Delisting the Gray Wolf
Montana Extends Comment Period for Potential Wolf Hunting Season
By David Nolt, 2-11-08
| Photo courtesy of Doug Smith, Yellowstone National Park. | |
With the federal government inching toward removing the gray wolf from the Endangered Species List, Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks (MFWP) is allowing the public until February 13, 2008 to comment on the proposed wolf season.
According to MFWP, there were a minimum of 316 wolves in Montana at the end of 2006. There are approximately 1,500 wolves in the Northern Rockies.
Among the three Northern Rockies wolf states (Idaho, Montana and Wyoming), Montana is leading the way in an effort to manage the wolf as any other wildlife species. In 2001, a broad-based, citizen-led Wolf Management Advisory Council released a report followed by the MFWP’s draft Montana Wolf Conservation Management Planning Document in 2002. This process laid the framework for Montana’s current management plan.
Montana’s process stands in contrast to Wyoming’s wolf management plan, which the federal government rejected in 2004. Federal delisting is currently stalled pending a lawsuit over the new Wyoming plan.
Montana is required to maintain at least 10 breeding wolf pairs and 15 breeding pairs in order to have a wolf hunt. The wolf would be treated as a trophy game animal in Montana. The Wyoming plan calls to treat wolves as “predators,” allowing citizens to shoot wolves on site without a permit in parts of the state.
Details on the tentative wolf-season proposal are available on the FWP website. Click “Montana Wolf Season.” Comments must be postmarked by February 13. Mail to: Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, Wildlife Division, Attn: Public Comment, PO Box 200701, Helena MT 59620-0701.
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Comments
A correction. When Dirk Kempthorne took over at Interior, the FWS suddenly decided to approve Wyoming's wolf plan, which establishes predatory animal status for the wolf throughout 90% of the State. All it took was a slight increase in the trophy game area in northwestern Wyoming to cover the FWS decision, which, if one knows the Endangered Species Act and the terms of reference for delisting as established in the original 1994 rule for recovery and delisting, is illegal.
In any case, we expect the FWS to formally announce the delisting of the wolf in the Greater Yellowstone and central Idado areas later this month or early next month. This will bring immediate lawsuits against lawsuits, primarily over the inadequacy of Wyoming and Idaho's plans.
Interestingly, the lawsuit by Wyoming against the feds for originally rejecting its dual status wolf plan to which you refer above is still in the courts. Wyoming is keeping all its bases covered.
RH
I have no problem "controlling" problem wolves. Wolves that are hanging out around human habitation, killing livestock etc. Trophy hunting, on the other hand, is reprehensible. When the wolf population reaches a certain level, they will "manage" themselves. It's called "carrying capacity".