Wolf hunting season opens in Montana

The Associated Presscopyrighted Hayden wolf in lodgepoles

First Published Sep 14 2013

Billings, Mont. • Montana’s general wolf season opens Sunday with much looser rules than in past years, as state wildlife officials ramp up efforts to reduce the predators’ population in response to public pressure over livestock attacks and declines in some elk herds.

Lower license fees, a five-wolf per person bag limit and a longer season top the list of changes put in place for the 2012-2013 season.

Only two areas in the state — near Glacier and Yellowstone National Parks — have limits on how many gray wolves can be killed.

Conservation groups have criticized the state’s liberal wolf hunting rules as a threat to their long-term population. But livestock owners and hunters have pushed for even more wolves to be killed, and state officials say they intend to maintain a smaller, but still viable, wolf population.

At the beginning of 2013 Montana had 625 wolves. That was a slight drop from the prior year and the first decline since Canadian wolves were brought to the Northern Rockies in the mid-1990s as a way to bolster the population.

State officials hope to continue driving the population down this year but have not set a target number.

The number of out-of-state hunters buying licenses is up sharply this year, with 370 purchased through this week compared to 55 at the same point last year. That comes after the Legislature reduced out-of-state licenses from $250 to $50.

Almost 6,000 state residents have purchased wolf licenses so far for $19 apiece. That’s roughly in line with last year’s sales figures.

The general rifle season runs through March 15.

Trapping season for wolves starts Dec. 15 and runs through Feb. 28. The two-week archery season for wolves ends Saturday, with two harvested as of Friday.

Archery season for wolves closes near Yellowstone

The archery season for wolves north of Yellowstone National Park came to an abrupt halt this week after the pre-established sub-quota of one wolf was met.

Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks noted that the wolf archery-only season will close a half-hour after sunset on Friday in Wolf Management Unit 313, which include portions of Park County.

This hunting district will re-open for the hunting of wolves for the general season in this district beginning Sept. 15.

Check helenair.com for more on this breaking story.

copyrighted wolf in river

Wolf hunt: Montana’s longer season starts Sunday with bag limit now at five

copyrighted Hayden wolf walking

Montana’s general wolf hunting season opens Sunday and runs through March 15. The archery season is underway now and closes Saturday. Trapping runs from Dec. 15 to Feb. 28.

Written by Erin Madison Tribune staff writer Sep. 12, 2013

Hunters will have a longer season this year to pursue wolves and will be able to take more wolves compared to last year.

Montana’s general rifle season for wolves opens Sunday and runs through March 15. This year’s season is about a month and a half longer than last year’s. The archery season for wolves opened Sept. 7 and goes through Saturday. Trapping will begin Dec. 15 and run through Feb. 28.

This year, wolf hunters and trappers will be able to take a total of five wolves, whether through hunting or trapping. Last year, trappers were limited to three wolves. Hunters were limited to one wolf until a bill passed midway through the Legislative session boosting that number to three.

With a higher bag limit and longer season, George Pauley, wildlife management section supervisor for Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks, expects more wolves to be harvested this year than last year.

“The population is larger than we want it to be,” he said.

[Well, same to you, buddy.]

Last year hunters and trappers took a total of 225 wolves in Montana.
• Montana wolf specialists counted 625 wolves, in 147 verified packs, and 37 breeding pairs in the state at the end of 2012. The count dropped about four percent from the previous year and marked the first time since 2004 that the minimum count declined.
• Last season the total hunting and trapping harvest was of 225 wolves. Hunters took 128 wolves and trappers 97.
• A total of 108 wolves were removed through agency control efforts in 2012 to prevent further livestock loss and by private citizens who caught wolves chasing or attacking livestock, up from 64 in 2011.

A history of wolf hunts in Montana

• 2009: During Montana’s first regulated wolf hunt, hunters harvested 72 wolves during the fall hunting season. As hunters approached the overall harvest quota of 75 wolves, FWP closed the hunt about two weeks before the season was scheduled to end.
• 2010: The hunting season was blocked by a federal court ruling in August 2010 that returned wolves to the federal endangered species list. In April 2011, the U.S. Congress enacted a new federal law delisting wolves in Montana and Idaho, and in portions of Washington, Oregon and Utah.
• 2011-12: The wolf hunting season ended with a total harvest of 166 wolves, 75 percent of the overall quota of 220 wolves. The season was initially set to end Dec. 31, but was extended to Feb. 15.
• 2012-13: This was the first time wolf trapping was allowed in the state. There was no statewide quota.

2012 wolf season details

• 128 wolves hunted, 97 trapped, 225 total
• 123 resident and three nonresident hunters harvested wolves
• 124 hunters took one wolf
• Two hunters took two wolves
• No hunter took three wolves
• 62 trappers took one wolf
• 13 trappers took two wolves
• Three trappers took three wolves
• One wolf was taken with archery equipment
• 18,889 wolf licenses were issued (18,642 resident and 247 nonresident)
• 2,414 trappers completed a wolf trapper education course
• 48 percent of wolves were harvested on federal land, 37 percent on private land and 3 percent on state land
• 117 females and 108 males were taken
• The largest harvested wolf weighed 120 pounds

The story continues here: http://www.greatfallstribune.com/article/20130912/LIFESTYLE05/309120003/Wolf-hunt-Montana-s-longer-season-starts-Sunday-bag-limit-now-five

 

Wolves in the News

copyrighted wolf in water

Lots of talk of wolves in the news today. Here’s some snippets and links…

Hearing in Sacramento Oct. 2 on federal protection of gray wolf

 By Matt Weiser      The Sacramento Bee

Published: Tuesday, Sep. 10, 2013
Sacramento will host one of three hearings in the West on the federal government’s proposal to withdraw Endangered Species Act protection for the gray wolf.

The hearing will be held Oct. 2 from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Clarion Inn, Martinique Ball Room, 1401 Arden Way, in Sacramento.

In June, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed removing the gray wolf from the endangered species list in 42 states, including California and Oregon.

http://www.sacbee.com/2013/09/10/5722212/hearing-in-sacramento-oct-2-on.html

Wolves need protection to fully recover

By Doug Tompkins and Peter Metcalf

First Published Sep 07 2013 01:01 am • Last Updated Sep 07 2013 01:01 am

Wildlands need their full complement of species to maintain their ecological integrity. Thus it has been heartening to see the gray wolf repopulate the rugged northern Rockies and expansive western Great Lakes in recent years.

http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/opinion/56829741-82/wolves-wolf-protections-gray.html.csp

Minnesota’s wolves needed for ecological balance

by                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          MAUREEN HACKETT                   September 8, 2013

http://www.startribune.com/opinion/commentaries/222746571.html

The recent article, “Despite wins, Minnesota’s endangered species list up by 180” (Aug. 20, 2013) quotes the Department of Natural Resources’ (DNR) endangered species coordinator as stating, “We’ve got to learn how to manage species on a larger scale.”

The state’s list of species that have gone extinct and of those that are endangered and threatening to go extinct has grown tremendously.

The Wolves Were Never at Our Doors

By Carl  M. Cannon –  September 9, 2013

To quell rumors that the destructive Rim Fire still raging in and around  Yosemite National Park was started by marijuana growers, authorities revealed  this week that the blaze was actually the fault of a careless hunter who set an  illegal campfire.

That was tough to take. The fire, which is expected to burn another two  weeks, has already charred some 400 square miles, destroyed 100 buildings, and  cost taxpayers $75 million. But my thoughts are with another hunter, the coward  who recently shot and killed a female Mexican gray wolf denning with her pups in  southwestern New Mexico.

These animals roamed the American Southwest and Mexico before there was a  border between our countries, long before Anglos or Spaniards ever set foot  there, in fact. For many millennia they coexisted easily with native people, who  not only eschewed killing them but emulated the way they stalked game.

Read more: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2013/09/09/the_wolves_were_never_at_our_doors_119864.html#ixzz2eVxd0cJA

Wolf hunting still divides Wisconsin

JAYNE BELSKY — Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources

In Madison and other urban parts of the state, wolves are noble creatures  along the lines of Jack London’s White Fang and Buck. In western and northern  Wisconsin, they are killers of the Big Bad variety.

Both views are correct, and both incorrect. Each is a matter of perspective  and personal priorities.

The state Department of Natural Resources has pursued a gray wolf management  plan that should appease both sides, but opinions have not budged much.

Last year, hunters and trappers killed 117 wolves under the DNR-managed plan.  They did not overkill, as some people had feared, remaining within the  constraints set by wildlife managers. An additional 126 died in accidents and  from other causes.

Yet despite nearly 250 deaths in 2012, the total population barely declined.  New wolves were born or moved in, and more than 800 still roam the state. The  DNR management plan calls for 350 wolves as a manageable, long-term population,  though that  figure is under review.

Despite last year’s successful hunt and plans for another this year limited to 251 wolves, a UW-Madison survey found public opinion remains entrenched. Eighty-one percent of respondents said their tolerance for wolves had not changed. At least the portion who had become more tolerant (14 percent) outnumbered those who became less tolerant (5 percent).

Support for hunting remains divided along geographic lines. Three-quarters of people who live in wolf range support it. Fewer than half outside the range do.

The DNR is handling the wolf challenge in a manner that protects people and property but maintains a viable population. All stakeholders have a seat at the table, and scientific data, not emotions, drive decision-making.

It’s easy to sit in Madison, far removed from any real wolf danger, and lament wolf killing. It’s also easy to sit in wolf country and complain about bleeding hearts. The hard thing is accepting Wisconsin’s smart compromise between killing every wolf and letting them run rampant.

Fewer people apply for permits to hunt wolves

by Elizabeth Dunbar, Minnesota Public Radio
September 6, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. — The number of people who want to hunt wolves in Minnesota this fall and winter has dropped significantly from last year.

About 13,000 people have applied for licenses to participate in this year’s wolf hunting season, compared to more than 23,000 last year, state Department of Natural Resources officials said.

After a survey showed the state’s wolf population has declined, department officials decided to issue 3,300 permits this year. That’s down from 6,000 permits last year.

“I’m sure last year with the novelty of it and trying to get in on the first-ever regulated wolf hunt in Minnesota’s history probably caused some people to apply,” said Steve Merchant, the DNR’s wildlife population and regulation manager. “Other people thought, ‘well geez, if the permits are down 50 percent it’s going to half my chances of winning so I’m just not going to put in this year.'”

Merchant said applicants have about a 1 in 4 chance of getting a wolf license, about the same odds as last year.

The early wolf season begins at the same time as the firearms deer season on Nov. 9.

copyrighted wolf in river

And We Call Ourselves Civilized?

In agreeing with President Obama’s plan to strike Syria, Representative Nancy Pelosi was quoted as saying we must respond to actions “outside the circle of civilized human behavior.” Nice to hear that the U.S. Government thinks it has the moral authority to respond to such actions. While they’re at it, I can think of a whole lot of other actions which should be considered “outside the circle of civilized human behavior” that are desperately in need of responding to.

I’m referring, of course, to the innumerable abuses of non-human animals by humans—many that go on every day right here in the U.S. of A. I’m afraid if I were to try to list all the instances of human mistreatment of other animals which should fall outside the “circle of civilized human behavior,” the pages would fill the halls of justice, spill out onto the streets and overflow the banks of Potomac River in an unending tsunami of savagery.

So here’s just a partial list…

Wolf Hunting—No sooner did grey wolves begin to make a comeback in the Lower 48 than did the feds jerk the rug out from under them by lifting their endangered species protections and casting their fate into the clutches of hostile states. Now, hunters in Wyoming have a year-round season on them while anti-wolf fanatics in Montana have quadrupled their per person yearly kill quota.

Trapping—Only the creepiest arachnid would leave a victim suffering and struggling for days until it suits them to come along for the “harvest.” Yet “law abiding trappers” routinely leave highly sentient, social animals clamped by the foot and chained to a log to endlessly await their fate.

Hound-Hunting—“Sportsmen” not content to shoot unsuspecting prey from a distance of a hundred yards or more sometimes use hounds to make their blood-sport even more outrageously one-sided.

Bowhunting—Those who want to add a bit of challenge to their unnecessary kill-fest like to try their luck at archery. Though they often go home empty-handed, they can always boast about the “ones that got away”… with arrows painfully stuck in them.

Contest Hunts—Prairie dogs, coyotes, and in Canada, wolves, are among the noble, intelligent animals that ignoble dimwits are allowed to massacre during bloody tournaments reminiscent of the bestial Roman Games.

Horse Slaughter—After all that our equine friends have done for us over the centuries, the administration sees fit to send them in cattle trucks to those nightmarish death-camps where so many other forcibly domesticated herbivores meet their tragic ends.

Factory farming—Whether cows, sheep, pigs, chickens or turkeys, the conditions animals are forced to withstand on modern day factory farms fall well outside even the narrowest circle of civilized human compassion. To call their situations overcrowded, inhumane or unnatural does not do justice to the fiendish cruelty that farmed animals endure each and every day of their lives.

Atrocious conditions are not confined to this continent. Chickens in China (the ancestral home of some new strain of bird flu just about every other week) are treated worse than inanimate objects. Bears, rhinoceros and any other animal whose body parts are said to have properties that will harden the wieners of hard-hearted humans are hunted like there’s no tomorrow. And let’s not forget the South Korean dog and cat slaughter, or Japan’s annual dolphin round up…

Far be it from me to belittle the use of chemical weapons—my Grandfather received a purple heart after the Germans dropped mustard gas on his foxhole during World War One. I just feel that if we’re considering responding to actions “outside the circle of civilized human behavior,” we might want to strike a few targets closer to home as well. Or better yet, reign in some of our own ill-behaviors so we can justifiably call ourselves “civilized.”

Text and Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson, 2013. All Rights Reserved

Text and Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson, 2013. All Rights Reserved

State’s first hunt didn’t reduce tensions over wolves

The following article proves that when Yellowstone biologist, Doug Smith, stated, “To get support for wolves, you can’t have people angry about them all the time, and so hunting is going to be part of the future of wolves in the West. We’ve got to have it if we’re going to have wolves,” he was dead wrong; and when wolf hunter Randy Newberg told NPR News, “Having these hunting seasons has provided a level ofcopyrighted Hayden wolf walking tolerance again” he was totally full of shit…

State’s first hunt didn’t reduce tensions over wolves

Last year’s first managed wolf hunt in Wisconsin history did not increase tolerance toward the animals among people who live in wolf country, a new survey by University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers shows.

With a growing wolf population, state wildlife managers and legislators who rewrote state hunting laws had hoped a hunting season would lower wolf numbers and reduce tensions over the animals.

But the survey shows this didn’t happen.

The last time the researchers surveyed public’s perception of wolves in 2009, 51% of wolf country residents said they would be more tolerant of wolves if the public could hunt them.

But in this year’s survey when asked the same question, residents in wolf country were much less accepting. The level of acceptance dropped to 36%.

When measuring the public’s attitudes in all parts of the state, 37% of the respondents said they would be more tolerant toward wolves with a public hunt. There was not a statewide comparison in 2009.

The wolf range is generally described as northern Wisconsin and the state’s central forests.

The hunt took place Oct. 15 to Dec. 23. Hunters and trappers killed 117 wolves, according to the Department of Natural Resources. The agency had set a harvest goal of 116 among non-tribal hunters and trappers.

“If one of the goals of the wolf hunt was to increase tolerance for the species, the first season did not accomplish this objective,” said Jamie Hogberg, a graduate student at the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies.

Team led study

Hogberg was part of a team that examined public attitudes toward wolves. Others on the team were Adrian Treves, an associate professor of environmental studies; Bret Shaw, an associate professor of the Department of Life Sciences Communication; and Lisa Naughton, a professor of geography.

One possible explanation for the lack of change in public opinion is that despite the hunt, the state’s wolf population has changed little.

In April, the DNR estimated the wolf population from over-winter counts at between 809 and 831 animals in 216 packs. The previous winter’s estimate was 815 to 880 wolves in 213 packs.

The survey was sent to 1,311 people. There were 772 responses, or 59%. The vast majority — 538 — of people who responded reside in areas where wolves are present.

In January 2012, the federal government removed wolves from the list of protected animals under the Endangered Species Act in the Great Lakes states. That allowed states to manage the wolf population through hunting and trapping seasons.

The Legislature approved a wolf hunt in April 2012.

Sears Sells Wolf Hunting T-Shirts!

http://www.sears.com/search=wolf?catalogId=12605&storeId=10153&levels=Clothing&autoRedirect=true&viewItems=50&redirectType=CAT_REC_PRED

THAT’S IT! I’ve officially lost all hope for humanity!! I’ve had it with this sociopathic society that has no regard or respect for the animal world! This is the lowest the human creature has ever crawled! If there were ever a time to drop completely out and go on the war wagon…

What’s driving me to these depths, you ask? Sears now sells “I Love Wolf Hunting T-Shirts”!! What are they trying to do, start a war?! Don’t they know that there’s a lot of folks out there who are only about a heartbeat away from going ballistic on the first person they see wearing a “Wolf Hunting Rocks” T-shirt?

Forget those beautiful, artistic images of wolves Sears used to sell, now they carry a solid black shirt with a red heart that simply states: “I (heart) wolf hunting” (how fucking clever, not to mention original).

If that’s too simplistic for your tastes, they also have dull brown shirts, in all shapes and sizes, ignorantly declaring “I have a Masters in Wolf Hunting.” One says, “Life without wolf hunting? I don’t think so” (to which we’d gladly oblige), while another idiotic shirt features a life-sized human heart over the words, “Wolf hunting, wolf hunting, wolf hunting, wolf hunting” as though it’s all the asshole wearing it has to live for.

Meanwhile, one bright-red shirt just says USA Wolf Hunting (like it’s something our country should be proud of?) Oh, and there’s one that just says, “Smile, life is wolf hunting.”

Well, if that’s all life is for some people, then they don’t deserve it.

 

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Wolf News and Hunt Updates

First, here are the numbers so far for this year’s wolf-kill season…

Latest Posted Idaho Wolf Hunt Kill total (current season): 2

Latest Posted Idaho Wolf Trapping Kill total (current season): 0
Latest Posted Montana Wolf Hunt Kill Total (season is currently closed): 0
Latest Posted Montana Wolf Trapping Kill total (season is currently closed): 0
Wyoming Wolf Kill Total (2013): 25

Regional Total Reported Killed Since Delisting: 1,184

National News:

Wolves Under Review
New York Times Editorial
August 15

Rocky Barker: Earth First! dead last in wolf advocacy
Idaho Statesman
August 19
http://www.idahostatesman.com/2013/08/19/2713697/earth-first-dead-last-in-wolf.html
•Seattle Gun Rights Examiner Blog: Wolf management saboteurs have playbook for disruption

•The Equation (Union of Concerned Scientist Blog): Wolves, the Endangered Species Act, and Why Scientific Integrity Matters
West Coast News:

Conservation groups seek stronger wolf protections
Metthow Valley News
August 14

Conservation groups seek stronger wolf protections

Confirmed Wolf Kill
Washington Ag Today
August 16
http://www.aginfo.net/index.cfm/report/id/Washington-Ag-Today-25655

Northern Rockies

Guard dogs being tested on Rocky Mtn Front
Great Falls Tribune via Miami Herald
August 16
http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/08/16/3567029/guard-dogs-being-tested-on-rocky.html

Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation Grant to Help Wolf Management in Wyoming
RMEF Press Release via AmmoLand
August 19
http://www.ammoland.com/2013/08/rocky-mountain-elk-foundation-grant-to-help-wolf-management-in-wyoming/#axzz2cRmEm8zo

Wyoming Game and Fish to trap wolves east of Yellowstone for monitoring
Yellowstone Gate
August 15

Wyoming Game and Fish to trap wolves east of Yellowstone for monitoring

Wolves cause death of 176 sheep near Fogg Hill; Forest Service says stay out of area
Teton Valley News
August 19
http://www.tetonvalleynews.net/news/wolves-kill-sheep-near-fogg-hill/article_f79754fc-08eb-11e3-82d9-001a4bcf887a.html

Elsewhere & Etc.

Court says DOE can force rancher to construct buffer fences
The Olympia Repirt
August 15
http://theolympiareport.com/court-says-doe-can-force-cattle-rancher-to-construct-buffer-fences/

Federal Officials Confirm Gray Wolf Taken In Kentucky
LEX18
August 14

http://www.lex18.com/news/federal-officials-confirm-gray-wolf-taken-in-kentucky
•AP Via the Republic: Federal officials confirm first gray wolf killed in Kentucky in more than a century

U.S. cattle inventory still declining
Drovers Cattle Network
August 15
http://www.cattlenetwork.com/drovers/markets/US-cattle-inventory-still-declining-219311601.html?ref=601
•The Wildlife News: Cattle Numbers Still Declining
Howling pups show Isle Royale wolves are reproducing, but not out of danger
MinnPost
August 16

Howling pups show Isle Royale wolves are reproducing, but not out of danger


•Michigan Radio: Wolf pups a good sign for struggling population on Isle Royale
BLM Public Lands Grazing Accounts for Only 0.41% of Nation’s Livestock Receipts
The Wildlife News
August 15

BLM Public Lands Grazing Accounts for Only 0.41% of Nation’s Livestock Receipts

Alyssa Grayson Gives Keynote Address at National Event
WolfWatcher
August 15

Alyssa Grayson Gives Keynote Address at National Event

Wolf hybrids allowed
Medford Mail Tribune
August 18
http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20130818/NEWS/308180318/-1/NEWSMAP

Stamford Woman Stumps In Support Of Endangered Gray Wolf
Stamford Daily Voice (CT)
August 14
http://stamford.dailyvoice.com/news/stamford-woman-stumps-support-endangered-gray-wolf

Little common ground found on wolf reintroduction
White Mountain Independent
August 16
http://www.wmicentral.com/news_premium/little-common-ground-found-on-wolf-reintroduction/article_6197762c-05d9-11e3-943f-001a4bcf887a.html

copyrighted Hayden wolf in lodgepoles