---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Norman Bishop <nabishop@q.com>
Date: Wed, Oct 19, 2011 at 1:02 PM
Subject: Fwd: GTNP opposed to Wyoming wolf plan--for all the right reasons FYI
To: Garrick Dutcher <gdutcher@livingwithwolves.org>, ralph maughan <rmaughan2@cableone.net>
Cc: Rick Meril <rick.meril@gmail.com>, Mike Leahy <mleahy@defenders.org>, Chris Colligan <ccolligan@greateryellowstone.org>, Lisa Upson <lupson@keystoneconservation.us>, Wendy Keefover <wendy@wildearthguardians.org>, "John Horning, Ex. Dir. Horning" <jhorning@wildearthguardians.org>, Terri Klug <westernwolvesidaho@gmail.com>, Brian Ertz <brian@westernwatersheds.org>, Marc Cooke <wolvesotr@gmail.com>, Matt Skoglund <mskoglund@nrdc.org>, "Gary MacFarlane, Ecos. Def. Dir" <foc@friendsoftheclearwater.org>, Brooks Fahy <brooks@predatordefense.org>, Michael Garrity <garritymichael@yahoo.com>, Derek Goldman <dgoldman@stopextinction.org>
From: Norman Bishop <nabishop@q.com>
Date: Wed, Oct 19, 2011 at 1:02 PM
Subject: Fwd: GTNP opposed to Wyoming wolf plan--for all the right reasons FYI
To: Garrick Dutcher <gdutcher@livingwithwolves.org>, ralph maughan <rmaughan2@cableone.net>
Cc: Rick Meril <rick.meril@gmail.com>, Mike Leahy <mleahy@defenders.org>, Chris Colligan <ccolligan@greateryellowstone.org>, Lisa Upson <lupson@keystoneconservation.us>, Wendy Keefover <wendy@wildearthguardians.org>, "John Horning, Ex. Dir. Horning" <jhorning@wildearthguardians.org>, Terri Klug <westernwolvesidaho@gmail.com>, Brian Ertz <brian@westernwatersheds.org>, Marc Cooke <wolvesotr@gmail.com>, Matt Skoglund <mskoglund@nrdc.org>, "Gary MacFarlane, Ecos. Def. Dir" <foc@friendsoftheclearwater.org>, Brooks Fahy <brooks@predatordefense.org>, Michael Garrity <garritymichael@yahoo.com>, Derek Goldman <dgoldman@stopextinction.org>
Begin forwarded message:
| -----Original Message-----
| From: George Wuerthner [mailto:gwuerthner@gmail.com]
| Sent: Wednesday, October 12, 2011 12:47 PM
| To: Norman A. Bishop
| Subject: GTNP opposed to Wyoming wolf plan--for all the right
| reasons FYI
|
| This is a very important article. In it the Supt. of Grand
| Teton NP is voicing her concerns about wolf hunting outside
| of the park and how it might negetively impact the park
| values.
But the really important difference I see is that she
| is talking about hunting disrupting the social ecology of
| wolves. This is one of the first times I've seen a government
| official expressing concern about how hunting may disrupt the
| social network and perhaps cause negative impacts.
I think | the disruption of social ecology of predators is one of the
| strongest arguments that we can use against livestock and
| hunting interests because it's the one area that agencies
| typically ignore and the bulk of research that has been done
| so far suggests that disruption of pack structure can have
| all kinds of negative impacts on wolves, as well as how it
| may affect interactions with humans (i.e. may increase
| livestock depredation for instance). i suggest that people
| continue to bring up the social disruption that occurs from
| predator control and indiscriminate hunting and how that may
| negatively impact everything from ecological health to
| livestock operations.
|
| Wolves causing federal discord
| Grand Teton, Interior Department
|
| By Cory Hatch
|
| Grand Teton National Park officials are at odds with their
| parent agency, the Department of Interior, over a proposed
| federal rule that would end Endangered Species Act protection
| of Wyoming wolves.
|
| Department of Interior officials released the proposed rule
| for removing protection of wolves in the Federal Register on
| Oct. 5. It comports with an agreement the agency reached with
| Gov. Matt Mead earlier this year, an agreement that led the
| Wyoming Game and Fish Commission to adopt the state's wolf
| management plan last month.
|
| Grand Teton National Park Superintendent Mary Gibson Scott
| raised concerns with that plan in a letter last month. Many
| of the reservations Scott expressed about Wyoming's plan
| apply to the Department of Interior position.
|
| In the Sept. 6 letter, Scott argued that the state's plan to
| allow wolves to disperse to and from Idaho is not based on
| sound science.
|
| The plan creates a "seasonal trophy game management area"
| south of Jackson where wolves would be treated as predators
| for most of the year and could be killed by any means without
| a license.
|
| However, from mid-October to late February, wolves in the
| area would treated as trophy game. The more stringent trophy
| killing rules are supposed to allow wolves to disperse
| through Star Valley to and from Idaho, increasing the chance
| for a genetic mix between Yellowstone-area and other wolf populations.
|
| Scott challenged the timing of the seasonal protection.
|
| "The biological rationale for the selection of those dates is
| unclear," she said in her letter. "... wolves disperse at
| every time of year."
|
| Federal officials have pledged "that any final action
| resulting from this proposed rule will be based on the best
| scientific and commercial data available and be as accurate
| and as effective as possible."
|
| Scott cited several studies that suggest peak months for wolf
| dispersal can range from October to June, depending on the
| location of the population. Biologists say allowing wolves to
| disperse between the two states is essential for maintaining
| the genetic diversity of Wyoming's wolf population.
|
| "Maintaining genetic connectivity between Wyoming and Idaho
| is important for the long-term resilience and persistence of
| wolves that reside in Grand Teton National Park," Scott said.
| "The best way to ensure that genetic exchange occurs is to
| allow for dispersal year-round."
|
| Scott went on to suggest that the seasonal trophy game
| management area be made permanent, or that the period the
| seasonal trophy game management area is in effect be extended
| through April. Teton County Commissioners also have called
| for a permanent trophy game area in all of Teton County.
|
| In the Oct. 5 proposed rule, Department of Interior officials
| argue for the mid-October to the end of February time frame,
| citing a study by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service researcher
| Mike Jimenez.
|
| The proposed federal rule agrees with Scott's assertion that
| wolf dispersal "occurred year-round." But it says the
| dispersal "peaked in winter (more than half of all dispersal
| occurred in the four months of November through February)."
|
| In the federal rule, Department of Interior officials
| acknowledge that the necessary dispersal to and from Idaho
| could be affected by hunting of wolves in Wyoming.
|
| "Specifically, these data indicate we may have averaged
| around one-and-a-half effective migrants [from central Idaho
| to the Greater Yellowstone area] per generation since
| reintroduction, with a large portion of this dispersal
| occurring in recent years when the central Idaho population
| was above 500 wolves," the federal rule states. A wolf
| generation is four years.
|
| "Post-delisting, populations will no longer be growing, may
| go through a period of population reduction before leveling
| off, and management will likely result in higher mortality
| rates for both dispersers and resident wolves," the federal
| rule states. "Thus, past dispersal data is unlikely to be
| reflective of future effective migration rates."
|
| Elk feedgrounds could also affect the ability of wolves to
| migrate to and from the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem,
| Department of Interior officials said. Wyoming operates 22
| elk feedgrounds, including 13 within the Wyoming wolf trophy
| game management areas.
|
| "These areas attract and could potentially hold dispersing wolves,"
| the federal rule says. "Many dispersing wolves in Wyoming,
| and even some established breeding pairs, temporarily leave
| their primary territories to visit the elk feedgrounds in winter."
|
| Under the proposed federal rule, the Wyoming Game and Fish
| Department could kill wolves that displace elk from feeding
| grounds if such displacement results in conflicts. "Such take
| will likely further reduce survival of dispersing wolves,"
| the federal rule says.
|
| However, the proposed rule also says hunting and other
| killing of wolves could help dispersal of wolves into new territories.
|
| "State management practices will periodically create
| localized disruptions of wolf pack structure or modified wolf
| density in select areas of suitable habitat that will create
| social vacancies or space for dispersing wolves to fill," the
| federal rule says. "This outcome will likely increase
| reproductive success rates for dispersers that enter the
| [Greater Yellowstone area]."
|
| Grand Teton officials also worry that hunting and state
| control of the species in the trophy game area might hurt
| wolves that spend part of the year inside the park.
|
| "Our goal is to maintain wolves as part of the natural
| ecological landscape in the park, which will require
| designing hunt seasons and implementing management actions
| that maintain packs outside our boundary," Scott said.
|
| Grand Teton wolves that move out of the park to the Gros
| Ventre drainage during the winter when the Wyoming Game and
| Fish Department is feeding elk on one or more feedgrounds in
| the area are of particular concern, Scott said.
|
| "Over the last 12 years, more than 50 radio-collared wolves
| from 10 packs that spent significant amounts of time in Grand
| Teton National Park also visited the Gros Ventre drainage at
| some point," she said.
| "Most of these visits occurred during the winter when the
| feedgrounds were occupied by elk."
|
| "This underscores the concern that multiple wolf packs could
| be eliminated or socially disrupted if wolves are targeted on
| or near feedgrounds without regard to pack affiliation,"
| Scott said. "We urge the [Wyoming Game and Fish Department]
| to consider all the implications of wolf management actions
| on or near feedgrounds carefully."
|
| In the proposed rule, federal officials acknowledged that
| some Grand Teton wolves would likely be killed after leaving the park.
|
| "While some wolves and some wolf packs also occur in Grand
| Teton National Park and John D. Rockefeller Memorial Parkway,
| these wolves and wolf packs usually have a majority of their
| home range in areas under the State of Wyoming's
| jurisdiction; thus, these wolves are only subject to National
| Park Service regulation when on National Park Service lands,"
| the federal rule says.
|
| To comment on the proposed rule electronically, go to
| http://www.regulations.gov/. In the Enter Keyword or ID box,
| enter FWS-R6-ES-2011-0039. People can also mail comments to
| Public Comments Processing, Attn: FWS-R6-ES-2011-0039,
| Division of Policy and Directives Management, U.S. Fish and
| Wildlife Service, 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, MS 2042-PDM,
| Arlington, VA 22203.
|
|
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