protect idaho wolves, protect the wolves

Protect The Wolves™ has submitted a FOIA Request for Lolo Wolf kill locations

In Ban Grazing Allotments, Protect Idaho Wolves, Protect The Wolves by Twowolves1 Comment

protect idaho wolves, protect the wolves

Protect The Wolves™ has submitted a FOIA Request for the wolf kill locations in the Lolo Unit in Idaho. The way Idaho operates near or even for that matter in Wilderness areas with total disregard for Federal Law, they have proven beyond a doubt that they can not be trusted.

In 2017, Idaho slaughtered 26,562 Elk, which tells a prudent Individual that there is not a shortage of Elk in Idaho. We find their reasoning for killing Wolves not based on Science nor Data.

 

Ten wolves taken in action that’s been conducted in six of the last seven years

Idaho Fish and Game has completed wolf control actions in northern Idaho’s Lolo elk zone to improve elk survival in the area. Predation on calves and cows is the primary factor limiting recovery of the Lolo elk population.

Ten wolves were killed during the operation, which started in late February. The operation is consistent with Fish and Game’s Elk Management Plan and Lolo Predation Management Plan.

The control operation was paid for using Fish and Game license dollars transferred to the Idaho Wolf Depredation Control Board, created by the Idaho Legislature in 2014.

Fish and Game authorizes control actions where wolves are causing conflicts with people or domestic animals, or are a significant, measured factor in deer and elk population declines. Such control actions are consistent with Idaho’s 2002 Wolf Conservation and Management Plan approved by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Idaho Legislature.

Fish and Game prefers to manage wolf populations using hunters and trappers and only authorizes control actions where regulated harvest has been insufficient to meet management goals. The Lolo zone is steep, rugged country that is difficult to access, especially in winter. To date, hunters and trappers have reported 22 wolves taken in the Lolo zone during the 2017-18 season. The trapping season ends March 31 and the hunting season ends June 30.

The Lolo elk population declined drastically over the last 25 years, from 16,000 elk to fewer than 1,000 elk in recent years. IDFG biologists estimated 2,000 elk in the Zone when it was surveyed last winter. Short-term goals for the Lolo elk population outlined in the 2014 Elk Management Plan include stabilizing the population and helping it grow.

Fish and Game has worked with the U.S. Forest Service for over 40 years to improve habitat for elk in the Lolo zone and will continue to do so. Hunting in the zone has been extremely restricted since the late 1990s. Rifle bull hunting was reduced by half and all rifle cow hunts have been eliminated. Additional restrictions were placed on rifle and archery hunters in 2011.

Fish and Game stepped up predation management in the Lolo area through increased harvest opportunities of black bears and mountain lions. Restoring the Lolo elk population will require continued harvest of black bears, mountain lions, and wolves along with wolf control actions when needed.

Wolf control actions have been conducted in the Lolo zone in six of the last seven years. The overall objective is to maintain a smaller, but self-sustaining wolf population in the Lolo zone to allow the elk population to recover.

Source: Wolf control action completed in Lolo Elk Zone | Idaho Fish and Game