Groups seek changes to Washington’s cougar, black bear hunting rules

Oct. 25, 2023 Updated Wed., Oct. 25, 2023 at 6:38 p.m.

A black bear takes a break from eating berries Oct. 1 in North Cascades National Park. Wildlife Services killed 433 black bears in 2021, including 32 in Washington.  (Colin Tiernan/The Spokesman-Review)
A collared cougar reacts after being treed by hounds in 2020.  (Tyler Tjomsland/The Spokesman-Review)
A black bear takes a break from eating berries Oct. 1 in North Cascades National Park. Wildlife Services killed 433 black bears in 2021, including 32 in Washington.  (Colin Tiernan/The Spokesman-Review)

https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2023/oct/25/groups-seek-changes-to-washingtons-cougar-black-be/?fbclid=IwAR0-MpvYMRspOKxxU5wlHPb_viQ4YdgXlTmbG9tAnrV0kzwos5J5CNsPZd8

1 of 2

A collared cougar reacts after being treed by hounds in 2020. (Tyler Tjomsland/The Spokesman-Review)

By Michael Wright michaelw@spokesman.com(509) 459-5508

A coalition of environmental groups is urging Washington to undo some recent changes to cougar and black bear hunting rules, arguing the tweaks have led to too many of the animals being killed.

Washington Wildlife First, the Mountain Lion Foundation, the Center for Biological Diversity and the Humane Society of the United States filed a petition Wednesday asking the Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission to reverse decisions from 2019 and 2020 that expanded opportunities for hunters to kill cougars and black bears.

The changes set the bag limit for black bears at two per hunter statewide, standardized the season length and reconfigured the state’s calculation of cougar densities, which are used to set overall hunting limits. The groups argue those rules have allowed hunters to kill cougars and bears beyond sustainable levels, and that the increase threatens the health of the two species’ populations.

The petition asks the commission to shorten bear hunting season by a month, set a statewide bag limit of one bear and close cougar hunting after area-specific quotas are met.

“It’s shortsighted and unscientific to allow hunters to kill so many of Washington’s bears and cougars,” Collette Adkins of the Center for Biological Diversity said in a news release.

The commission has 60 days to respond. Staci Lehman, a spokesperson for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, which the commission oversees, said the agency has not had time to review the petition in depth, and will look at it more thoroughly in the coming weeks. The commission will confer with WDFW wildlife staff and take it up at a meeting within the 60-day window.

Predator hunting has been a point of controversy for the commission over the past few years, as wildlife advocates have pushed for more protection for animals like bears and cougars while others argue the populations are doing fine, and that hunting is an important management tool.

In 2022, the commission voted to end Washington’s permit-only spring black bear hunting season. The decision was controversial, and commissioners have rejected multiple petitions seeking to restore that season.

Brian Lynn, a spokesperson for the Sportsmen’s Alliance, said in a statement that the petition filed Wednesday is “more agenda-driven hyperbole from animal-rights groups that want to end all hunting in Washington.”

“Each of these groups implores the use of science, but when science supported a spring bear season, they rejected it out of hand so blatantly that the biologist left,” Lynn said. “The WDFW is losing good biologists over the ideologically driven, non-scientific decision making these organizations are pushing.”

In 2019, the commission increased the bear bag limit from one to two bears per hunter in Eastern Washington and made Aug. 1 to Nov. 15 the standard season length statewide. Before the change, rules varied between Washington’s nine bear management units – five had seasons that started Aug. 15 or later, and five had a bag limit of one.

https://1fe38c9588b2177d8da03c64f5461529.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Lengthening the season and increasing the limit resulted in 50% more bears being killed by hunters, peaking in 2022 with hunters killing more than 2,200 bears, according to the petition. The groups argue that’s a problem because black bears face threats from climate change, and that increased hunting could lead to a serious population decline.

In 2020, the commission voted to change how it sets cougar hunting guidelines, which are based on estimated densities of the big cats. The guidelines set a range of allowable cougar kills for individual game management units.

The commission’s change directed WDFW to use the median density instead of the average and count only 2-year-old and older cougars toward the guidelines. The petition says that raised the number of cougars that could be killed each year by more than 50%, and it argues the move ignored science that indicated the populations couldn’t handle that much hunting pressure.

The petition seeks a one-bear limit statewide, and a bear season that runs from Sept. 1 to Nov. 15. For cougars, it calls for returning to setting guidelines based on population estimates and growth rates, and counting cats of all ages toward the rules.

It also argues that the rules – which were made permanent – should be reviewed alongside the rest of Washington’s hunting seasons during the commission’s season-setting process every three years.

The commission has begun working on setting hunting seasons for 2024 to 2026. The panel’s wildlife committee reviewed recommendations from WDFW at a meeting earlier this month, and is scheduled to discuss hunting seasons again when it convenes on Thursday.

WDFW has urged the panel to leave bear and cougar regulations alone until a new game management plan is finished or the commission creates a carnivore hunting policy. But at the wildlife committee meeting earlier this month, some commissioners signaled that they wanted to at least consider reverting the bear and cougar rules to the pre-2019 structure.

Legal Petition Seeks Science-Based Hunting Reforms for Washington’s Cougars, Bears

OLYMPIA, Wash.— Wildlife conservation groups today petitioned the Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission to amend state hunting rules for cougars and bears. The legal petition asks the commission to restrict killings of these ecologically important carnivores to avoid overexploitation and population declines, and to better align policy with agency science.

If granted, the rulemaking petition would reverse the commission’s 2019 and 2020 expansions of cougar and bear hunting, which resulted in a 50% increase in the number of bears killed each year and kept cougar mortality above levels recommended by agency scientists. Among other things, the petition asks state wildlife managers to immediately close cougar hunting upon reaching area-specific quotas and institute a statewide “bag limit” of one bear per hunter.

“It’s shortsighted and unscientific to allow hunters to kill so many of Washington’s bears and cougars,” said Collette Adkins, carnivore conservation program director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “The state’s own biologists have found that killing cougars at current levels will likely lead to population declines and more conflicts with people. The commission needs to fix this, now.”

“In 2019 and 2020, the department decided to disregard the important work of its own carnivore biologists in its rush to placate special interests,” said Claire Loebs Davis, president of Washington Wildlife First. “We are asking the commission to return to a science-based management policy before it is too late for the state’s cougars and bears.”

“Since 2020, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife has allowed trophy hunters to kill unsustainable numbers of rare and important cougars and black bears,” said Dan Paul, Washington state director at the Humane Society of the United States. “With this citizen petition, new policy makers now have an opportunity to correct this mistake and follow the best available science, including by the agency’s own wildlife biologists, who spent years in Washington conducting field research.”

“As a Washington resident, I look forward to my wildlife commissioners bringing this era of needless and ruthless overhunting to an end,” said R. Brent Lyles, executive director of the Mountain Lion Foundation. “Cougars and bears are critically important keystone species, and Washington’s current policies fly in the face of decades of research. It’s time to bring scientific thinking back to the forefront of our state’s decision-making processes. Washingtonians and our imperiled wildlife deserve nothing less.”

The commission has 60 days to respond to today’s petition.

https://biologicaldiversity.org/w/news/press-releases/legal-petition-seeks-science-based-hunting-reforms-for-washingtons-cougars-bears-2023-10-25/

The petition was filed by Washington Wildlife First, Center for Biological Diversity, the Humane Society of the United States, Mountain Lion Foundation, WildFutures, Predator Defense, Coexisting with Cougars in Klickitat County, and Kettle Range Conservation Group.

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.7 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.

Together with millions of supporters, the Humane Society of the United States takes on puppy mills, factory farms, the fur trade, trophy hunting, animal cosmetics testing and other cruel industries. Through our rescue, response and sanctuary work, as well as other direct services, we help thousands of animals in need every year. We fight all forms of animal cruelty to achieve the vision behind our name: a humane society.

Washington Wildlife First is dedicated to reforming Washington’s management of its fish and wildlife, to change the focus from killing wildlife to protecting healthy and resilient ecosystems that will be better prepared to survive the dual crises of climate change and global biodiversity loss.

The Mountain Lion Foundation’s mission is to ensure that America’s lion survives and flourishes in wild. With members in all 50 states and beyond, our work champions broad protections for mountain lions and their habitats across the United States; cultivates proactive, community-based coexistence for people and lions; and fosters appreciation of mountain lions and their ecological significance.