Bad Predator Policies In Montana, Idaho Could Derail Delisting Wyoming Grizzlies, Bear Expert Says

A grizzly bear sow leads her cubs through the snow in Grand Teton National Park. (Getty Images)

Published on March 29, 2023March 29, 2023  in News/Grizzly Bears/wildlife/Hunting

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By Mark Heinz, Outdoors Reporter
Mark@CowboyStateDaily.com

Wyoming’s efforts to delist grizzly bears – possibly within the next year – could be derailed by poor predator management plans in Montana and Idaho, a bear expert tells Cowboy State Daily. 

For instance, Montana has been offering a bounty on wolves, said Missoula, Montana, wildlife biologist Chris Servheen.

“You don’t even have to actually kill a wolf to collect. You just have to say you went out and tried to kill a wolf,” he said. “That’s like going back to the 1800s. That’s the dark ages of wildlife management.” 

And it’s why Servheen said he recently testified for members of Congress that grizzlies shouldn’t be delisted – at least not now. 

Wyoming Game and Fish Director Brian Nesvik, who Servheen said he knows well and admires, testified at the same congressional subcommittee hearing in favor of delisting.



Not Against The Idea Of Delisting

When it comes to grizzlies, Servheen speaks with considerable authority. He was the grizzly bear recovery coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for 35 years prior to his retirement in 2016. He’s now the board chair and president of the Montana Wildlife Federation.

In principle, he’s not against delisting grizzlies. 

“I was the main proponent of delisting for years,” he said. “I wrote the first delisting rule and defended it in court.”

So, what changed his mind?

Overall terrible state-level predator management, particularly in Montana and Idaho, he said. 

Those states handle their wildlife largely based on “anti-predator paranoia” rather than sound wildlife management, Servheen said. 

Bad Wolf Policy Could Affect Grizzlies

Though the bulk of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem and its estimated 1,000 grizzlies are in Wyoming, parts of it are in Montana and Idaho. There’s also a large population of grizzlies in northwest Montana, centered around Glacier National Park, and federal delisting would affect them as well. 

Montana allows setting neck snare strangulation traps for wolves, hunting wolves at night with artificial light and night vision scopes, as well as hunting black bears with packs of hounds, Servheen said. 

At least within the “trophy game zone” immediately adjacent to Yellowstone Park, where the core population of wolves is, Wyoming doesn’t allow those wolf hunting practices. Wolf hunting is allowed there only by licensed hunters during designated hunting season and within bag limits. 

In the rest of Wyoming, or 85% of the state, wolves are in the “predator zone” and can be killed at any time without bag limits. 

Wyoming also allows using hounds to hunt mountain lions, but not black bears. 

Heavy-handed and “unnecessary” wolf killing policies such as Montana’s can affect grizzlies, Servheen said. 

For instance, snares set for wolves sometimes kill grizzlies, and it isn’t known how many. 

“There’s little to no incentive for the people who are doing these things to report them (grizzly snare trap deaths),” he said. “Or the bear might get caught in the snare and go off and die somewhere else, so nobody might realize it even happened.”

And when hounds are set loose after black bears, they will sometimes go after grizzlies insted, he said, because the dogs don’t know the difference. That has led to some grizzlies getting killed.

“The hound hunter might encounter a grizzly fighting the hounds, or a grizzly that has become agitated trying to flee the hounds, and that’s a situation in which grizzlies can be killed,” he said. 


Chris Servheen of Missoula, Montana, was the grizzly bear recovery coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for 35 years and is now the board chair and president of the Montana Wildlife Federation. (Courtesy Photo)

Isn’t Just About Numbers

During his testimony for the congressional subcommittee, Nesvik said that the population of grizzlies in the Greater Yellowstone is roughly double the target number supposedly needed for delisting. 

However, delisting is about more than just numbers, Servheen said. 

“You have to have proper (state) regulations in place” and at least in Idaho and Montana, that’s not the case right now. 

There also has to be adequate habitat protection, he said.

Without all three of those things – an adequate number of bears, habitat preservation and proper state regulations that will prevent overkill once Endangered Species protection is removed – delisting won’t work in the long run, he said.

And even if Wyoming has sound policies, delisting won’t work for one state alone, Servheen added, because the ecosystem and bear population are singular units that don’t recognize state lines.

“We’ve come a long way and the bears are doing well,” Servheen said. “But they aren’t going to be if this anti-predator paranoia continues. State legislation is focuses on how many wolves and bears they can kill.”

Unfounded Fears Could Hurt Hunting

The greatest fears associated with wolves and grizzlies – that they’ll attack livestock and ruin big game herds – are largely unfounded, Servheen said. 

“When we look at the overall numbers of deer and elk, and the rates of hunter success, there’s not a problem related to predators,” he said. 

And while certain cases of wolves or bears killing livestock garner attention, in the larger picture that’s not a problem either, he said. 

“We don’t want wolves to kill livestock, and there are mechanisms in place to deal with that,” he said. 

Overall, the numbers of livestock killed by wolves and bears don’t add up to much, Servheen argued in a 2022 story he wrote for Wildlife Professional magazine. 

For instance, between 2018 and 2020, roughly 113 cattle and sheep were lost to wolves each year, or 0.00428% of the cattle and sheep in one Western state, he wrote in the article. 

However, during 2015 alone, 40,000 cattle and sheep were killed by the weather in Idaho, Servheen stated. 

Overly aggressive killing of predators also is bad for the public image of hunting, he added. That’s important, because if anti-hunting sentiment takes hold with most Americans, hunters could be overwhelmed. 

“If you’re shooting wolves at night over bait with night vision scopes, it erodes the image of hunting in the eyes of the public,” he said. “Less than 3% of the American public hunts, and even fewer than that hunts big game.” 

Deep ocean currents around Antarctica headed for collapse, say scientists

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Story by Deutsche Welle•11h ago

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Anew study says that rapidly melting Antarctic ice could impact oceans “for centuries to come.”The fast melting of Antarctic ice threatens to slow deep currents in the world’s oceans, adversely affecting the climate, the spread of fresh water and oxygen as well as life-sustaining nutrients for centuries, scientists have said.

The “overturning circulation” of waters in the depths of the oceans would slow by 40% by 2050 in a high-emissions scenario, the study said©David Vaughan/AP Photo/picture alliance

According to a new study published in the journal Nature on Wednesday, deep water currents around Antarctica could slow by more than 40% in the next 30 years.

The “overturning circulation” of waters in the depths of the oceans would slow by 40% by 2050 in a high-emissions scenario, the study said, warning of repercussions…

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Youth Turkey Season Opens April 1, General Season Opens April 15

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

March 24, 2023 News Edge Newsroom News Edge

https://www.wpkyonline.com/2023/03/24/youth-only-turkey-season-opens-april-1-general-season-opens-april-15/news-edge/

The 2023 spring turkey hunting season in Kentucky kicks off soon, with the youth-only window open April 1-2, and general hunting season beginning April 15 through May 7.

According to the Kentucky Department of Fish & Wildlife Resources, this season is structured to give turkeys ample time to breed before introducing hunting pressures — while giving hunters the opportunity to hear the gobblers.

Wild turkeys communicate through different vocalizations during the breeding season, and officials are expecting an “especially good” hunt this year.

Zak Danks, wild turkey program coordinator for KDFWR, forecasted this good year from 2-year gobblers based on the above-average turkey brood survival rate recorded in 2021. Brood surveys, which are conducted in July and August, help the department make season predictions.

Danks is encouraging beginners to try turkey hunting this season, because of the expected abundance…

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Wildlife advocates concerned about public relations tactics related to hunting, trapping amendment

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

Software can bombard lawmakers with different messages from same individual

BY: DARRELL EHRLICK – MARCH 26, 2023 10:13 AM

Hunting, fishing, and other wildlife-related recreation in the United States is estimated to contribute $122 billion to our nation’s economy annually (Photo by Ryan Hagarty | U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service).

An out-of-state group that is lobbying for the constitutional effort that purports to protect hunting interests via a ballot measure for the Montana Constitution may seem much more popular than it is.

HOWL for Wildlife, an advocacy group that supports the measure, boasts on its website that it has sent more than 40,000 messages to Montana legislators in order to get House Bill 372 passed. HB 372 is a constitutional proposal that would classify hunting, trapping and fishing as the primary preferred method of wildlife management in Montana.

A sophisticated marketing and lobbying campaign pushed through its website allows…

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Most Kenai Peninsula trapping setback proposals fail at Board of Game

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

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Riley Board, KDLL – Soldotna

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March 23, 2023

the Alaska Board of Game
The Board of Game meets at the Soldotna Regional Sports Complex on Tuesday, March 21, 2023. (Riley Board/KDLL)

In its six days of meetings in Soldotna, the Alaska Board of Game heard hours of public testimony and weighed in on more than 150 proposals to change hunting and wildlife regulations in the state. Members considered nine proposals around the contentious issue of trapping setbacks, which require traps to be placed a certain distance from public-use areas like trails and campgrounds.

Out of those proposals, the board failed seven.

“I am disappointed at the decisions they came to and the lack of support the Board of Game showed,” said Lorraine Temple, who heads the Cooper Landing Safe Trails Committee — the group behind many of the proposals.

The group hastried and failedto get the same proposals passed before at…

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South Carolina hunting lodge where Alex Murdaugh murdered wife Maggie and son Paul sells for $2.6m to two buyers – far less than the $3.9m it was listed for

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

  • The property was the scene of the gristly double murder of Maggie and Paul Murdaugh by disgraced legal scion Alex in June 2021
  • It sold on Wednesday for $2,663,676 to two buyers with the proceeds going in part to pay for Alex’s outstanding legal fees
  • Before the property went on sale countless items belonging to the Murdaugh family wereput under the hammer

ByEMMA JAMES FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

PUBLISHED:08:24 EDT, 27 March 2023|UPDATED:08:46 EDT, 27 March 2023

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A hunting lodge that previously belonged to the Murdaugh family has sold for $2.6million to two buyers – less than the $3.9million it was originally listed for.

The property, Moselle, in South Carolina, was the scene of the gristly double murder of Maggie and Paul Murdaugh bydisgraced legal scion Alex in June 2021.

They were found…

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Not a big fan of predator hunting

[They try to justify hunting to control deer population, while out the other side of their mouth they kill predators to “aid the deer population.”]

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

[They try to justify hunting to control deer population, while out the other side of their mouth they kill predators to “aid the deer population.”]

Ben Leblanc of Mapleton poses with one of many coyotes that he has eliminated over the years while reducing the pressure on the local deer population. (Courtesy of Bill Graves)

Coyote hunting aids deer population

Bill Graves, Special to The County•March 24, 2023

I am not a big fan of coyotes. I am a believer in coyote hunting.

Regardless of the fact that the coyote-deer situation is natural predation, Aroostook’s harsh winters favor the predator, and in the end that notably affects the deer herd in certain areas. Anyone who has seen a pack of coy dogs relentlessly pursue a deer and down it, then begin feeding before the whitetail is dead, will share my support of varmint hunting.

Another…

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The Greenland Ice Sheet is close to a melting point of no return, says new study

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

by American Geophysical Union

https://phys.org/news/2023-03-greenland-ice-sheet.html

The Greenland Ice Sheet is close to a melting point of no return
Equilibrium states of the volume of the Greenland Ice Sheet (GIS) (black dots) with respect to pre-industrial as a function of atmospheric CO2concentration (top left) and corresponding temperature anomaly (top right). The blue curve refers to increasing CO2concentration starting from the pre-industrial GIS, the other curves to decreasing CO2starting from a completely ice free GIS (red curve) and from intermediate states (yellow and purple curves), respectively. The bottom panel illustrates the GIS thickness at the points A–D. Credit:Geophysical Research Letters(2023). DOI: 10.1029/2022GL101827

The Greenland Ice Sheet covers 1.7 million square kilometers (660,200 square miles) in the Arctic. If it melts entirely, global sea level would rise about 7 meters (23 feet), but scientists aren’t sure how quickly the ice sheet could melt. Modeling tipping points, which are critical thresholds where a system behavior irreversibly changes, helps researchers…

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1,000-plus years of tree rings confirm historic extremity of 2021 western North America heat wave

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

by Columbia Climate School

https://phys.org/news/2023-03-plus-years-tree-historic-extremity.html

1,000-plus years of tree rings confirm historic extremity of 2021 western North America heat wave
Lead author Karen Heeter takes a core sample from an old mountain hemlock near Crater Lake, Oregon, where at least one tree dated to the 1300s. Credit: Grant Harley/University of Idaho

In summer 2021, a stunning heat wave swept western North America, from British Columbia to Washington, Oregon and beyond into other inland areas where the climate is generally mild. Temperature records were set by tens of degrees in many places, wildfires broke out, and at least 1,400 people died. Scientists blamed the event largely on human-driven climate warming, and declared it unprecedented. But without reliable weather data going back more than a century or so, did it really have no precedent?

A new study of tree rings from the region shows that the event was almost certainly the worst in at least the past millennium. The research, published in the journalnpj Climate and…

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Pair in fishing scandal plead guilty to cheating in Lake Erie walleye tournament

by: Justin Dennis

https://www.woodtv.com/news/nexstar-media-wire/pair-in-fishing-scandal-plead-guilty-to-cheating-in-walleye-tournament/

Posted: Mar 28, 2023 / 09:52 AM EDT

Updated: Mar 28, 2023 / 11:57 AM EDT

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CLEVELAND (WJW) — Two men accused of cheating in a walleye fishing tournament on Lake Erie pleaded guilty on Monday.

Jacob Runyan, 43, of Ashtabula, Ohio, and Chase Cominsky, 36, of Hermitage, Pennsylvania, were each indicted in October on felony charges of cheating, attempted grand theft and possessing criminal tools, and a misdemeanor count of illegal animal ownership. They initially pleaded not guilty.Man accused in fishing scandal faces new charge after bowling alley incident

But on Monday, each pleaded guilty to a felony count of cheating and a misdemeanor animal ownership violation. The remaining charges were dismissed.

The pair is due for sentencing on May 11.

  • Chase Cominsky, together with Jacob Runyan, has won a slew of fishing tournaments with cash awards and major prizes in recent years. The two were accused of cheating late last month, after organizers of a fishing tournament found lead weights in their catches. (WKBN)Read More »
  • Jacob Runyan
  • Chase Cominsky in a Cuyahoga County court on charges related to the fishing tournament (WJW photo).Read More »
  • Jacob Runyan, left, and Chase Cominsky, sit in court as they are arraigned, Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2022, in Cleveland. The two pleaded not guilty to cheating and other charges in a lucrative fishing tournament on Lake Erie in the end of September where they were accused of stuffing five walleye with lead weights and fish filets. (AP Photo/Mark Gillispie)Read More »
  • Chase Cominsky, together with Jacob Runyan, has won a slew of fishing tournaments with cash awards and major prizes in recent years. The two were accused of cheating late last month, after organizers of a fishing tournament found lead weights in their catches. (WKBN)Read More »
  • Jacob Runyan

Jacob Runyan

(WJW photos)

In the September 2022 tournament, anglers from several surrounding states competed for the heaviest walleye catches, according to authorities. The pair stood to win a prize of more than $28,000.