December 29, 2013
At least four wolves appear in this trail camera picture shot by Baraga resident Bill Delene on his property in September. (Bill Delene)
Lansing—
Roughly half the intended number of wolves will be taken during
Michigan’s first wolf hunt in 53 years, but Department of Natural
Resources officials still deem it a success. Twenty-one
wolves were slain as of Friday in the three designated Upper Peninsula
hunting areas. The most recent was a young male wolf shot Christmas Day.
The quota of 43 won’t be reached in the 48-day special season that
began Nov. 15 and ends Tuesday. “We were
able to pull this off using a system unique at least for Michigan,” said
wildlife biologist Brian Roell of the DNR’s Marquette office. “We’re
the first state that went to a very small quota in specific zones.”
The
DNR issued 1,200 licenses to hunters wanting to try their luck in three
UP zones where wolves preying on pets and domestic animals had been
reported and investigated by game biologists. Each area had a specific
quota and hunters had to report their kills by phone the same day so the
DNR could shut down an area if its quota had been reached.
Jill
Fritz, head of a Michigan group hoping to end wolf hunting after one
season in Michigan, took small comfort in the fact that far fewer than
43 of the state’s 658 wolves would be killed. Her group aims to have two
anti-wolf-hunt proposals on Michigan’s 2014 general election ballot. “It’s
always good news they’re killing fewer wolves than they intended to
kill, but the hunt never should have been held in the first place,” said
Fritz, state director of the Humane Society of the U.S. and director of
Keep Michigan Wolves Protected.
Fritz said
hunters are learning that, contrary to claims they’d attack kids at day
care centers or playing outside at home, “wolves are shy, elusive
creatures that will avoid human contact as much as possible.” Fritz
and the Humane Society maintain wolf hunts are being held purely for
sport and aren’t necessary to control the animals’ populations or
prevent them from killing domestic animals.
Proponents
of the wolf hunt say DNR experts such as biologist Roell should be
entrusted to make science-based decisions about what animals to hunt and
how many should be killed. Roell said
coming up short of the quota doesn’t signal the agency will raise the
quota next year — should there be another hunt — or that it will permit
trapping of wolves, as neighboring Minnesota and Wisconsin do. “We’ll look at the effects,” he said. “Did we change the behavior of these animals? Did we have lower depredation?”
Cold a factor
Soon after Jan. 1, DNR officers and biologists
will conduct their annual wolf count. Those findings, coupled with the
observations they make in the field, will help influence decisions about
future wolf hunting in Michigan, Roell said. He speculated extreme cold in the U.P. during the first two weeks of December contributed to the limited number of wolves taken. “To me, it would be prohibitive,” he said. “I wouldn’t want to sit out there when it’s 10-below.”
Fritz
fears that if there’s another wolf hunt, Michigan’s DNR will expand
hunters’ options to include methods that proponents might have seen as
too controversial in the first year. This year, Michigan hunters could
use only wolf calls and stalking techniques. Besides
trapping, Wisconsin and Minnesota permit wolf baiting. Wisconsin also
allows hunters to use dog packs to hunt down wolves.
In
Wisconsin, where the season just ended, hunters took 257 wolves, six
over the goal. Minnesota’s goal of 132 wolf kills already has been
exceeded by eight and the season isn’t over. It will be the second
straight year in which Minnesota hunters exceeded the wolf kill quota.
Appeal to voters
Fritz said her group is on target to collect
the required number of signatures by March 12 for a 2014 ballot
initiative banning wolf hunting in Michigan. On the ballot also will be
the groups’ earlier referendum, seeking to undo a 2012 law the
Legislature passed and Gov. Rick Snyder signed, allowing wolf hunting.
After
Keep Michigan Wolves Protected turned in the requisite number of
petition signatures for that first referendum, lawmakers and Snyder
maneuvered around it by passing a second new law. It gave the Michigan
Natural Resources Commission — not the Legislature — the right to
determine which critters can be hunted in Michigan. The governor-appointed commission then authorized this year’s wolf hunt.
Conservation
groups and sportsmen now are circulating petitions for a rival
initiative to counteract the two Keep Michigan Wolves Protected
proposals. It also may be on the 2014 ballot, aimed at keeping wolf
hunting alive. Their effort, if successful,
would first call on lawmakers to pass a law allowing wolf hunting. As
with the recently passed petition initiative banning basic insurance
coverage of abortions, lawmakers would have 40 days to act or allow the
proposal to automatically go to the ballot.
State
Elections Director Chris Thomas recently told the media that, based on
a past court ruling, the ballot proposal garnering the most votes would
prevail among the three.
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