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Coyotes-Wolves-Cougars.blogspot.com

Grizzly bears, black bears, wolves, coyotes, cougars/ mountain lions,bobcats, wolverines, lynx, foxes, fishers and martens are the suite of carnivores that originally inhabited North America after the Pleistocene extinctions. This site invites research, commentary, point/counterpoint on that suite of native animals (predator and prey) that inhabited The Americas circa 1500-at the initial point of European exploration and subsequent colonization. Landscape ecology, journal accounts of explorers and frontiersmen, genetic evaluations of museum animals, peer reviewed 20th and 21st century research on various aspects of our "Wild America" as well as subjective commentary from expert and layman alike. All of the above being revealed and discussed with the underlying goal of one day seeing our Continent rewilded.....Where big enough swaths of open space exist with connective corridors to other large forest, meadow, mountain, valley, prairie, desert and chaparral wildlands.....Thereby enabling all of our historic fauna, including man, to live in a sustainable and healthy environment. - Blogger Rick

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Sunday, August 14, 2011

Minnesota Sportsmen and Livestock Groups are mimicing the behavior of their counterparts in the Rocky Mtn States as it relates to wanting bold and swift Federal Delisting of Wolves .............In what is "hypocrisy on steroids", they are simultaneously looking for beefed up Federal handouts from WILDLIFE SERVICES so that this U.S. Dept. of Agriculture unit can continue to kill so-called "problem Wolves" that allegedly kill livestock............(see Carter Niehmeyers teriffic book entitled WOLFER to get an idea of how many wolves are killed by WILDLIFE SERVICES even when they are not guilty of killing cattle)..............I am all for Federal delisting as long as all stakeholders(in addition to farmers and hunters,,,,hiking groups, bird watching groups,,,scouting groups,,,,,,educational groups,,,,,,ecotourism goups, among other interested parties) in Minnesota have a hand in drafting a responsible/multiple persepctive management plan that does not automatically halve or reduce by 2/3(aka the State mgmt plan for wolves in Idaho, Montana, Wyoming) the wolves that roam the "Land of 10,000 lakes",,,,(Minnesota's name comes from a Dakota(Sioux) word for "sky-tinted waters")..............Those "sky-tinted waters" stayed clean and pure for millenia because keystone carnivores like wolves and cougars danced the equilibrium-generating "predator and prey tango" with moose and deer(and one time Elk) that roamed the region..............Does anyone beside me find it ironic that the sportsmen and farmers who want to get rid of all Federal Government involvement in local affairs(e.g wolf management) is all too happy to take and want increased Federal monies and manpower when it comes to killing wolves through the acts of WILDLIFE SERVICES............May I remind our outdoor and agricultural neighbors and friends that we need to reduce the Federal deficiit and balance our budget............Ultimate hypocrisy by folks when it comes to wanting what they want, even if it is scientifically, ecologically and morally dead wrong to drastically pair our wolf packs back to some "man-justified" mimimum target levels that has nothing to do with wolves fulfilling their ecological services for the long-term health of the land!

Minnesota groups seek wolf delisting, funds for control program


By: Brad Dokken, image
    A coalition of Minnesota sporting and farm groups has written letters to the state's congressional delegation asking for their support in removing timber wolves from federal protection and to ensure stable funding for the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Wildlife Services division, which is charged with responding to wolf complaints.

    The first of two letters sent Wednesday afternoon asks the congressional delegation to contact Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Dan Ashe, director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, urging them to delist the timber wolf from federal protection in Minnesota and the Great Lakes region. The sporting groups say the species has met or exceeded recovery goals that called for a population of 1,251 to 1,400 wolves in Minnesota by the year 2000.

    Minnesota today has an estimated population of 3,000 wolves.The letter also asks the politicians to protect the delisting process from "frivolous legal actions." Lawsuits in the past have derailed efforts to remove wolves from federal protection."If the delisting process is not successful in 2011, we would ask you to work with your colleagues to expeditiously delist the wolf via congressional action," the letter states.

    The second letter requests adequate funding for USDA Wildlife Services. The federally funded program spends $300,000 to $600,000 annually to control problem animals in Minnesota, the letter says, and federal funding has ranged from $100,000 to $300,000, along with another $200,000 to $300,000 in special congressional earmarks.

    Recently, though, Congress eliminated $727,000 in earmarked monies for Wildlife Services in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan as part of its continuing resolution. The result is a budget gap for Wildlife Services, and the letter asks the congressional delegation to contact Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack to provide alternative funding to carry out wolf control work in Minnesota through Sept. 30.Otherwise, the letter says, Wildlife Services might not be able to respond to wolf complaints. Wildlife Services removes about 200 problem wolves in Minnesota annually, officials say.

    "In order to send a clear message to all affected stakeholders, (Vilsack) needs to publically announce that personnel will be able to respond to wolf complaints," the letter states. "We request your support to adequately fund Wildlife Services in the next fiscal year, Oct. 1 and beyond. Furthermore, we need your support to work with Secretary Vilsack to ensure adequate dollars are specifically allocated for wolf control work."

    Signing the letters were Mark Johnson, executive director of the Minnesota Deer Hunters Association; Joe Martin, executive director of the Minnesota State Cattlemen's Association; Don McMillan, president of the Minnesota Outdoor Heritage Alliance; Doug Peterson, president of the Minnesota Farmers Union; Peggy Callihan, executive director of the Wildlife Science Center; Peter Hunt, president of Minnesota Safari Club International; Ryan Benson, national director of Big Game Forever; Brian Bachman, president and CEO of the North American Bear Foundation; Brian Petschl, legislative liaison, Land of Lakes Bowfishing Association; Tim Hughes, president of the Minnesota Trail Hound Association; Shawn Johnson, president of the Minnesota Trappers Association; Gary Botzek, executive director of the Minnesota Conservation Federation; and Catherine McLynn, Itasca County commissioner.

    4 comments:

    MWJ said...

    After reading the rant of half-truths and misleading information at the top of the page, it was refreshing to actually read the article by Brad Dokken. The truth is that MN DNR has a very good wolf management plan that the USFWS has approved. So have WI and MI. Montana's and Idaho's management plans are also USFWS approved and call for hunts to reduce their wolf populations by up to 25%, not half or more as claimed in the rant. Get your facts straight. If or when any future managed wolf hunts happen in MN, they will likely not exceed 25% of the minimum estimated population, even though harvest of nearly 50% can still provide a sustainable population. Harvest of 25% is just sound, cautious biology and is easily regulated. Also, no one wants to eliminate wolves from MN, not the Deer hunters, not the Livestock owners, etc. We all agree Wolves deserve to live here. They are a phenomenal animal. But the facts are that Wolves have also "recovered" by every measure of the Endangered Species act and they now deserve to be delisted. If they are not, wolves will soon be considered by a growing segment of our society as troublesome vermin. None of us want that.

    Coyotes, Wolves and Cougars forever said...

    Thanks for your comments......The Idaho Wolf management plan calls for unlimited takes..........near year round hunting and trapping and does not account for Wildlife Services additional "harvests" of so-called problem wolves.........Montana's plan is not quite as extirpation oriented with 220 of the current estimated 550 wolves targeted for cull.......on to of that another 140 or so animals taken by Wildlife Services......25% harvests hardly...........sustainable hardly.........wolves doing their job in support of the land......hardly..........managing just for Elk and Ranchers--SURELY

    You can hardly blame folks for wondering how good the Great Lakes States will be in carrying out their plans..........And while you cite USFW as "seal of approval", not quite sure they are the "MR CLEAN" of sound wildlife management........

    MWJ said...

    I stand corrected. Idaho's planned wolf hunt does indeed appear to have no upper limit on the harvest of wolves, except that they claim to be prepared so as not to fall below the 150 wolf, 15 breeding pair ESA threshold. Montana's 220 wolf harvest target is 39.2% of the current estimated population. Obviously, both stated are looking at reducing wolf populations, but not extirpating them. Minnesota would also look at reducing wolf populations with a hunt, especially outside of wolf range where there are definitely wolves but of those outside of wolf range there has been no census. Currently in MN we have at least 3,000 wolves within the wolf range alone.
    As far as allowing states to manage their own wolves, why not? Keeping the wolf on the endangered species list when they are no longer endangered doesn't make any sense. So delist them and allow the states to try their hand at management. My guess is that the earth and the wolf will survive. Even in the 1960 when wolves were not protected and bounties still were used, MN still had several hundred wolves in our NE wolf range. They are much more resilient than preservationists would like us to believe.

    Coyotes, Wolves and Cougars forever said...

    MWJ

    I do not think that we are at complete odds with each other......I have posted many times on this blog that once Wolves are deemed as recovered from the standpoint of fulfilling their trophic, keystone "jobs" and being dispersed across a watershed in a connective way which allows for healthy gene flow,the Feds job is done...........Also please consider that unlike deer and elk herds that can be managed by sheer numbers, "top-dog" carnivores like wolves are part of a social pack...........you kill members of the pack, chaos erupts.........somehow wolves interacted with deer, elk, moose and buffalo in your State without ever wiping them off the planet......Only the human animal comes equipped with a killing tool kit that can accomplish this........Therefore, I believe that before State management takes place, the folks in the State wildlife Commissions have to be selected not by Govenors granting political favors to key constituents, but in fact an assembly of folks from all walks of life that in consultation(not pressure down, but true collaboration based on best science)with wildlife biologists manage carnivores so that they fulfill ecological services, not just fulfill an arbitrary minimum number of individuals........we should continue our dialog......Happy Friday to you.

    Rick