Montana & Idaho Seek Okay for Gray Wolf Hunting

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — State officials sought Tuesday to revive gray wolf hunts in the Northern Rockies, even as they entered talks with environmentalists whose lawsuit restored the endangered status of the animals.

Hunters in Idaho and Montana killed 260 wolves last year in the first managed hunts since the species rebounded from near-extermination in the past century.

This year’s hunts were doubtful after a U.S. District Court ruling that portions of the wolf population remained at risk.

On Tuesday, Montana asked the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to commit by Sept. 10 to the state’s plan for “conservation hunts” beginning this fall.

State officials said the hunts were justified because the wolf population had exceeded its “carrying capacity” — the number of wolves that are biologically and socially sustainable. They also said the hunts would help curb increasingly frequent wolf attacks on livestock and big game herds.

Idaho plans to make a similar request. Jim Unsworth of Idaho Fish and Game said the state will point to the legal harvest of other protected species such as salmon and bull trout as a precedent.

It was uncertain how many animals might be harvested. State officials were waiting for a response from the federal government before setting any quota.

There are an estimated 1,700 wolves in Wyoming, Idaho and Montana — more than five times the federal government’s benchmark of 300 wolves for the species to be considered recovered.

“Montana began 2010 with a minimum of 504 wolves, even after a conservative but successful 2009 hunting season,” Joe Maurier, director of Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks wrote in a letter to U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Acting Director Rowan Gould.

Maurier asked that the federal government issue Montana a conservation hunt permit by Nov. 30.

Original plans called for a hunting quota of 186 wolves this fall in Montana. That would have driven down the population to 439 by the end of 2010.

Idaho had not set its 2010 quota. The state’s long-term goal is to reduce its wolf population from current estimates of at least 843 animals to roughly 500.

Federal officials have declined to say if they would allow any public hunting while wolves remained on the endangered list. Even without hunts, wolves are killed regularly in the region by wildlife agents and ranchers responding to attacks on sheep and cattle.

Environmental groups have vowed to stop attempts to circumvent the federal court ruling. Their attorneys were meeting Tuesday with officials from Idaho and Montana and the Fish and Wildlife Service.

Wolves were removed from the endangered species list in Idaho and Montana in 2009 before that decision was reversed in court earlier this month.

U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy ruled the government ended up violating federal law by stripping wolves of their endangered status in Idaho and Montana while portions of the population remained at risk.

Wyoming’s 320 wolves were not taken off the endangered list last year. Federal officials said the state’s wolf law was too hostile to the animals, allowing them to be shot on sight in a predator zone covering about 90 percent of the state.

About Global Sporting Safaris, Inc.  
Global Sporting Safaris, Inc. is a Full-Service Hunting Booking Agency located in Casper, Wyoming and established in 1991. We have a staff of 7 Hunting Consultants and Fishing Travel Agents with a combined 175 years of experience.   We specialize in Africa Hunting Safaris, New Zealand Hunting and Argentina Hunting.   Global Sporting Safaris invests time, effort and financial resources in developing our hunting trips with a constant eye on the quality and professional services they offer.

Yellowstone Grizzly Bear Court Decision to be Appealed

FWS Appeal 2009 Decision Putting Bears Back on Endangered Species List
8/26/10

Wolves are not the only controversial animal recently put back on the Endangered Species List.  The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) recently appealed a 2009 court decision, made by Judge Donald W. Molloy of the Federal District Court for Montana that placed the Yellowstone Grizzly back under Endangered Species (ESA) protection.  The outcome of the appeal will lead to an important precedent as to how difficult it will be in the future to delist any species once placed under federal protection even when their populations have recovered.

Judge Molloy’s decision came in response to a suit brought against the FWS by a coalition of anti-hunting and environmental groups seeking to overturn the agency’s 2007 delisting of the bear.  The Service has publicly stated that the Yellowstone Grizzly’s have surpassed recovery goals and they strongly oppose the decision.

Among the reasons cited by Molloy for relisting the grizzlies was a determination that the FWS relied on state regulations to assure protection of the bears after being delisted that he did not believe were adequate.  

“We disagree with every point [Judge Molloy] has,” stated FWS grizzly bear recovery coordinator Chris Servheen according to press reports.

Judge Molloy’s decision could have far reaching implications.  This case may establish a precedent that could be used by anti-hunters to block the delisting of healthy and sustainable animal populations, such as the Northern Rocky Mountain wolves and the Great Lakes wolves. 

The Yellowstone Grizzly population has reached approximately 600 bears.  At this number, many biologists believe that the Yellowstone ecosystem is at full saturation level with grizzlies.  In fact, the target recovery population to trigger the delisting was set at 400-500.  News Source: U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance.

Global Sporting Safaris, Inc. is a Full-Service Hunting Booking Agency located in Casper, Wyoming and established in 1991. We have a staff of 7 Hunting Consultants and Fishing Travel Agents with a combined 175 years of experience.   We hold integrity, ethics and honesty in high regard and deal with each client in a one on one basis.   Global Sporting Safaris invests time, effort and financial resources in developing our outfitters and guides with a constant eye on the quality and professional services they offer.

Idaho wants full authority over wolves

Eric Barker : August 17th 2010
Fish & Game vows to pursue all legal options 

      The Idaho Fish and Game Commission pledged to pursue all legal options to regain full management authority over wolves Monday, including the appeal of a recent federal court decision or legislation reversing it.

      Commissioners rejected calls for the state to end all cooperation with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to manage wolves in Idaho. Instead commissioners decided Idaho would be best served by the state retaining its role as the lead wolf management agency in the state, even though the court ruling stripped it of authority to conduct regulated hunting seasons.

      Earlier this month, Judge Donald Molloy of Missoula, Mont., struck down a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service rule that removed wolves in Idaho and Montana from federal protection, ending a year of state management and dashing plans for a second consecutive wolf hunting season. Monday’s commission meeting in Idaho Falls was the first chance the body had to officially comment on the ruling and chart a course forward.

      In a unanimous decision, the commission passed a resolution calling for Idaho to continue to abide by the state’s wolf management plan and support an earlier objective of managing for a population of about 520 wolves in Idaho.

      But commissioners want to draft a new agreement with the federal government matching the state’s now limited wolf management authority with its financial resources. Commissioners committed to work with Gov. C.L. (Butch) Otter’s office to reach a new agreement that ensures revenue from the sale of hunting tags and permits is not used on some wolf management duties such as the enforcement laws prohibiting the killing of wolves. Commissioners said if Idaho doesn’t have full authority to manage wolves, it should not incur all the costs of doing so.

      Commission chairman Wayne Write, of Twin Falls, said when Idaho briefly possessed full management of wolves, it could raise money through the sale of wolf hunting tags. “Now we are left in a situation where we can’t raise funds,” he said.

      Commissioner Gary Powers of Salmon described the situation as a quagmire, but said the best way to get out of it is to stay engaged in the fight. “I think it’s important to continue to do as much as we can to manage wolves,” he said.

      Robin Thorson, regional director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, addressed the commission and said the agency was disappointed in Molloy’s ruling, but has not decided if it will appeal.

      She called the failure of the rule removing federal protections for wolves a legal and administrative issue but said wolves continue to be biologically recovered. Thorson also said it is unlikely the state would be able to conduct a wolf hunting season while wolves are under federal management.

      “The Fish and Wildlife Service is not going to go forward with something that has a high risk of litigation loss – that is the caution I am compelled to share.”

      Thorson said future wolf recovery would proceed more quickly if Idaho retains its commitment to its federally approved wolf management plan. Deputy Attorney General Kathleen Trever told commissioners that backing away from its commitment to manage wolves could jeopardize the state’s ability to appeal Molloy’s ruling. She also said it would revert the state back to more restrictive wolf management rules approved in 2004 instead of more flexible rules approved in 2008.

      A copy of the commission’s resolution is available at www.fishandgame.idaho.gov/ under “Headlines”.  Barker may be contacted at ebarker@lmtribune.com or at (208) 848-2273.

About Global Sporting Safaris, Inc.

Global Sporting Safaris, Inc. is a Full-Service Hunting Booking Agency located in Casper, Wyoming and established in 1991. We have a staff of 7 Hunting Consultants and Fishing Travel Agents with a combined 175 years of experience.   We hold integrity, ethics and honesty in high regard and deal with each client in a one on one basis.   Global Sporting Safaris invests time, effort and financial resources in developing our outfitters and guides with a constant eye on the quality and professional services they offer.