May 26, 2012
In its first hunt since assuming wolf management from the federal
government, the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources has proposed
an early wolf hunting season that would coincide with the state’s
firearms deer season, opening Nov. 3.
By:
Forum Communications, Lake County News-Chronicle
Minnesota will see two wolf seasons this fall, not just one.
In
its first hunt since assuming wolf management from the federal
government, the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources has proposed
an early wolf hunting season that would coincide with the state’s
firearms deer season, opening Nov. 3. A late wolf hunting and trapping
season would open Nov. 24. It would close Jan. 6, 2013, or whenever a
total harvest of 400 wolves in both seasons combined is reached, if that
comes sooner.
The first season would be open only in the areas
of the state open to rifle deer hunting, which are the northern and
central zones. The late season will be open statewide.
The
Minnesota Legislature passed a law in its 2012 session requiring that a
wolf season begin concurrently with the firearms deer season, but
legislators gave the DNR authority to structure the season.
“The
first season was at the direction of the Legislature and the governor,”
said Steve Merchant, wildlife populations program manager for the DNR.
“That one is a given for us. We said all along that we’d like to provide
a hunting and trapping season for people who want to take wolves in
that dedicated season (after deer hunting).”
Preparations for the
state’s first formal wolf season have proceeded with little public
opposition, although some residents testified against such a season
before the Legislature. In contrast, removing the wolf from protection
under the federal Endangered Species Act was fraught with controversy.
So-called delisting was first proposed for wolves in the western Great
Lakes region in 1998 but has been in and out of court ever since.
So far, no groups have offered a legal challenge to Minnesota’s proposed wolf season.
“In
the past we have challenged delisting of wolves, but we have no plans
to do that this time. In the same vein, we have no plans to challenge
the hunting season,” said Collette Adkins Giese, an attorney for the
Center for Biological Diversity.
The DNR is seeking public comments on details of this fall’s proposed seasons. The complete proposal is available on the DNR website, where comments are being taken through an online survey.
A
total of 6,000 licenses would be offered, with 3,600 available in the
early season and 2,400 in the late season. Late-season licenses will be
further split between hunting and trapping, with a minimum of 600
reserved for trappers. The target harvest quota will be 400 wolves for
both seasons combined, and will initially be allocated equally between
the early and the late seasons.
Wolf hunting licenses will be $30
for residents and $250 for nonresidents. Nonresidents will be limited to
5 percent of total hunting licenses. Wolf trapping licenses will be $30
(limited to residents only). A lottery will be held to select license
recipients. Proof of a current or previous hunting license will be
required to apply for a wolf license. The lottery application fee will
be $4.
The early hunting-only season will be open only in the
northern portions of Minnesota. It will start on Nov. 3, the opening day
of firearms deer hunting. It will close either at the end of the
respective firearms seasons in the two northern deer zones (Nov. 18 in
Zone 1 or Nov. 11 in Zone 2), or when a registered target harvest quota
of 200 is reached, whichever comes sooner.
If fewer than 200
wolves are taken during the early season, the remaining portion of the
quota will be added to the quota for the later season, said the DNR’s
Merchant.
“The DNR is taking a very conservative approach to this
first season,” Merchant said. “It’s designed to help us learn about
hunter and trapper interest and what kind of hunter and trapper success
we’ll have.”
The proposed season is consistent with the goal of
the state’s wolf management plan to assure the long term survival of the
wolf and address conflicts between wolves and humans, he said.
Merchant
said wildlife experts took into account the number of wolves killed in
damage-control efforts when setting the harvest number. Typically, about
80 farms have verified wolf depredation complaints each year, according
to the DNR. Over the past several years, an average of 170 wolves have
been captured or killed each year by federal trappers in response to
verified livestock depredation. About 70 wolves have been trapped and
killed so far this spring following verified livestock damage
complaints, primarily on calves.
No American Indian bands or
tribes in Minnesota have announced wolf hunting seasons. The Fond du Lac
Band of Lake Superior Chippewa will not hold a season, said Mike
Schrage, wildlife biologist at the Fond du Lac band.
“A lot of
band members feel a strong spiritual and/or cultural connection to
wolves,” Schrage said. “Part of that spiritual and cultural connection
is that wolves are part of the Ojibwe creation story.”
The 1854
Treaty Authority, representing the Bois Forte and Grand Portage bands,
also will not hold a wolf season this fall, said Sonny Myers, executive
director of the authority.
Nancy Gibson, co-founder of the
International Wolf Center, expressed concern that the DNR’s public
comment period is being offered only online. But she is pleased with
details of the season.
“I think it’s a good, cautious approach. I
hope it coincides with some good research and social science,” Gibson
said. “This is new for Minnesotans. … I hope we get some questions
answered in this first season.”
Wolves were returned to state
management in January when they were removed from the federal Endangered
Species list. Before their protection under federal law in 1974, wolves
were unprotected under state law and the DNR had no wolf management
authority. This proposal marks the first regulated harvest season for
wolves in state history.
The state has an estimated 3,000 wolves,
according to the DNR. Wolf numbers and their distribution have remained
relatively stable for the past 10 years and have been well above the
federal wolf recovery population goal since the 1990s.
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