Wolf quota eyed after 9 shot near Yellowstone
BILLINGS, Mont. — Wildlife officials in Montana will consider changes to the state’s inaugural wolf hunt after nine of the predators were shot in just three weeks along the border of Yellowstone National Park.
More than 1,300 gray wolves were removed from the endangered species list in Idaho and Montana this spring following a costly federal restoration effort.
Hunting has been promoted as a way to keep the population of the fast-breeding species in check and reduce wolf attacks on livestock. Hunters in the two states have killed at least 48 wolves since Sept. 1.
However, all but two of the 11 wolves killed in Montana came from a small portion of the Absaroka (ab-SOHR’-ka)-Beartooth Wilderness, along the northern border of Yellowstone. And at least four were from Yellowstone’s Cottonwood Pack, including the group’s breeding female.
Concerned about the heavily concentrated killing, state wildlife commissioners last week suspended hunting in the area.
On Tuesday, commissioners will consider a range of additional responses, from reallocating the season quota of 75 wolves to shutting down the hunting season in part of the state.
“We’ve missed the mark a little this first year,” said Carolyn Sime, lead wolf biologist for Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks. Shooting a wolf, particularly in some of the sparsely vegetated terrain around Yellowstone, proved easier than expected, she said.
The Absaroka-Beartooth was one of two remote “backcountry” areas of Montana where wolf hunting was allowed before the statewide season opening, set for Oct. 25.
Grazing is generally not allowed in the backcountry. That means the harvest of wolves there gives little help to ranchers suffering losses from wolf attacks. In addition, critics said the shootings could choke off the flow of young wolves leaving Yellowstone to establish packs outside the park.
“Yellowstone can’t be a source for wolves to colonize other areas if they get blown away right at the boundary,” said Norman Bishop, a former Yellowstone park ranger now on the board of the Wolf Recovery Foundation, an Idaho-based advocacy group.
Sime said that with wolves firmly established in many areas of Montana, Yellowstone’s importance as a source of wolves had diminished.
There were 89 packs in Montana at the end of 2008, including 18 in the part of the state that borders Yellowstone.
“From a biological perspective, it’s a non-issue,” Sime said, noting the death of nine wolves was unlikely to hurt the overall population.
Environmentalists countered that the concentrated shootings in the Absaroka-Beartooth area showed the Idaho and Montana hunts were too hastily planned. They also decried the loss of wolves from the park, a wildlife haven where hunting is not allowed.
Yellowstone was one of two areas where the animals were reintroduced beginning in 1995 after being absent across most of the Northern Rockies for decades.
In Idaho, which has about 800 wolves, wildlife officials said their hunt has gone more smoothly. Thirty-seven wolves had been killed in Idaho through Sunday, with the harvest spread across 11 of the state’s 12 wolf-hunting zones.
Idaho has a quota of 220 wolves. Like Montana, the state also had an early season opening in some areas, although none bordering Yellowstone.
Bob Ream, a Montana wildlife commissioner from Helena who spent more than 20 years researching wolves, said in hindsight it was unwise for Montana to allow so many wolves to be killed on land adjacent to the park.
But because wolves breed so prolifically, expanding their numbers by as much as 30 percent a year, he said any harm done would be temporary.
“There’s plenty of wolves to fill in for those nine, either from the park or other parts of the Absaroka-Beartooth,” Ream said.
Any decision from commissioners on Tuesday will be set against the backdrop of a federal lawsuit that is challenging the removal of wolves from the endangered species list.
U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy last month allowed the hunting seasons in Idaho and Montana to go forward, rejecting an injunction requested by environmentalists. But Molloy also said the environmentalists were likely to ultimately prevail, leaving future hunts in doubt.
Related News
Feds say ruling that put bears back on threatened list actually puts them in greater dangerOctober 8th, 2009 Feds: Bears in more danger on threatened listBILLINGS, Mont. — Federal officials say a court ruling that returned Yellowstone grizzly bears to the threatened species list has unexpectedly put the animals at increased risk.
US judge raises questions about removal of gray wolves from endangered list in Idaho, MontanaSeptember 9th, 2009 Judge faults removal of wolf from endangered listBILLINGS, Mont. — Hunters can keep stalking gray wolves for now in the Northern Rockies, but the killing may be short-lived after a federal judge found problems with the recent removal of the animal from the endangered species list.
Federal judge says gray wolf hunts OK in Idaho, MontanaSeptember 9th, 2009 Federal judge says wolf hunts OK in Idaho, MontanaBILLINGS, Mont. — A federal judge said gray wolf hunts can go on for the first time in decades in the Northern Rockies, just months after the animals were removed from the endangered species list.
Federal judge rules in favor of controversial wolf hunts in Montana, IdahoSeptember 9th, 2009 Federal judge says gray wolf hunts can continueBILLINGS, Mont. — A federal judge said Wednesday that gray wolf hunts in the Northern Rockies can go on, denying a request by environmentalists and animal welfare groups to stop the first organized wolf hunts in decades in Idaho and Montana.
First hunter to report Idaho wolf kill gets harassing phone callsSeptember 3rd, 2009 Idaho hunter bad-mouthed after wolf killLEWISTON, Idaho — The first hunter to report a wolf kill in Idaho says he's been flooded with nasty messages. Robert Millage of Kamiah said he's been called a wolf murderer, a fat redneck and other names in about 50 phone calls and hundreds of e-mails.
First public wolf hunt in decades under way in lower 48, judge eyes request to haltSeptember 1st, 2009 Wolf hunt is on in Idaho _ for nowBOISE, Idaho — Gray wolves were back in the cross hairs of hunters on Tuesday, just months after they were removed from the federal endangered species list and eight decades since being hunted to extinction across the Northern Rockies. Hunters in Idaho began stalking gray wolves in a handful of districts in the central and northern mountains.
Idaho's wolf hunt off to slow start as federal judge eyes request to haltSeptember 1st, 2009 Idaho's wolf hunt on for nowBOISE, Idaho — The first legal wolf hunt in decades in the lower 48 states is off to a slow start. Hunters in Idaho could begin shooting wolves just before sunrise Tuesday in select hunting districts in the central and northern mountains.
Wolf hunts to proceed in Northern Rockies as judge weighs injunction requestAugust 31st, 2009 Wolf hunts are on as judge eyes request to stopMISSOULA, Mont. — Gray wolf hunting will begin in the Northern Rockies as a federal judge considers an injunction request by environmental and animal welfare groups to stop the predators from being killed.
Fate of Rocky Mountain wolf hunts in Idaho, Montana in federal judge's handsAugust 31st, 2009 Fate of MT, ID wolf hunts in federal judge's handsBOISE, Idaho — Greg Wooten says shooting a Rocky Mountain wolf won't be easy, even if a federal judge doesn't blow apart the hunting season before it starts. Wooten, the Idaho Department of Fish and Game's assistant chief of law enforcement, has seen wolves within shooting range only in two years since 1995, when they were reintroduced to the state's central mountains.
Wolf hunts to proceed in Northern Rockies as judge weighs request to stop themAugust 31st, 2009 Wolf hunts are on, but it's uncertain for how longMISSOULA, Mont. — Wolf hunting will begin in the Northern Rockies as a federal judge weighs a request by environmental and animal welfare groups to stop the predators from being killed.
Wolf hunts to open in Northern Rockies as judge considers request to halt killingAugust 31st, 2009 Wolf hunts to open, judge eyes injunction requestMISSOULA, Mont. — Gray wolf hunting was set to begin in the Northern Rockies, even as a federal judge eyed a request to stop the killing of the predators just four months after they were removed from the endangered species list.
Conservation groups urge federal judge to block next month's wolf hunts in Idaho, MontanaAugust 21st, 2009 Groups try to block Idaho, Montana wolf huntsMISSOULA, Mont. — Conservation groups are asking a federal judge in Missoula to block fall wolf hunts in Idaho and Montana.
ID, Mont. ready for first open wolf hunts in lower US after endangered status liftedJuly 8th, 2009 States ready for first open wolf huntsBILLINGS, Mont. — Montana and Idaho are moving to host the first open gray wolf hunts in the lower 48 states after the animal's removal from the endangered list across much of the Northern Rockies.
Lawsuits over hunting of gray wolves filed in federal courts in Montana, WyomingJune 2nd, 2009 Lawsuits over wolf hunting filed in Mont., Wyo.BILLINGS, Mont. — A pair of federal judges will decide which states in the Northern Rockies have enough gray wolves to allow public hunting, as the bitter debate over the region's wolves heads to courts in Wyoming and Montana.
Wyoming, Idaho governors slam federal brucellosis plan, ask Vilsack to withhold actionMay 8th, 2009 Wyoming, Idaho govs slam feds' brucellosis planBILLINGS, Mont. — The governors of Wyoming and Idaho say a federal plan to create a special livestock disease management zone in the Yellowstone region would "taint" the area's cattle industry but do nothing to eliminate the disease.