protect the wolves, ban grazing allotments

Erik Molvar: Chronic Wasting Disease highlights underlying dysfunction in wildlife policy 

In Protect The Wolves by TwowolvesLeave a Comment

protect the wolves, ban grazing allotments

How is it that Fish and Game Agencies as well as Biologists do not recognize what is actually causing these problems? They blame feeding stations… seems that takes the easy way out to us.

The problem lies within grazing allotments being over grazed, which leaves the Publics resources with no food left in traditional locations to carry them through the winter. They do not have corridors that allow them safe passage from summer to winter grounds…. Then the Ranchers and Farmers complain they eat their crops or hay…. The government steps in, feeds the ungulates that then spread a disease that was most likely brought here by the importation of livestock to begin with. However they will fight to the end from keeping that from coming out into the eye of the public. Why one might ask? Well it isnt to difficult to figure out…. They’d loose federal funding to manage grazing allotments that almost free grazing costs do not cover. You can not pay 1.87 a month per cow calf pair and expect that to cover costs, so the costs then get passed onto the taxpayers. Our Government needs to wake the hell up. They dropped this years grazing fees just a fraction under the maximum amount allowable which is 25% change either plus or minus in a calendar year. Look Folks, costs rise every year, not drop…. how many of you have seen the price of their cars drop or for that matter anything at all. So just how is it that we can allow the FEDS to drop grazing fees by .46 when costs continue to rise? It is not fiscally responsible.

Further, pointing out these feed stations are a cause of spreading of CWD needs to be recognized for just exactly what it is! It is stealing from your taxes, as well as from Us The Publics Natural resources being Deer, Elk, Bison etc by robbing them of the food that is necessary to carry them through the winter. Look, The feds dont help a Construction business, or for that matter a hair salon if they can not be successful on their own… why do they keep giving away our wildlife’s food for next to nothing to simply put more money in Ranchers pockets, and then use your taxes to pay the administration costs of such a program. Rather then bleeding any more out of the taxpayers, they need to start cutting programs that do not ever pay their own way.

 — The federal grazing fee for 2018 will be $1.41 per animal unit month (AUM) for public lands administered by the Bureau of Land Management and $1.41 per head month (HM) for lands managed by the USDA Forest Service. The 2017 public land grazing fee was $1.87.

 

>>The Wyoming Game and Fish Department is finally trying to come to grips with the spread throughout the state of Chronic Wasting Disease, a brain disease caused by a prion – or mutant protein – much like mad cow disease. It results in the slow wasting of infected animals as they grow listless, drool and eventually die. WGFD’s initial recommendations to limit the disease are reportedly to: (1) reduce artificial wildlife feeding stations, (2) issue more mule deer buck hunting tags and fewer doe tags and (3) change hunting seasons.

If you’re a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. And if you are a game and fish agency, there is a tendency to try to “manage” wildlife problems through more or different patterns of hunting tags and seasons. But this approach ignores a more promising solution – allowing native predators to take care of the problem. In this case, wolves and coyotes are better suited than human hunters to cut the disease out of the deer, elk, and moose herds because they naturally focus on culling the weak and the sick from the herd.

Trying to combat CWD with human hunting, on the other hand, is deeply problematic. Human hunters tend to target the largest and healthiest animals, not the weak and the sick. And ethical hunters will not shoot anything they don’t intend to eat. Now that Chronic Wasting Disease has demonstrated its ability to jump from game meat to monkeys in laboratory settings, what hunter will want to risk infecting themselves and their families with a brain disease likely to resemble Creutzfeld-Jakob disease with its memory loss, dementia and ultimately death?

Coyotes and wolves, the deer family’s natural predators, offer a cleaner solution. But Wyoming state agencies, the agriculture industry, and their federal partners, have been at war with these real Wyoming natives for more than a century.

Coyotes are intentionally exterminated by the thousands each year in Wyoming. A federally agency cynically named Wildlife Services is the main culprit, engaging in aerial gunning, lethal trapping, the barbaric practice of burning coyote pups alive in the dens, and the use of poisons including the notorious M-44 “cyanide bomb.” The state Department of Agriculture and local ag extension services also are complicit in the annual coyote killing spree.

Conservation and wildlife advocacy groups petitioned Wildlife Services and the Wyoming Department of Agriculture to stop using M-44s statewide last year after a family had two of its dogs killed by them near Casper, but today, even after the first human fatality from an M-44 this past February (Dennis Slaugh, a rockhound who lived in Green River, Utah), both state and federal agencies insist on continuing to use this dangerous and indiscriminate type of land mine.

Realistically, coyotes aren’t effective elk or moose predators, but the State of Wyoming has a dysfunctional policy that prevents wolves from fulfilling their natural role as predators of these larger prey species. By declaring all wolves outside a narrow band of wilderness surrounding Yellowstone to be “predatory animals” and subject to unlimited killing without bag limits, seasons, or even a valid hunting license, Wyoming engages in state-sanctioned extermination of any wolf that ventures away from the Yellowstone region and into the rest of the state. And inside the “trophy management zone,” Wyoming Game and Fish Department has set aggressive targets on trophy wolf killing in the lands surrounding Yellowstone. As a result, wolves cannot perform their natural ecological function of minimizing disease in elk, deer, and moose herds across the vast majority of Wyoming.

While it would be foolish to expect human hunting to tackle the widespread and pervasive CWD problem in Wyoming, wolves and coyotes are tailor-made for the job. The State Game and Fish Department should be taking a leadership role in re-thinking our human relationship to native predators, so we can stop getting in our own way and start facilitating natural solutions to the chronic wasting disease epidemic.

WGFD also has highlighted wildlife feeding stations as a main threat in the spread of chronic wasting disease. But one of the biggest perpetrators of these feeding stations is Wyoming Game and Fish Department itself, through its operation of 23 elk feedgrounds surrounding the Yellowstone ecosystem, which lure thousands of elk away from their natural winter ranges (many of which are now private ranchlands) and concentrating them in unnatural densities. Western Watersheds Project, the Sierra Club, and others saw the catastrophic potential of CWD entering the Yellowstone elk herds, and sued to end this practice.

Killing or driving off native wildlife for the benefit of ranchers or hunters, or just to assuage irrational fears among the general public, is woven deep into the dysfunctional custom and culture of Wyoming. This CWD epidemic offers an opportunity for the Wyoming Game and Fish Department to teach us a little humility, and begin to reverse a century and a half of hubris and delusions that through the management of bag limits and hunting seasons we can successfully manipulate complicated natural systems to achieve a healthy and ecologically sound result.

The path forward is clear – close the elk feedgrounds and allow the deer family’s natural predators to repopulate and re-form their natural pack structures so they can cull infected deer, elk, and moose. Today, WGFD is asking the right questions, and pointing their recommendations in the right direction. Now they just need to plow ahead through the opposition of vested political interests to bring this effort to its logical conclusion – closing feedgrounds and restoring native predators. In a state like Wyoming, that would be no small achievement.

Source: Molvar: Chronic Wasting Disease highlights underlying dysfunction in wildlife policy | Open Spaces | trib.com

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