Federal Government Ends Wyoming Wolf Protections

Wait, it’s called the U.S. FISH and WILDLIFE Services? What a disgrace.

Kenn Bell
Dog Files Creator

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — The federal government will end protections for wolves in Wyoming, where the effort to revive the predator from near extinction in the United States began about 20 years ago.

The announcement Friday by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service endorses a plan that allows the wolves to be shot on sight in most parts of the state. It retains protections in certain areas.

The move quickly sparked promises of legal challenges from environmental groups, which argue wolves still need protection to maintain their successful recovery.

North America was once home to as many as 2 million gray wolves, but by the 1930s, fur traders, bounty hunters and government agents had poisoned, trapped and shot them to near extinction in the continental United States. An effort to revive their numbers rose up and centered on starting the recovery in Yellowstone National Park in northwest Wyoming.

Overcoming protests from Wyoming farmers and ranchers who feared wolves would prey on their livestock, wildlife managers transplanted 14 wolves from Canada into Yellowstone in the mid-1990s. The effort exceeded all expectations as wolf numbers quickly multiplied, and Friday’s action means Wyoming can now take measures to control their population outside the Greater Yellowstone vicinity.

There are about 270 wolves in Wyoming outside Yellowstone. There are about another 1,100 or so in Montana and Idaho where wolves were delisted earlier and still more in Washington and Oregon.

Wyoming has been chaffing under federal wolf protections for years. Ranchers and hunters complain that wolves kill too many cattle and other wildlife.

Wyoming’s management plan, which was agreed to last year by Gov. Matt Mead and U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, calls for the state to maintain at least 10 breeding pairs of wolves and at least 100 individual animals. Additional wolves inside Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks, the John D. Rockefeller Jr. Memorial Parkway – which is located between Yellowstone and Grand Teton – and the Wind River Indian Reservation in central Wyoming will maintain protection from being hunted.

The state will classify wolves in the remaining 90 percent of Wyoming as predators, subject to being killed anytime by anyone.

The state will take over management of the wolves under its purview effective Sept. 30.

The Wyoming Game Commission has approved wolf hunts starting Oct. 1. The state is prepared to issue unlimited hunting licenses but will call a halt after hunters kill 52 wolves.

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Lunawolf
Lunawolf
11 years ago

LIES!!!!! Call the hunt off after 52 wolves…nothing but lies. Not science based but all politics. A disgrace!

Martie
Martie
11 years ago

Such a tragedy. People need to understand the need to protect ALL wildlife so they can do their job to continue to ecosystem. Wolves only encourage other animals to mate and procreate more to protect their species and an abundance of prey animals leaves wolves no need to prey on domestic animals, and do not prey on humans unless directly threatened. Wolf populations will be naturally purged by in-fighting, between rival packs, predators, etc. More wolves means more prey animals.which creates more wildlife which in turn promotes more vegetation.

TobyandDizzy Austin
11 years ago

Truly a disgrace! I doubt that any of the great white hunters aka murderers will ensure that there are “at least 10 breeding pairs of wolves and 100 individual animals.” The animals are NOT the predators…wusses with weapons are! Thanks for nothing, Mead and Salazar!

alfabanalalala
alfabanalalala
11 years ago

270 in WY and 1100 in MT, gets them of the protected list and anybody can shoot them on sight? that can’t be right.

Kenn at Dog Files
11 years ago
Reply to  alfabanalalala

Sadly, it is.

dmazment
dmazment
11 years ago

This is so very wrong

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