian Journal of Zoology. Their article says the reintroduction
of gray wolves) to Yellowstone National Park provides a rare
opportunity to study interactions with coyotes which had lived
in the absence of wolves for more than 60 years. Using radio-collared
wolves, they documented 337 wolf - coyote interactions from
1995 to 2007.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
6/25/09: Wolves
and the ranching economy
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The journal Ecological Economics has an article
entitled "Livestock depredation by wolves and the ranching
economy in the Northwestern U.S" by T. Muhly and T. Musiani.
In it they say that livestock depredation by wolves is a cost
of wolf conservation borne by livestock producers, which creates
conflict between producers, wolves and organizations involved
in wolf conservation and management. Compensation is the main
tool used to mitigate the costs of depredation, but this tool
may be limited at improving tolerance for wolves. In addition,
the article says wolf depredation is a small economic cost
to the industry, although it may be a significant cost to affected
producers as these costs are not equitably distributed across
the industry..... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
6/23/09: Wolf
status report 6/19/09
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service) US Fish & Wildlife Services has released a wolf
status report on June 19, 2009. Past weekly and annual reports
can be viewed online. Weekly reports for Montana and Idaho
are produced by those States and can be viewed on the Montana
Fish, Wildlife and Parks and Idaho Department of Fish and Game
websites. All weekly and annual reports are government property
and can be used for any purpose. The Rocky Mountain Wolf Recovery
2008 Annual Report is also available online. The status report
includes information on monitoring, control, research, delisting
status, law enforcement activities, outreach and education,
and more.... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
6/23/09: Elk
foundation supports wolf delisting
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) AmmoLand.com has an interesting editorial
about the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation and its support for
wolf delisting... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
6/23/09: Livestock-killing
wolf allowed to remain
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has decided
to allow a livestock-killing endangered Mexican wolf to remain
in the wild. The wolf has been involved in four livestock depredations...
(Click on the link above
for the complete story.)
6/23/09: Greater
Yellowstone Coalition files wolf lawsuit
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Greater Yellowstone Coalition (GYC) has
filed its own lawsuit challenging the removal of federal protection
for gray wolves in the Northern Rockies. GYC is represented
by the Mills Legal Clinic at Stanford Law School in the lawsuit
that was filed in federal court in Montana. A group of about
a dozen environmental and animal advocacy organizations joined
together earlier last month to file a federal case against
wolf delisting, using the non-profit law group Earthjustice
as its legal counsel. Its federal lawsuit challenges the fact
that wolves in Wyoming remain classified as "non-essential,
experimental" under the same federal regulations that
allowed for wolf reintroduction in the mid-1990s. The GYC lawsuit
cites concerns for genetic interchange between wolf populations
in the tri-state region, finding fault with the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service commitment for managed genetic exchange....
(Click on the link above
for the complete story.)
6/17/09: Great
Lakes wolf delisting challenged
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Environmental groups aren't just unhappy
about wolves being delisted in Montana and Idaho, but have
also challenged
the removal of federal protections for wolves in the Great
Lakes region.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
6/17/09: Wyoming's
breeding wolf packs
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service) At least 15 breeding pairs of wolves have been identified
this spring in Wyoming, outside Yellowstone National Park.
Jackson has 5 denning packs. Cody/Sunlight has 4.
Cora/Pinedale area has 2. Dubois has 1. Green River has 1.
There is 1 on the west side of the Teton Range, and South Pass/Sweetwater
has 1. Telemetry flights will continue this spring to identify
additional packs that have denned. Click on this link for more
info on Wyoming’s breeding wolf packs... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
6/12/09: Yet
another wolf lawsuit
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Greater Yellowstone Coalition has filed
its own lawsuit against wolf delisting. The case was filed
in federal court in Montana, and was filed separately from
the one filed by other environmental and animal advocacy groups
recently. Wolf litigation has also been filed in federal district
court in Wyoming, by State of Wyoming officials... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
6/11/09: Wolves
kill dog in Cody region
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!)
The Cody Enterprise has an article by Carole Cloudwalker detailing
an account of a local man backpacking and camping in the North
Fork area when a pack of eight wolves arrived on the scene
and killed his dog. ... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
6/2/09: Earthjustice
files wolf case for enviros
(By Earthjustice)
Conservation groups filed their challenge to the removal of
Endangered Species Act protections for gray wolves in the Idaho
and Montana. The case was filed in federal district court in
Montana. On April 2, 2009, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
dropped the wolves from the Endangered Species list, finalizing
an effort launched by the Bush administration to deprive the
wolves of legal and habitat protections, thus allowing state
management and hunting. The challenged delisting decision is
the second time in a year the federal government has removed
federal protections for wolves in the northern Rocky Mountains.
Conservation groups, represented by Earthjustice, successfully
sued to get the protections reinstated in July 2008.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
6/2/09: Wolf
lawsuits begin (again)
(By Defenders of
Wildlife) Defenders of Wildlife and 12 other conservation
groups filed a lawsuit asking the courts to reverse the ill-timed
and unwarranted removal of Endangered Species Act protections
for wolves in the Northern Rockies. The lawsuit is a last resort,
and only comes after exhausting all other reasonable options....
(Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
6/2/09: Wyoming
files wolf lawsuit
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Wyoming Attorney General's Office filed
a petition for review of final agency action with the U.S.
District Court for Wyoming today. The petition serves as a
legal challenge of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service decision
not to delist wolves in Wyoming... (Click on the link
above for the complete story.)
6/1/09: NRDC
slams Idaho, Montana wolf plans
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Billings Gazette includes a guest opinion
column by Louisa Willcox of the Northern Rockies Defense Council.
In the opinion piece, Willcox outlines the problems her organization
sees with wolf management plans adopted in Idaho and Montana,
which were approved by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
NRDC plans to challenge the plans, which provided the basis
for wolf delisting in those states, in federal court. Willcox
claims that federal plans for recovery don't provide for enough
wolves in the region, taking issue with Idaho's plan for a
fall wolf hunting season. In addition, Willcox claims that
the "Shoot, shovel and shut up" culture is alive
and well.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
6/1/09: Oregon
wolf update
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife
is continuing to monitor the recently radio-collared male wolf
near the Keating Valley in Oregon. As expected, visual observations
by aircraft confirmed the presence of a second, smaller wolf
travelling with the radio-collared animal. Since collaring
the young male on May 3, the wolves have been located on 26
days. Most locations have been in upper-elevation forested
area. ODFW is awaiting results of genetic analysis of tissues
collected during the capture. The wolves being monitored were
involved in the April depredations of 24 sheep and a single
calf in the Keating Valley. In addition to active hazing, other
non-lethal methods have been employed including fladry (around
sheep pen), RAG box, burying of cow carcasses, radio receivers
to affected ranchers, and night penning of local sheep. No
depredations have been confirmed since April 17.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
5/30/09: Sweden
to allow more wolf hunts
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Reports indicate that Sweden may soon allow
increased wolf hunting, citing the need to cull a portion of
the highly-inbred population of about 220 animals to make room
for new bloodlines..... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
5/26/09: Wolf
located south of Lander
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports
that a radio-collared wolf from the Yellowstone Delta Pack
dispersed from the park some time in March, and was recently
located south of Lander. The collared wolf is a young female....
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
5/26/09: Feds
explain wolf death
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Yellowstone National Park staff killed a
habituated wolf in the park on Tuesday morning along Fountain
Flat Drive. The wolf had repeatedly chased people and was frequently
observed in Biscuit Basin and the Old Faithful developed areas
in close proximity to park visitors. The wolf had reportedly
exhibited behaviors consistent with being conditioned to human
food. Yellowstone staff made attempts at hazing the wolf from
the area, only to have the wolf return and repeat this behavior.
The decision to remove the wolf from Yellowstone was made in
consultation with the United States Fish & Wildlife Service.
The park cautions visitors to not feed wildlife because it
conditions them and may result in habituation, making them
a potential danger to people and consequently may result in
their destruction. The removal of this wolf is not considered
to have a detrimental impact to the overall health and population
of wild, free roaming wolves in Yellowstone.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
5/26/09: Wolves
return to northern China
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Wolves are taking their toll on livestock
on the steppes of northern China, according to news accounts.
Herders have issued a plea for control of predating wolves,
and for hunting seasons to resume. In one district of China's
Inner Mongolia, herders have lost more than 600 sheep and 300
camels in the last two years, due to wolf depredation....
(Click on the link
above for the complete story.)
5/26/09: Wolf
reintroduction in southern Rockies?
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) WildEarth Guardians has called for wolves
to be reintroduced into Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado
and in north-central New Mexico.... (Click on the link
above for the complete story.) 5/26/09: Oregon:
move wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) An Oregon newspaper's editorial board has
taken the position that since wolves have been removed from
federal protection in that state, wolves that have preyed on
livestock need to be trapped and relocated away from private
property.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
5/22/09: Alaska
wolf harasses bicyclists
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reports that
a wolf has been harasssing bicyclists in Denali National Park,
going so far as to chew on the handlebars on one bike and puncture
a beverage bottle on another, in separate incidents.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
5/20/09: Yellowstone
National Park kills nuisance wolf
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Yellowstone National Park wolf that has
chased bicyclists and a motorcyclist
in the park was killed by park staff on Tuesday....
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
5/16/09: Yellowstone
wolf chases people
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service) During winter 2009, the 17 wolves captured
near Jackson, WY were tested for 2 strains of Brucellosis (Brucella
canis and Brucella abortus). All 17 wolves tested negative
for Brucella canis and fifteen wolves tested negative for Brucella
abortus. Two wolves tested positive for Brucella abortus. Recently,
two separate situations in YNP with habituated wolves have
occurred. The annual Yellowstone Park Wolf Project Winter Study
took place in March 2009 examining wolf predation. Prey selection
and kill rate were typical for late winter: primarily bulls
and old cows were taken with few calves. A young wolf dispersing
probably from the Gibbon Meadows pack chased people on bicycles
and a motorcycle on several occasions. It is unclear how many
times as it appears the wolf has been illegally fed and this
and other incidences of habituation have gone unreported....
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
5/11/09: Wolf
rhetoric remains
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Idaho Statesman takes a look at how the
wolf debate has changed, but the
rhetoric remains the same...
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
5/11/09: Predators
alter cattle behavior
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A new paper in the journal “Behavioural
Processes” examines cattle response to
predator stimuli. With the research conducted by B. Kluever,
L. Howery, S.
Breck, and D. Bergman. In it, they conclude that wild and domestic
ungulates modify their behavior in the presence of olfactory
and visual cues of predators, but investigations have not exposed
a domestic species to a series of cues representing various
predators and other ungulate herbivores. Researchers measured
vigilance, foraging rates, giving up density (GUD) of high
quality foods and time spent in high quality forage locations
in
response to location of stimuli treatments...
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
5/7/09: Montana
wolf reports
(By Montana Fish,
Wildlife and Parks) With the recent federal delisting of the
Rocky Mountain gray wolf in Montana, state wildlife officials
affirmed that a weekly online report will continue to chronicle
Montana’s wolf management efforts. FWP’s Montana
Wolf Weekly highlights the previous week’s activities
related to monitoring, wolf and livestock interaction, outreach,
education, research, law enforcement, and other topics. Contributors
to the Montana Wolf Weekly include FWP, USDA Wildlife Services,
the National Park Service, U.S. Forest Service, Confederated
Salish and Kootenai Tribes, the Blackfeet Nation and others....
(Click on the link above for the
complete story.)
5/7/09: Wolf
litigation discussed
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Jackson Hole News and Guide has an interesting
article this week that "Wolf delisting might hinder Wyoming
ranchers." The interesting part is where attorneys for
the Natural Resources Defense Council and Earthjustice claim
that wolf delisting in Montana and Idaho may jeopardize the
legal status of Wyoming's wolf population, which is classified
as "nonessential, experimental." This is the status
granted to wolves when Canadian wolf populations were released
into the region... (Click on the link above for the
complete story.) 5/7/09: Wolves
den at Mammoth
(By Yellowstone
Insider) National
Park Service officials are getting to see wolves on a daily
basis now that
a wolf pack has taken
up residence just outside Mammoth, Yellowstone National Park's
headquarters... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
5/7/09: Wolves
delisted in Idaho, Montana
(By Idaho Department
of Fish and Game)
The federal rule that removes gray wolves in Idaho from the
endangered species list became final on Monday, May 4. The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's delisting rule affects wolves
in Idaho, Montana, parts of Washington, Oregon and Utah. Wolves
in Wyoming will remain on the endangered species list. Idaho
has again taken over managing wolves under state law adopted
in 2008 and under a wolf population management plan also adopted
last year. Under state law, wolves that are molesting or attacking
livestock or domestic animals may be killed by livestock or
animal owners without a permit from Fish and Game. But the
incident must be reported to the Fish and Game director within
72 hours. The wolves killed would remain the property of the
state. Livestock and domestic animal owners may take all nonlethal
steps they deem necessary to protect their property... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
5/7/09: Oregon
wolf collared
(By Oregon Department
of Fish and Wildlife)
A joint effort by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Oregon
Department of Fish and Wildlife specialists resulted in the
capture, radio-collaring, and release of a male wolf on May
3rd. The event marks the first radio-collaring of a wolf in
Oregon. The wolf captured and radio-collared was an 87-pound
male estimated to be about 2 years old. The track size and
a second, smaller wolf seen at the capture site indicate that
the wolf is one of two involved in several livestock depredations
in the Keating Valley area of Baker County over the past few
weeks... (Click on the link above for the complete story.) 4/28/09: Thirty-six
elk plunge to death
(By Echo Renner)
Thirty-six head of elk plunged to their death over a 150 – 200
foot rim rock on Carter Mountain west of Meeteetse in January.
Horn hunters discovered the carcasses last month, and reported
it to area landowners. Casualties were seven yearling males,
12 adult females, 10 calves, and seven unknown that slid down
over another cliff. Wyoming Game & Fish officials speculate
something spooked them. Wolves, helicopters, a storm were given
as possible guesses as to why they went over. Grizzly bear
predation does occur in the area, however they were still in
hibernation at the time of this event. Wolves are active in
the area with known predation on area ranches. The reason for
this plunge of death will probably remain a mystery forever....
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
4/20/09: Wyoming
wolf update
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service) USFWS reports (past weekly and annual reports) , and
the Rocky Mountain Wolf Recovery 2008 Annual Report on the
status of Gray Wolf Management in Wyoming are available online.
The Final Rule to Establish a Gray Wolf – Northern Rocky
Mountain Distinct Population Segment and Remove it from the
Federal List of Threatened and Endangered Species becomes effective
May 4, 2009. Approximately 60% of the packs in the Northern
Range in Yellowstone National Park have denned; however, no
interior pack dens have been confirmed. To request an investigation
of livestock injured or killed by wolves, please contact the
U.S. Dept. of Agriculture Wildlife Services at (307)261-5336.....
(Click on the link above for the complete story.) 4/20/09: Winter,
wolves, take toll on deer
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Chronicle Journal of Thunder Bay, Ontario,
Canada reports that two bad winters and heavy predation by
wolves are taking a hard toll on the local deer population.
The number of deer in the region has crashed by half, and officials
estimate that 40 percent of fawns could be stillborn this spring....
(Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
4/18/09: Camera
catches lamb-killing wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Remote cameras captured images of two wolves responsible
for killing penned lambs in Oregon.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
4/13/09: Wandering
Colorado wolf dead
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service) The radio collar transmissions from the female
wolf travelling in Northwestern CO stopped moving at the end
of March, 2009. Investigators from the Colorado Division of
Wildlife and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service responded and
retrieved her carcass. Those investigators are working toward
determining the cause of death, which was unknown as of April
8th, 2009. Anyone with information regarding the death of this
wolf is urged to call the Colorado Division of Wildlife at
1-877-COLO-OGT or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service at 970
257-0795.... (Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
4/13/09: Details
of proposed wolf delisting litigation
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Wyoming Wolf Coalition has submitted
its notice of intent to sue the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
for excluding Wyoming from its wolf delisting rule. The coalition
consists of associations and entities comprised of the Wyoming
Wool Growers Association, Wyoming Stock Growers Association,
Wyoming Association of Conservation Districts, Rocky Mountain
Farmers Union, Wyoming Outfitters & Guides Association,
Wyoming Association of County Predatory Animal Boards, Cody
Country Outfitters and Guides Association, Predator Management
District of Niobrara County, Sportsmen for Fish & Wildlife
Wyoming, and Wyoming Farm Bureau Federation. The notice of
intent to use states that Wyoming Wolf Coalition members "intend
to file a civil action for the purpose of enjoining the FWS
from violating and continuing to violate the Endangered Species
Act, its implementing regulations, FWS policies, and the applicable
interagency peer review guidelines. The Wyoming Wolf Coalition
also intends to seek an injunction requiring the FWS to undertake
an environmental impact statement of its decision to delist
the Canadian gray wolf in Idaho and Montana, and in parts of
Washington, Oregon and Idaho, and to exclude Wyoming from the
delisting rule."... (Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
4/11/09: Montana
supports wolf delisting
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Montana legislature has approved a resolution
supporting wolf delisting and
urging state officials to defend against legal challenges to
delisting.... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
4/11/09: Wolves
photographed in Big Horns
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Gillette News Record has a full account
of the recent wolf photographs taken by remote camera in the
Big Horn Mountains.... (Click on the link
above for the complete story.)
4/8/09: Idaho
debates non-native species bill
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Idaho Statesman reports that the Idaho
legislature is debating a bill that would make introducing
non-native species a felony. The bill is a result over the
ongoing controversy over the release of Canadian wolves into
the state, and wolf management... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.) 4/8/09: Ovaries
harvested from Mexican wolf
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Lewisboro, New York-based LewisboroLedger.com
is reporting that the International Wolf Center has spayed
on older female Mexican wolf, a member of an endangered species,
and harvested her ovaries. The center apparently hopes to be
able to use the eggs harvested from her ovaries in a potential
future in vitro fertilization program... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
4/5/09: Wyoming
wolf update
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service) The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service estimated there
were at least 178 wolves and at least 30 packs in Wyoming (outside
YNP). The census period ends on December 31st of each year.
They continue collecting population data for the upcoming year.
So far in 2009, at least 2 additional packs have been identified
and 1 possible pack may have formed last summer.... (Click on the link above
for the complete story.)
4/5/09: Final
wolf delisting rule published
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has published
the final rule delisting wolves in the Montana and Idaho portions
of the Northern Rocky Mountain wolf population, but leaving
wolves under federal protection in Wyoming. The delisting rule
will take effect May 4, 2009... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.) 4/5/09: Wyoming
prepares wolf lawsuit
(By Wyoming Governor
press release)
The State of Wyoming announced that it will challenge in federal
court a decision by the U.S. Department of Interior to remove
gray wolves from the Endangered Species List in Montana and
Idaho, but not in Wyoming.... (Click on the link above
for the complete story.)
4/5/09: Isle
Royale wolves suffer from inbreeding
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!)
Every one of the dead wolves from Isle Royale examined by researchers
in a 12-year period showed bone deformities, indicating that
wolf population is suffering from inbreeding. Researchers are
now pondering whether humans should step in and attempt to "rescue" this
wolf population by augmentation, raising ethical considerations....
(Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
4/5/09: Enviros
to sue over wolf delisting
(By Earthjustice) In response to
delisting in Idaho and Montana, environmental law firm Earthjustice
issued a press release notifying of their intention to ask
a federal court to reinstate federal Endangered Species Act
protections for wolves in the northern Rockies. Earthjustice
says wolf numbers still are not strong enough and the conservation
groups they represent do not feel the state plans responsibly
manage wolves.... (Click on the link above for the
complete story.) 4/5/09: Challenge
to lethal wolf control moves forward
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) A legal challenge
over the Mexican wolf recovery program will move forward, a
judge has ruled. Defenders of Wildlife and other environmental
groups are seeking to overturn the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
rule that provides for control of wolves that prey on livestock,
among other issues... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
3/30/09: The
Cody elk/wolf problem
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Wyoming Game
and Fish Department has organized a nine-member working group
to help the agency address problems with the elk population
in the Cody region. WG&F is focusing the working group’s
efforts on the declining numbers of bull elk in the Sunlight-Crandall
portion of the Clarks Fork Elk Herd Unit. One of the items
of interest is during the last 20 years, elk have undergone
a major shift to private lands during winter. The elk that
moved onto private lands have become non-migratory, apparently
sticking to the security of the private property in response
to predation.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/30/09: Predation
on Jackson elk
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Wyoming Game
and Fish Department reports that the ration of elk calves to
cows is nearly twice as high for elk located on private property
in the Jackson region.... (Click on the link above for the
complete story.)
3/30/09: Moose
licenses drop from 500 to 40
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The Wyoming Game
and Fish Department reports that the Jackson moose herd appears
to be continuing its downward trend with fewer total animals
being observed during this winter’s aerial surveys. Also,
there were fewer calves counted, which doesn’t bode well
for the future of this herd. WG&F has continually reduced
the number of hunting licenses for the Jackson moose herd over
the past several years. When moose numbers were strong back
in the early 1990s, there were nearly 500 licenses being offered
in the Jackson moose herd. This year WG&F is down to offering
just 40 licenses.... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
3/24/09: Wolf
back in Colorado
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service reports that the female wolf that has
roamed in five states, raising some hopes and expectations
from Colorado wolf advocates, then venturing back into Wyoming
and dashing those hopes, has once again been located back in
Colorado. The female wolf had dispersed from southwestern Montana
last year before traveling through Wyoming, southeastern Idaho,
northeastern Utah, northern Colorado, and then back to south
central Wyoming. She was recently located again in north central
Colorado.... (Click on the link above for the
complete story.)
3/25/09: Idaho
sets wolf hunting seasons
(By Idaho Department
of Fish and Game) Idaho Fish and
Game Commission Tuesday, March 24, adopted big game seasons
as recommended by Fish and Game biologists, with a few last
minute changes in response to public comments..... (Click on the link above for the
complete story.)
3/24/09: Alberta
ranches under wolf attack
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Ranchers in Alberta,
Canada, are complaining about increasing wolf attacks on their
cattle. Provincial wildlife managers say culling the wolf population
is not an option.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/20/09: Alaska
halts helicopter wolf gunning
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Alaska wildlife
officials have halted their wolf control program using helicopter
gunners after recent snow loss left conditions less than ideal.
But they had succeeded in killing 66 wolves in five days, all
in an effort to save a caribou herd in jeopardy.... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.) 3/20/09: Idaho
hazes wolf pack
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) State wildlife
officials hazed the 10-member Phantom Hill wolf pack away from
Sun Valley, Idaho-area subdivisions this week. The pack was
chased with a low-flying helicopter.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.) 3/20/09: Mangy
wolf killed at Gardiner
(By Cat Urbigkit,
Pinedale Online!) Federal wildlife
officials killed a wolf near the Gardiner, Montana area. The
wolf was badly infested with mange. A kill order was also issued
for two Montana wolves that attacked and injured a livestock
guardian dog and a domestic goat in the Helena area... (Click on the link above for the complete story.)
3/18/09: Northern
Rockies wolf report for 2008 available
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service)
The gray wolf population in the Northern Rocky Mountains continues
to thrive. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) and
its federal, state and tribal partners estimated at the end
of 2008 there were 1,645 wolves in 217 packs in Montana, Idaho,
and Wyoming. At least 95 of those packs contained at least
1 adult male, 1 adult female, and 2 pups on December 31, 2008,
meeting the recovery goal description of a breeding pair....
(Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
3/18/09: Alaska
changes wolf control program
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
In attempt to boost caribou numbers in Alaska, state wildlife
officials are now shooting wolves
out of a helicopter. The action has raised the ire of some
observers, including park service officials.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/18/09: Wolves
encroaching on Idaho town
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
Idaho wildlife officials are now considering hazing the 10-member
Phantom Hill wolf pack as it has been encroaching on the town
of Hailey, Idaho.... (Click on the link above for the
complete story.)
3/18/09: Idaho
wolf update
(Idaho Fish and Game Department monthly
report)
Aerial telemetry flights and end-of-year counts are completed,
and the annual report is being wrapped up. The minimum population
estimates for 2008 are 846 wolves for Idaho, in 88 packs, 39
breeding pairs. This is about a 15 percent increase over the
2007 minimum population estimate of 732. From January 1 – February
28, agencies have documented five dead wolves in Idaho. Of
those, four were depredation control actions by Wildlife Services,
and one was an illegal kill..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/15/09: Wolf
wanders back to Wyoming
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports today that the wandering
wolf that has travelled through parts of five states has now
returned to Wyoming. According to FWS, "In early winter
2008, a female wolf dispersed from SW Montana and traveled
through Wyoming, southeastern Idaho, northern Utah, and Colorado.
Recent location data indicate the wolf is traveling through
south central Wyoming.... (Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
3/15/09: Wolves,
dogs conflict in Montana
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
Montana News Station has an article about recent conflicts
between lion hounds and wolves in the Bitterroot..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/11/09: Coastal
wolves unique
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
Researchers suggest that coastal wolves - those animals living
in coastal regions of Alaska and Canada - are unique animals
in need of recognition and protection..... (Click on
the link above for the complete story.) 3/11/09: Wisconsin
deer thump wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
The Wisconsin State Journal has a fascinating article about
something researchers believe happens, but is rarely witnessed.
In this case, a man witnessed white-tailed deer battling gray
wolves.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/7/09: Wolves
dispersing here and there
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife
reports that it is a well documented fact that wolves can disperse
extremely long distances, frequently over 500 miles and across
huge expanses of habitat unsuitable for wolf pack persistence.
Routine long distance dispersals are common and provide further
evidence that genetic connectivity in the NRM wolf population
is and will remain extremely high and is not a long term wolf
conservation issue... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.) 3/7/09: DOI
affirms wolf delisting
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
press release)
Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar affirmed the decision
by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to remove gray wolves
from the list of threatened and endangered species in the western
Great Lakes and the Northern Rocky Mountain states of Idaho
and Montana and parts of Washington, Oregon and Utah. Wolves
will remain a protected species in Wyoming. The Service will
now send the delisting regulation to the Federal Register for
publication. The Service decided to delist the wolf in Idaho
and Montana because they have approved state wolf management
plans in place that will ensure the conservation of the species
in the future. At the same time, the Service determined wolves
in Wyoming would still be listed under the Act because (they
contend) Wyoming’s current state law and wolf management
plan are not sufficient to conserve its portion of northern
Rocky Mountain wolf population.... (Click on the link
above for the complete story.) 3/7/09: Yellowstone
wolf numbers down, elk up
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
In January, Yellowstone National Park issued a press release
reporting that while wolf numbers are declining in the park,
elk numbers on the Northern Range are up. The reduction in
wolf numbers is the first drop in the park in three years.
The Yellowstone Wolf Project reports the 2008 population at
124 wolves, down 27 percent from the 171 wolves recorded in
2007. This year’s elk count was slightly higher than
the counts during the three previous winters. The slight increase
in elk counted during winter 2009 compared to the three previous
winters may reflect favorable counting conditions, a reduction
in the hunter harvest of antler-less elk, and a reduction in
wolf predation owing to a fairly large decrease in wolf numbers
during the summer of 2008... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.) 3/7/09: Hunter
reports of wolf presence accurate
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
Recent research found a strong correlation between the number
of wolves detected by hunters and the density of wolves in
each of four Montana study areas, suggesting hunters’ observations
are reasonably accurate. More about this is in a new research
paper, "Developing Wolf Population Monitoring Techniques."..(Click on the
link above for the complete story.) 3/7/09: Wolves
kill six llamas on animal rescue ranch in Montana
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
The Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks has reported recent
wolf depredation in Montana, including six llamas over two
nights on a large animal rescue ranch near Niarada in February.
Tracks from at least two wolves were found going in and out
of the pasture holding approximately 750 llamas. After the
installation of three-quarter of a mile of turbo-fladry, no
more depredations have been reported....(Click
on the link above for the complete story.) 3/7/09: Wisconsin
wolf numbers up
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
The Sun-Times News Group reports that wolf numbers in Wisconsin
are up
slightly. With about 550 wolves, state biologists believe the
wolf population has
reached its saturation point....(Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
3/4/09: Isle
Royale wolf population inbred
(By Wyoming Game and Fish Department)
"Congenital bone deformities and the inbred wolves (Canis
lupus) of Isle Royale" is the title of a new research
paper published in Biological Conservation, by researchers
Jannikke Ralkkonen, John Vucetich, Rolf Petersen, and Michael
Nelson. The wolf (Canis lupus) population on Isle Royale, a
remote island in Lake Superior, North America, is extremely
inbred. ...(Click on the link
above for the complete story.) 3/4/09: Staying
safe in predator country
(By Wyoming Game and Fish Department)
Wildlife officials are encouraging people to attend one of
the upcoming public workshops titled "Staying Safe in
Bear, Lion and Wolf Country". These workshops are free
to the public and will be offered in both Jackson and Pinedale
this spring. Anyone who spends time in bear and lion country
is encouraged to attend. The three-hour evening workshop will
be held in Pinedale on March 18 from 6:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m.,
at the Pinedale Game and Fish office...(Click on
the link above for the complete story.)
3/4/09: More
on wandering wolf
(By U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)
An 18 month old female wolf that was originally radio collared
in southwesters Montana dispersed from her natal pack in September
2008. She has traveled from Montana, through parts of western
Wyoming, southeastern Idaho, and northeastern Utah.Last week,
locations from her GPS satellite collar indicated she was near
Vail, Colorado, approximately 450 (straight-line) miles from
her natal home range... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
2/28/09: Wyoming
wants to test wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
Wyoming State lawmakers want to determine the prevalence of
brucellosis in wolves, and
are proposing legislation to that end. If the bill passes,
it will allocate $45,000
to draw blood samples from any wolves captured or killed in
the state, to allow
the blood to be tested for brucellosis...(Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
2/28/09: Montana
hunters demand wolf delisting
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
A protest was held outside the offices of the Montana Fish,
Wildlife and Parks office this weekend by hunters demanding
that wolves be removed from federal
protection....
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
2/28/09: Idaho
proposes killing wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
Idaho wildlife officials will soon ask for federal approval
of their plan to kill up to about 100 wolves in the Lolo area....
(Click on the link
above for the complete story.)
2/25/09: Yellowstone
wolf in Colorado
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
A wolf from Yellowstone National Park is being tracked as it
roams in Colorado. According to a news account from KMGH in
Denver, the wolf has been tracked since September as it traveled
in five states. She was collared in Montana, traveled south
through Yellowstone and the Bridger-Teton National Forest,
cruised southeastern Idaho and northern Utah before jaunting
over to Eagle County, Colorado.... (Click on the link
above for the complete story.)
2/23/09: Jackson
wolves may have mange
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports that February 11-13,
FWS biologists aerial darted and radio collard 15 wolves in
three packs near Jackson. All 5 wolves collared in the Antelope
Pack had significant hair loss and skin irritation, indicating
they were possibly infected with mange. None of the captured
wolves from the other two packs displayed signs on mange. FWS
will continue routine winter capture and collaring efforts
in Wyoming until the end of March... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.)
2/22/09: Hunting
dogs killed by wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources has an excellent
website with information on hunting dog depredations by wolves.
In response to the high number of dog depredations in recent
years, the state DNR maps "caution" areas for hunters.
The site also includes a mapping system so that you can examine
territories of individual wolf packs...
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
2/22/09: Idaho
calculates revenue loss from wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
Idaho is losing as much as $24 million a year in hunting-related
revenue due to wolves killing big game animals. That's the
calculation offered by the Idaho Department of Fish and Game...
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
2/22/09: Wolf
return to Oregon pondered
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
A recent wolf sighting near Bend, Oregon has folks there questioning
whether
wolves have returned to the state, or where the animal might
have come from.
..
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
2/11/09: Wind
River Indian Reservation wolf management
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
While Wyoming and other Rocky Mountain states struggle to deal
with wolf management issues, Wind River Indian Reservation
officials have their own wolf management plan. According to
the tribal plan, "Tribes will manage wolves independently
and are not subject to the number of packs required to be maintained
for recovery in areas of Wyoming outside of Yellowstone National
Park. At this time, the Tribes do not designate a specific
number of individuals or packs for which it will manage."..
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
2/11/09: Dealing
with habituated wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
Did you know that Yellowstone National Park has a written
plan
in place for dealing with habituated wolves? The plan
was written in 2003, after several years of incidents involving
wolves showing no fear of humans, and actually approaching
humans. According to the YNP plan, "Our first response
to a report of a habituated or unafraid wolf would be to warn
and educate the public, increase our monitoring intensity,
and visit the site where problems were reported. This would
primarily be to gather more data, allowing formulation of future
responses if necessary. If the problem continues we would negatively
condition the animal with cracker shells, bean bag rounds,
or rubber bullets, all proven to be non-injurious deterrents.
If hazing fails, then the final step would be wolf removal."...
(Click on the link
above for the complete story.)
2/7/09: Idaho
plans for wolf management
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
Idaho Fish and Game wildlife managers are making plans for
managing wolves, including a possible hunting season, should
they be removed from the endangered species list as proposed
by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Fish and Game biologists
are updating data, reviewing conflict levels, population status
and harvest objectives for a fall 2009 wolf hunting season
should the animals be delisted.... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.) 2/7/09: Wolf
management in MT
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks, through an interagency cooperative
agreement, is still the lead agency for all wolf conservation
and management in the state of Montana (within the bounds of
federal regulations) so long as adequate federal funding continues
to be made available..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.) 2/7/09: Wolf
control in Alaska
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
While many news outlets are calling it a "cat fight" between
Alaska Governor Sarah Palin and animal activist Ashley Judd,
Alaska's aerial gunning program for wolves is once again in
the spotlight, pleasing Defenders of Wildlife, the organization
Judd is promoting in the process. For the real deal on what's
happening in wolf control in Alaska, read the story by the
Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Alaska is home to the distinct
Alexander Archipelago wolf, which you can also learn about
from that site.... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
2/7/09: Wolves
cause drop in MT elk population
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!)
The Great Falls Tribune is reporting that a study conducted
by Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks has concluded that wolves
have caused a drop in some elk populations..... (Click on the link above for the
complete story.)
2/5/09: Idaho
looks to export wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Planning
ahead, Idaho legislators are in the process of enacting legislation
that would allow
the state wildlife agency to export wolves to other states,
once the species has been removed from federal protection....
(Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
1/29/09: Walkabout
wolves and wolf update
(By US Fish & Wildlife Service Wolf
Report) WYOMING WOLF WEEKLY- Jan. 9, 2009
through Jan. 23, 2009....
(Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
1/29/09: Wolf
shot in South Dakota
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Argus Leader reports that a coyote hunter shot and killed a
wolf in South Dakota this week. The 70-pound female wolf was
killed in Roberts County.... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
1/28/09: Wolf
hearing Friday morning
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The Wyoming Legislature's
House Travel, Recreation and Wildlife Committee will hold a
hearing on the six wolf bills pending in the house. The hearing
is slated for 7 a.m., Friday January 30, 2009 in Room 302 of
the Wyoming Capitol in Cheyenne. For individuals unable to
travel to Cheyenne, selected video conferencing sites in northwestern
Wyoming will be open to the public. Video conferencing sites
will be available in Cody, Afton, Jackson, Lander and Pinedale.... (Click on the link above
for the complete story.)
1/28/09: Wolf
confirmed near Buffalo
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) It
appears a lone wolf has been making its presence known near
Buffalo,
Wyoming.... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
1/22/09: Obama
halts wolf delisting
(By Center for Biological Diversity
press release) President
Barack Obama has issued a freeze on publication of federal
regulations planned under the previous administration but not
yet published in the Federal Register. This action, which will
give the new administration a chance to review Bush-era policy
decisions, will delay and possibly prevent the premature removal
of gray wolves from the endangered species list in Montana,
Idaho, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan, and portions of Washington,
Oregon, Utah, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana,
and Ohio. According to Michael Robinson of the Center for Biological
Diversity, the pause will afford President Obama and Secretary
of the Interior Ken Salazar the opportunity to rethink the
previous administration’s efforts to remove wolves from
the endangered species list... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.) 1/22/09: Idaho
wolves at a glance
(By Idaho Fish and Game Department) As
of the end of 2008, tentative numbers are 824 wolves, 88 packs
of which 38 are considered breeding pairs. About 1,500 are
found in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. 84 wolves in 50 packs
had radio collars in December 2008. If the delisting rule goes
into effect, Idaho Fish and Game would be the lead agency in
Idaho wolf management.... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
1/22/09: Wolves
impact elk grazing
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) "Risk
effects in elk: Sex-specific responses in grazing and browsing
due to predation risk from wolves" is an article by D.
Christianson and S. Creel in the journal Behavioral
Ecology.... (Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
1/19/09: Hunting
decline changes natural order
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Matthew
Teague has an interesting article posted on Sports Illustrated
Vault. The
article is "How the decline of hunting is changing the
natural order." It's a long
article and well worth the read..... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
1/19/09: Senate
passes wolf compensation bill
(By U.S. Senator Jon Tester press release) On
Thursday, the U.S. Senate overwhelmingly passed a bipartisan "Wolf
Kill Bill" by Senators
Jon Tester and John Barrasso, R-Wyo. The measure, officially
called the Wolf Livestock Loss Mitigation Act, was included
in a major public lands bill. In Montana, the Wolf Kill Bill
authorizes federal money from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
to boost Montana’s livestock loss fund. That fund repays
Montana ranchers the full market value of animals killed by
wolves. The Wolf Kill Bill will also minimize wolf kills in
states like Montana and Wyoming by allowing federal grants
to improve fencing, improve grazing practices, and to encourage
the use of guard dogs. The measure is expected to pass the
U.S. House of Representatives next week before going to President
Obama to be signed into law.....
(Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
1/19/09: Time
to manage wolves
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) Scientific
American magazine online has dusted off an old article from
2003 and put it back into
the spotlight this week. It's called "The Gray Wolf: Out
of the Woods?" Short and to the point, the article by
Emily Harrison notes that after years of cries to "save
the wolf," recovery has been achieved, and now it's time
to manage our nation's wolf populations.... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
1/16/09: Wyoming
left out of wolf delisting
(By U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service) Wyoming
wolves still need Endangered Species Act protection, according
to the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, due to a lack of adequate
regulatory mechanisms ensuring their protection under state
law. Wolves in the western Great Lakes population and portions
of the northern Rocky Mountain populations have been removed
from ESA protection. Wolves in other parts of the 48 states,
including the Southwest wolf population, remain endangered
and are not affected by the actions taken.... (Click on the link above for the complete
story.)
1/16/09: Enviros
plan to sue over delisting
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Wyoming Chapter of the Sierra Club has pledged to sue over
the latest FWS wolf delisting rule. Sierra Club issued a press
release stating in part, “Removing federal protections
for wolves will leave them at the mercy of aggressive state
plans
that
treat wolves as pests rather than a valuable wildlife resource.
Releasing yet another flawed delisting rule is simply a last
ditch attempt to remove protections for wolves before the Bush
administration leaves office."... (Click on the
link above for the complete story.)
1/16/09: Defenders
pledges wolf lawsuit
(By Defenders of
Wildlife) Defenders
of Wildlife weighed in on the gray wolf delisting by the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, calling it an “attempt to
prematurely strip wolves of legal protection before the clock
runs out next Tuesday on the most anti-environment administration
in American history.” .. (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
1/13/09: Yellowstone
wolf numbers decline
(By National Park Service) The
number of wolves in Yellowstone National Park declined last
year. It’s the first drop in wolf numbers in the park
in three years. The Yellowstone Wolf Project reports the 2008
population at 124 wolves, down 27 percent from the 171 wolves
recorded in 2007. Previous population declines in 1999 and
2005 were attributed to the impacts of disease, especially
on wolf pups. This past year, distemper, mange, and wolves
killing each other are the likely causes of the population
decline... (Click
on the link above for the complete story.)
1/9/09: Wolf
hunting reinstated in Macedonia
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Newropeans online magazine has an interesting article detailing
how the ban on wolf hunting in Macedonia has been set aside
after numerous recent conflicts with wolves, of which number
in the "many." Macedonia, once part of Yugoslavia,
is an independent state in southeastern Europe...
(Click on the link above for the complete story.)
1/6/09: Wolves
spotted on Muddy Mountain
(By Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!) The
Casper Star-Tribune reports that two wolves have been spotted
in the Muddy Mountain area about 30 miles south of Casper....
Click on the link above for
the complete story.)
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