The
Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission approved decreasing the number of
wolves that can be killed each year in two hunting districts near the
north side of Yellowstone National Park from three to two. That means
after two wolves are killed, wolf hunting in those districts would be
shut down.
The change affects
hunting districts 313 and 316, which border Yellowstone National Park
and are two of the three more tightly controlled wolf hunting districts
in the state. The third is near Glacier National Park, which already had
a quota of two wolves.
Missoula commissioner Gary Wolfe offered the amendment after the department proposed no changes to the wolf hunting regulations.
Marc
Cooke, of Wolves of the Rockies, was happy to see the commission take
up the idea, saying it signaled that commissioners cared about people
other than hunters and anglers.
“It shows that the commission is listening to what the non-consumptive people are saying,” Cooke said.
Abigail Wilson, an FWP wolf
management specialist based in Bozeman, said they’ve seen more wolves in
those areas in the past year.
Many of the wolves that appear there are often migrating out of the park and following elk and other prey.
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