wolf control action complete in the Lolo Zone

Wolf Control Action Completed In The Lolo Zone

Idaho Fish and Game has completed a wolf control action in northern Idaho’s Lolo elk zone near the Idaho/Montana border to improve poor elk survival in the area.

The Lolo elk population has declined from 16,000 elk in 1989 to roughly 2,100 elk in 2010, and possibly fewer than 1,000 this year, with predation and habitat changes among the chief causes of the decline. Fish and Game is focusing on habitat improvement operations, regulations on elk hunting, liberal seasons and bag limits on black bears, mountain lions, and wolves, and wolf control actions to improve elk populations.

In February, Idaho Fish and Game requested USDA Wildlife Services conduct a control action consistent with Idaho’s predation management plan for the Lolo elk zone, where predation by several species is the major reason elk population numbers are considerably below management objectives. Ongoing wolf and elk research has shown that wolves have become the primary predator impacting calf and cow elk survival in the Lolo, contributing to a continual decline in total elk population.

The Lolo predation management plan is posted on the Fish and Game website: http://fishandgame.idaho.gov/public/wildlife/?getPage=325
USDA Wildlife Services specialists killed 19 wolves through aerial control in February. During the last five years, six other agency control actions in Lolo zone removed an additional 48 wolves.

This winter, helicopter crews captured and placed radio collars on additional elk and wolves in the Lolo zone and surrounding area to continue monitoring to see whether prey populations increase in response to regulated wolf hunting, trapping and control actions.

Fish and Game authorizes control actions where wolves are causing conflicts with people or domestic animals, or are a significant factor in prey 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 harvest has been insufficient to meet management goals. The Lolo zone is steep, rugged country that is difficult to access, especially in winter.

In addition to the animals killed in this control action, 11 wolves have been taken by hunters and trappers in the Lolo zone during the 2014-2015 harvest season. The trapping season ends March 31, the hunting season ends June 30. More than 90% of the state’s wolf packs are located outside of the Lolo Zone.

Fish and Game has worked with the U.S. Forest Service for over 40 years on several cooperative initiatives to improve habitat for elk. Hunting has been extremely restricted since 1998 in the Lolo Zone, and is not a primary factor limiting population growth. Rifle bull hunting was reduced by 50 percent in the zone in 1998 in the zone and all rifle cow hunts have been eliminated since that same year. Additional restrictions were placed on rifle and archery hunters in 2011. Further, Fish and Game stepped up predation management efforts and has allowed increased bear and lion harvest in the Lolo since 1999 by allowing a 2 bear and 2 mountain lion bag limit, reduced nonresident tag prices, and the opportunity to use a nonresident deer or nonresident elk tag to harvest a black bear, mountain lion, or wolf.

Restoring the Lolo elk population will require liberal bear, mountain lion, and wolf harvest through hunting and trapping (in the case of wolves), and control actions in addition to improving elk habitat. The short-term goals outlined in Fish and Game’s 2014 Elk Management Plan are to stabilize the elk population and begin to help it grow.

Here’s a link to the Elk Management Plan: http://fishandgame.idaho.gov/public/wildlife/?getpage=324

The overall objective is to maintain a smaller, but self-sustaining, population of wolves in the Lolo zone to allow the elk population to increase.

Idaho Fish and Game does not yet have a cost estimate for last month’s wolf control action in the Lolo elk zone. The entire cost will be paid using Wolf Depredation Control Board money funded by sportsmen and women through purchase of hunting licenses.

FWP To Host Open Houses To Discuss 2014-2015 Hunting Seasons

We’re looking for discussions about any hunting regulation changes folks would like FWP to consider,” said FWP Director Jeff Hagener in Helena. “We’re also hoping to learn more about what hunters are experiencing afield and what they don’t want to see changed in the future.”

FWP To Host Open Houses To Discuss 2014-2015 Hunting Seasons
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks invites hunters, landowners, outfitters, and others to get involved now to help set hunting seasons for 2014 and 2015.
The public can comment online beginning Friday, Aug. 9 and at a series of statewide open houses later this month at most FWP regional offices.
The open house meetings will include a brief overview of the season setting process, and the public can stop by any time during the open house to visit with FWP biologists and game wardens.
The meetings will be held at the following locations:
Aug. 13, 6-9 p.m.: Glasgow—Valley County Courthouse; 501 Court Sq.
Aug. 13, 6-9 p.m.: Kalispell—FWP Region 1 HQ; 490 N. Meridian Rd.
Aug. 13, 6:30-9 p.m.: Missoula—FWP Region 2 HQ; 3201 Spurgin Rd.
Aug. 22, 6-9 p.m.: Billings—FWP Region 5 HQ; 2300 Lake Elmo Dr.
Aug. 22, 6-9 p.m.: Bozeman—FWP Region 3 HQ; 1400 S. 19th Ave.
Aug. 22, 6-9 p.m.: Great Falls—FWP Region 4 HQ; 4600 Giant Springs Rd.
TBA: Miles City—FWP Region 7 HQ; 352 I-94 Business Loop

To submit comments online beginning Friday, Aug. 9 go to fwp.mt.gov, then click “Hunting.”
The comment deadline is 5 p.m. on Sept. 6.
Proposals that emerge for the 2014 and 2015 hunting seasons will be presented to the FWP Commission in December, followed by public comment opportunity in January 2014. The Commission will adopt final rules in February.

http://fwp.mt.gov/news/newsReleases/hunting/nr_1942.html

RMEF MT. Summer Rendezvous – June 21, 22 & 23rd

Complete and Mail Your Registration Today for RMEF MT Summer Rendezvous
Montana Summer Rendezvous, June 21, 22 & 23rd _ SAVE THE DATE
You and your family are invited to join us in teamwork, celebration, friendship and for a great time.
Friday is Check In, this is your free time, visit with new and old RMEF friends from across our state. You’re welcome to bring boats, fishing gear and ATVs. We want to keep costs to a minimum and leave the registration fee at $25 per fami- ly. Friday evening’s dinner and breakfasts will be your responsibility. We will supply coffee, tea and hot chocolate in the mornings. Our work project is on Saturday morning. This gives more people the opportunity to participate. Our Work Project is being finalized at Iron Mask in the Elkhorn Mountains, south of Helena. This is rugged Montana country in- cluding prickly pear cacti and rattlesnakes. Please be prepared with sturdy footwear, protective clothing, bring gloves and your fencing tools. Be prepared for various weather conditions. Saturday’s lunch will be provided after the work project. Youth activities are planned for Saturday afternoon, which will allow youth the opportunity to earn money for the Kid’s Auction that evening. Our Wild Game Potluck is on Saturday evening with the presentation of our Traveling Golden Rolling Pin to the cook of the winning recipe, voted upon by dinner attendees. Don’t miss out on the best wild game dinner of your life! There are so many great dishes to choose from. Everyone is welcomed to enter their dish into the contest, we ask that you submit your written recipe as you and your dish arrive at dinner. On Sunday please pick up and leave your area clean before heading home.
DOGS are welcomed, ONLY IF, they remain on a leash at all times and the owners must control them. Dogs are NOT allowed to roam freely and are NOT allowed in the common gathering areas of camp. Thank you in advance for your cooperation!
Our RMEF Rendezvous Encampment is on the south end of Canyon Ferry Lake Directions to our RMEF Rendezvous Camp
From Helena: Take Highway 287/12 approximately 25 miles towards Townsend. At the 70 mile marker, on the lake side of the highway, is the Silo’s Bar and a KOA campground sign. Turn left, towards the lake, at the Silo’s Bar. Follow this pavement down the hill, towards the lake, past the KOA Campground and store, past the bright Pink Flamingo ham- burger joint to the first right turn you can make. This will be a good gravel road and you will be heading south along the lake. Continue south on this gravel road past all of the official camping areas. After you go past the last official camping area you will go through a little dip in the road. At the top of this dip you will have arrived at the RMEF Camp. Watch for Welcome RMEF signs.
From Interstate 90: Take exit #274 and travel North on Highway 287 approximately 32 miles to the flashing red light in Townsend. Continue north from the flashing red light in Townsend for approximately 8 miles. You will see the Silo’s Bar, on the right side of the road and a KOA Campground sign, at exactly the 70 mile marker. Turn right at the Silo’s Bar and refer to the above directions from there. Watch for Welcome RMEF signs.

Email: Moe614@gmail.com for registration form.