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Pinedale Online > News > November 2018 > Wolf News Roundup 11/13/2018
Wolf News Roundup 11/13/2018
by Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!
November 13, 2018

Wyoming Hunt
The hunting season for wolves in the trophy game area of northwestern Wyoming opened Sept. 1. According to the Wyoming Game & Fish Department, 27 wolves have been harvested as of November 11. The agency set a total quota of 58 wolves in the state’s 14 hunt areas for wolves. The hunting season remains open until Dec. 31 or until hunt-area quotas are reached. Currently, only one hunt area has reached its quota. There have also been 34 wolves killed in Wyoming’s predator zone so far in 2018.

Idaho
Idaho allows both hunting and trapping seasons for wolves, and in 2017, harvested more than 280 wolves. According to the state wildlife agency: "Harvest quotas (limits) were initially used for managing wolf harvest in Idaho to ensure harvest was well-distributed across the state. After 7 years of harvest, it was apparent that harvest quotas were not needed as none had been reached. Consequently, harvest quotas requirements were removed beginning 2017."

Hunters and trappers may take up to five wolves per person, per year.

Montana
A Montana law allows landowners or their agents to take up to 100 wolves a year that potentially threaten livestock, domestic dogs or human safety. The quota will be examined in four 25-wolf increments. There have been three wolves killed in 2018 under the current quota.

Montana’s general rifle season for wolves runs from Sept. 15 through March 15, 2019, while the trapping season opens Dec. 15 and runs through Feb. 28, 2019. There is no quota system in place for most of the state’s wolf management units, and hunters may take up to five wolves per person maximum. There has been one wolf harvested from the three hunt areas with quotas.

In 2017, hunters and trappers harvested 254 wolves in Montana.

Washington
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) Director Kelly Susewind today authorized the use of lethal measures to remove wolves from two packs that have repeatedly preyed on cattle on grazing lands in northeast Washington. The two wolf packs subject to lethal action are the Smackout pack in Stevens County and the Togo pack in Ferry County.

Susewind authorized the removal of one or two members of the Smackout pack after WDFW field staff confirmed that the pack preyed on five cattle since Aug. 20. Four heifers were killed and one calf was injured in those attacks on privately owned pastures.

The pack includes four or five adult wolves and no known pups, said Donny Martorello, WDFW wolf policy lead.

Martorello said the latest depredations were confirmed in the last week, crossing the threshold for considering lethal action under WDFW's wolf-livestock interaction protocol. Under that policy, WDFW can use lethal action to deter wolves if department staff documents three predations by wolves on livestock within 30 days, or four within 10 months.

"The purpose of this action is to change the pack's behavior and deter continuing predation on livestock," Martorello said. "That strategy is consistent with the guidelines established by the state's Wolf Conservation and Management Plan and the department's protocol."

Susewind also authorized the removal of the remaining members of the Togo pack, which has accounted for the death or injury of six cattle over the past 10 months in Ferry County.

On Sept. 2, the department removed one male wolf from the pack after documenting six depredations by the pack, then suspended that operation to determine whether it would deter further attacks.

On Nov. 1, WDFW staff confirmed another injury to a calf by the Togo pack, prompting Susewind to reauthorize removing additional wolves from the pack. The Togo pack consists of one female adult wolf and two pups.

Because the affected cattle are on private land, Susewind issued a permit to the rancher allowing him, his immediate family or his employees to kill wolves if they enter the private fenced pasture where the livestock are located.

Consistent with WDFW's wolf-livestock protocol, the ranchers whose cattle were killed or injured by the two packs have employed range riders and other non-lethal measures to deter predation by wolves, Susewind said.

"Authorizing the removal of wolves is one of the most difficult decisions I've had to make in my professional career," he said. "Our department is committed to working with a diversity of people and interests to find new ways to reduce the loss of both wolves and livestock in our state."

As of the first of the year, the state was home to at least 122 wolves, 22 packs, and 14 successful breeding pairs, according to an annual field study conducted by state, tribal, and federal wildlife managers. That compares to 27 wolves, five packs, and three successful breeding pairs documented in 2012.



Related Links
  • Wyoming hunt - Wyoming Game & Fish Department
  • Idaho - Idaho Fish & Game
  • Montana - Montana Fish Wildlife & Parks
  • Washington - Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife
  • Wolf Watch - by Cat Urbigkit, Pinedale Online!
  • Pinedale Online > News > November 2018 > Wolf News Roundup 11/13/2018

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