Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone in 1995 with 14 animals that were captured in Canada................ In 2003, the wolf population peaked with an estimated 174 animals...............At the time of Wolf re-introduction, a bloated Northern Yellowstone Elk herd of some 15,000 carpeted the landscape.......Per Yellowstone Park biologist Doug Smith, the 4900 Elk that exist today in the northern reaches of the Park seem to have found a sustainable carrying number, a population allowing plant regeneration and more optimum biodiversity in the ecosystem..............104 wolves/4900 Elk..............The Yellowstone system once again vibrant with predator and prey in rough equilibrium!

https://www.google.com/url?rct=j&sa=t&url=http://www.greatfallstribune.com/story/news/local/2016/01/17/officials-elk-population-stable-years-decline/78945996/&ct=ga&cd=CAEYAyoUMTA1NDM2ODQzOTgxNDg0NTk5NjgyGmQ1NjI2NjBmNmQ2M2I5ZjE6Y29tOmVuOlVT&usg=AFQjCNH_ghPR4rSb4t02OdOtPGy5s8NSJQ

Officials: Elk population stable after years of decline


BOZEMAN (AP) — Officials say the elk population in the northern part of Yellowstone National Park and southern Montana is stable after dropping over the past few years, though biologists are warning that after a set of mild winters, there is a possibility that 
harsher winters could change that in the future.
The Northern Yellowstone Cooperative Wildlife Working Group counted 4,900 elk in the region this winter. That’s up from last year’s count of 4,840 elk, but still down sharply from the highest count in recent years, when biologists saw more than 6,000 in 2010, and down from 19,000 in the mid-1990s.
“In a way it’s good news,” said Doug Smith, a Yellowstone National Park biologist. “We think we have a fairly stable elk herd.”

Wolves chasing Elk, as it was meant to be for the optimum
health of the two species as well as the rest of the environment
they occupy










The number of elk in that region has been the subject of a debate between outfitters, hunters and wildlife officials for several months.
Wildlife officials proposed capping the number of hunters in one hunting district near Gardiner at 75, a huge drop from the number allowed to hunt there now, which is about 1,500 in heavily trafficked years. Wildlife officials cite unsustainable hunting, while opponents argue the herd isn’t in a biological crisis.
The count is an estimate, based on airplane surveillance. They were documented by the number of elk and didn’t classify them by sex or age.
Karen Loveless, a biologist with Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks, said she flew over the area in late December and kept track of the bulls, an indication of the herd’s health. She saw 116 brow-tine bulls, which are bulls older than about 2 years. Of those, she said about 44 percent were six-point or better, and about 56 percent were five-point or smaller, the Bozeman Daily Chronicle reported

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