2:31 PM,
Jul 17, 2012
|
STEVENS POINT
— Conservationists and animal lovers pushed the state Department of
Natural Resources’ board Tuesday to reduce kill goals for Wisconsin’s
new wolf hunt, arguing the population remains fragile.
The
DNR has proposed limiting the harvest to 201 wolves, roughly a quarter
of the state’s population. The agency’s board was expected to vote on
the plan Tuesday.
The
wolf hunt has emerged as one of the most contentious wildlife issues
the DNR has had to navigate in recent years. Nearly 100 people packed
the board’s meeting at a Stevens Point hotel, and 43 had registered to
speak, promising a long, bruising debate before the vote.
Hunt
supporters argued wolves have more than re-established themselves in
the state. Ecologists, conservationists and wolf lovers countered a hunt
combined with other wolf deaths from illegal kills and car crashes
could result in a drastic dip in wolf numbers.
Howard
Goldman, the Minnesota state director of the Humane Society of the
United States, told the board there’s no biological reason to hunt
Wisconsin wolves, noting President Barack Obama’s administration just
removed Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin wolves from the endangered
species list in January.
“What’s the rush?” Goldman said. “The wolf is not just another game species.”
Orman Waukau, a member of the Menominee Nation tribal council, told the board his people revere the wolf.
“In effect, we’re saying we’re going to go out there and hunt our brothers and sisters,” he said.
But
hunter representatives countered the quota is too low, pointing out the
DNR estimates as many as 880 wolves roam the state, far exceeding the
agency’s goal of 350.
Ralph
Fritsch, chairman of the Wisconsin Wildlife Federation’s wildlife
committee, called the harvest goal “ultra-conservative” and said it will
do nothing to decrease the population. Bob Welch, speaking on behalf of
the Hunters Rights Coalition, said it’s ludicrous to think hunters will
wipe out Wisconsin’s wolves. Hunters want wolves around because they’re
a trophy species, he said.
“Hunters are going to become the strongest advocates for wolves,” Welch said. “That’s how it’s worked with every other species.”
Gov.
Scott Walker signed a bill earlier this year that calls for a wolf hunt
from Oct. 15 through the end of February. The legislation set out
almost all the hunt’s parameters, including permit fees and allowing
hunters to hunt at night and use bait and traps. The measure left the
total harvest and permit limits to the DNR, however.
The
agency released an emergency rule package earlier this month that set
the total kill quota at 201 across six management zones, establish
higher sub-quotas in areas that have seen more depredation and limit
permits to 2,010. Bill Vander Zouwen, chief of the DNR’s wildlife
ecology section, told the board the agency is trying to find a balance
between hunters and wolf lovers, but warned the first season will be
touch-and-go.
“This whole first season will be a time for us to learn and adapt,” he said.
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