Tag Archives: wolves

Poaching doesn’t impact Montana’s wolf hunt quota

Today’s online edition of the Missoulian has an article explaining why the recent wolf poaching incidents on the North Fork did not affect the local wolf hunt quota . . .

When a Columbia Falls man pleaded guilty last week to poaching two wolves just outside Glacier National Park, many thought the area’s wolf-hunting quota would be adjusted accordingly.

They were wrong.

“Looking at Idaho might have been somewhat constructive,” said Louisa Wilcox of the Natural Resources Defense Council. “They had a poaching incident there, and they cut the quota in response.”

But state wildlife officials say Montana and Idaho came at their quota counts in different ways, and in Montana those poached wolves already were considered dead, long before they were killed.

Read the entire article . . .

Columbia Falls man fined for poaching wolves in North Fork

This article from today’s Hungry Horse News offers a little more information about the October 9th wolf poaching incident near Whale Creek . . .

A Columbia Falls man has pleaded guilty to poaching two wolves near Whale Creek up the North Fork.

Randy Houk, whose age wasn’t released, paid fines totaling $1,135.

Fish, Wildlife and Parks is offering up to a $1,000 reward for information on the shooting death of a wolf found Oct. 25 in the Red Meadow drainage of the North Fork Flathead.

Read the entire article . . .

Check Montana wolf hunt status online

For those of you who wish to keep track of this season’s wolf hunt, Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks Has a web page, updated daily, showing the harvest status in the various “Wolf Management Units” throughout the state. The North Fork has its own special subunit with a limit of two wolves.

Links . . .

FWP’s “Wolf Hunting Season Status” page

Write-up on wolf hunt status and related information in the Flathead Beacon

Wolf advocates won’t appeal court decision allowing Idaho & Montana hunts

From today’s online edition of the Missoulian . . .

Wolf advocates have opted not to appeal a federal court decision that let wolf hunting seasons proceed in Montana and Idaho.

“We’re anxious to get to the merits of our case,” said Doug Honnold, lead attorney for EarthJustice, the law firm representing 14 environmental and conservation groups that want the gray wolf returned to federal endangered species list protection. “The best way to do that is to speed up the merits process than have an appeal ongoing at the same time.”

Read the entire article . . .

Montana & Idaho wolf hunts can continue

U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy ruled that wolf hunts in Montana and Idaho can continue pending results of a lawsuit brought by a coalition of environmental groups.

Here is a selection of today’s press coverage . . .

From the Daily Inter Lake:

A federal judge said Wednesday that gray wolf hunts in the Northern Rockies can go on, denying a request by environmentalists and animal welfare groups to stop the first organized wolf hunts in decades in Idaho and Montana.

U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy said plans to kill about 20 percent of the two states’ estimated 1,350 wolves would not cause long-term harm to the population. He said federal biologists had shown the animal could sustain a 30 percent annual reduction without long-term harm.

But Molloy added that by carving Wyoming out of the recent decision to remove wolves from federal protection, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service appeared to violate the Endangered Species Act by making its decision based on political boundaries.

Molloy said that means environmentalists could ultimately prevail in their bid to restore endangered species protection for the animals.

Read the entire article . . .

From the Missoulian:

Wolf hunters won the battle, but wolf supporters may win the war in the lawsuit over hunting the once-endangered species in Montana and Idaho.

U.S. District Judge Don Molloy turned down requests to stop 2009 wolf hunting seasons in the two states in an order released late Tuesday evening. In his 14-page opinion, Molloy said the 13 conservation groups opposing the hunts failed to show wolf populations would suffer irreparable harm, even if individual wolves were killed by hunters.

Read the entire article . . .

From the Flathead Beacon:

A federal judge said gray wolf hunts can go on for the first time in decades in the Northern Rockies, just months after the animals were removed from the endangered species list.

U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy denied a request by environmentalists and animal welfare groups to stop the hunts in Idaho and Montana, saying plans to kill more than 20 percent of the estimated 1,350 wolves in the two states would not cause long-term harm to the species.

Read the entire article . . .

For now, wolf hunts will proceed

From Monday’s online edition of the Daily Inter Lake . . .

Gray wolf hunting will begin in the Northern Rockies as a federal judge considers an injunction request by environmental and animal welfare groups to stop the predators from being killed…

After a three-hour hearing Monday, U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy gave no indication how he might rule on the request. Molloy said he would decide “as quickly as I can.”

Read the entire article . . .

Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation weighs in; wolves kill 120 sheep near Dillon

A couple of recent events turned the heat up another notch on the wolf hunt debate.

With exceptionally bad timing, a local wolf pack killed 120 sheep in one night on a ranch near Dillon earlier this month. Also, the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation is taking the highly unusual step of filing a “friend of the court” brief in favor of the Montana and Idaho wolf hunts as part of the hearing in front of Judge Molloy Monday.

Here are the related stories . . .

Wolves kill 120 sheep at ranch near Dillon

Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation joins legal fracas to support wolf hunting in Montana, Idaho