2007 Hunting Season

Too Many Elk, Not Enough Hunter Access to Private Land


By David Nolt, 10-25-07

 
  photo courtesy of Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks

With the Montana elk population 12,000 above what the Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks (MFWP) says it should be, stagnant license sales and an every-increasing amount of private land closed to hunting, MFWP is hoping more hunters will take advantage of over 1,000 Block Management Areas (nearly 8.5 million acres) across the state this season.

The program is a cooperative effort between private landowners and MFWP to open up private land to hunters free of charge. In Region 3—which includes areas surrounding Bozeman, Butte and Helena—private landowners enrolled almost 700,000 acres in the program, creating 85 Block Management Areas (BMA). According to the MFWP, nearly 50 percent of all elk harvests in the state come from Region 3.

Statewide, 23,000 private landowners control nearly 60 million acres of land—around 64 percent of Montana’s 93,156,480 acres. Of course, not all of this land provides hunting, but as more and more land transactions take place across rural parts of the state, access to such land hinges on the hunting sympathies of property owners.

In 2005 MFWP adopted the Montana Elk Management Plan, which sets target population numbers for Montana’s most sought-after big game species. Wildlife biologists working on the plan say there are 124,000 elk in the state, which is about 14 percent above what they would like to see.

The Bozeman Daily Chronicle recently quoted MFWP Head of Communications and Education Ron Aasheim as saying, “We estimate that 35 percent of all Montana elk are on private land that is inaccessible to the general hunter.”

Aasheim and MFWP are citing inaccessible private land and mild winters as the primary causes of the elk surplus. Landowner Sportsman Coordinator Alan Charles says, although the Block Management Program (BMP) has been relatively successful, the lack of hunting access on private land is still a major impediment to keeping elk populations within target numbers.

“The Block Management Program is one tool we have,” Charles explains. “…But it’s not meeting all the needs, clearly, because all the landowners may not want to participate. We need sufficient hunting pressure on the elk to keep them moving around. The elk are gravitating to areas with no pressure.”

Charles says the elk are smart enough to know where they are safe, and he even jokingly speculates some of the older elk are learning to read “No Hunting” signs. The MFWP started the BMP in 1985 to deal with the issue of private land access and considerably revamped the program in 1995. Since then, about 1,250 landowners have participated in the program.

The program also provides incentives to contributing landowners; landowners are eligible to receive compensation of up to $12,000 per year and can also receive hunter management and monitoring assistance, a complimentary hunting license and reimbursement if any livestock are killed or injured by hunters. Taxpayers funded this year’s program to the tune of $6 million, $4.1 million of which goes directly to the landowners with block management contracts. The remaining money is used for hunter management purposes.

Charles says the BMP is very successful in many parts of Region 3, but other areas still have “islands” of little or no hunting pressure, which lessens the impact the BMP will have. Charles says there are other options, such as working with landowners to allow outfitters to lead hunts on their land, but the reality is, many landowners still will not allow any type of hunting on their land.

“In many cases, in all candor, we cannot get key landowners to come to the table,” Charles admits. “We cannot do this without the help of private landowners…Access is more and more the critical issue that will allow us to get to those objectives [of the Montana Elk Management Plan].”

Charles gives the example of someone who owns a second-home in Montana. They likely only spend a limited amount of time at their home and won’t allow hunting because they want to see elk on their property when they are there. Such is the challenge of balancing private property rights with managing wildlife across the changing landscape of the West.

Charles also emphasizes much responsibility also lies on the shoulders of hunters. Respect for private land and also the motivation to hunt beyond the general area surrounding an automobile will earn the respect of landowners and also result in a higher harvest of elk, Charles says.

The Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks will be considering proposals to change season structures and regulations, and the agency is also planning an “elk summit” for December 8, 2007 at the Montana State University student union building.



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Comments

By Marion, 10-25-07
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