11 April 2014
In Idaho, a series of increasingly aggressive policies – including aerial gunning, paying contractors to kill entire wolf packs in wilderness, and liberal hunting and trapping regulations resulted in a 9 percent decline in the population. Since wolves were delisted in 2011, Idaho has seen a 14 percent decline in its wolf population, while the reported number of successful breeding pairs in Idaho has declined by 50 percent.
Regionally, these dramatic declines were diffused because states like Washington and Oregon actually did maintain relatively stable populations from the end of 2012 to the end of2013. The number of wolves living in Montana from the end of 2012 to the end of 2013 was also stable, but the state’s breeding pairs declined from 37 pairs to 28 pairs, a significant decrease. All in all, it’s not sufficient to say that there was “no change” in the wolf population, when wolves are still struggling to gain toe-holds in states like Washington, Oregon and California, and when they are so clearly the target of over-the top killing programs in Idaho.
Should Northern Rockies Wolves Be Relisted? Defenders Requests Immediate Status Review: As you’ve read above, in just three years since wolves were delisted in Idaho, the state has managed to turn their recovering wolf population into a declining population. And even with their over the top attacks on wolves in 2013, the full effect of their aggressive wolf-killing policies have yet to be felt.
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