Currently, Hazelhurst’s favorite demagogue is mad that “the wolf population is being allowed to run rampant in Wisconsin.” That’s why the headline on his May 9 news release — issued jointly with state Rep. Adam Jarchow, R-Balsam Lake — shouted, “Enough is Enough.”
Their announced solution is a Great Lakes Wolf Summit in September, which will “send a crystal clear, grassroots message that it’s irresponsible to ignore this issue any longer.”
Cool. What could be more “grassroots” than a meeting run by two lawmakers, and what could be more “crystal clear” than sending a message to a person or agency not identified?
I know. Details, details.
Anyway, Tiffany and Jarchow also announced June 28 that their summit will be 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Sept. 15 at the Das Lach Haus in Cumberland. They’ll open registration July 20.
But the lawmakers seemingly lost some of their fury the past two months. Their recent news release was merely two paragraphs and ended weakly: “Our goal remains to have a policy-driven discussion about the situation at hand.”
Yawn. Who’d drive to Cumberland for that? I mean, Cumberland is three hours from Eagle River, 4½ hours from Marinette and about 100 minutes from Superior. Maybe Tiffany should dust off “Enough is Enough” from that May 9 release and add three exclamation points. He also could recycle this line: “Let us be clear: Wisconsin is not a wolf sanctuary and it’s irresponsible to allow it to be treated as such.”
And just so we’re clear, I agree with Tiffany and Jarchow that Wisconsin proved from 2012 through 2014 that it can responsibly manage its wolf population. It’s ridiculous that Great Lakes wolves are back on the Endangered Species List nine years after the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service first delisted them, especially with the minimum population nearing a record 900 animals and 222 packs.
But will yet another wolf meeting hasten the F&WS’s ongoing appeal of this current relisting? Or will calling it a “summit” inspire Capitol Hill to permanently remove federal protections and let the Department of Natural Resources resume management duties?
Granted, we’re talking wolves, which likely generate more controversy than all other wildlife species combined worldwide. Still, it’s unlikely Tiffany and Jarchow’s invited “experts in the field” or six hours of testimony from weary travelers will provide any new insights for federal courts and Washington insiders.
If Tiffany and Jarchow want to target more costly consumers of crops and livestock, they should attack white-tailed deer, which caused 73 percent of Wisconsin’s 2014 abatement bill. And heck, don’t forget about black bears, 12 percent; or Canada geese, 8 percent.
And if we’re going to reimburse people for wolf-killed pets, hunting dogs, sheep, calves, horses, llamas, emus and other livestock, why stop there? To be fair, we should also compensate folks when a coyote or bobcat kills their cat or dog; or a fox, weasel or raccoon kills their rabbit, chicken or other barnyard fowl.
And speaking of wolf-killed dogs, maybe the summit should address whether Wisconsin could save some hounds by shortening our bear-baiting season. Depending on the year, our bear hunters lose two to seven times more hounds than their counterparts in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, according to a 2013 study by Joseph Bump at Michigan Technological University in Houghton.
The most obvious difference is that Wisconsin allows bear baiting from April 15 through the end of bear season in mid-October, which covers most of the time they aren’t hibernating. That’s the United States’ longest bear-baiting season. Michigan is next longest, but it doesn’t allow baiting until 31 days before its bear-hunting season, or roughly mid-August.
The longer a bait site is active, the greater the chance wolves discover its pull on prey. As Bump notes: “The extended, pre-training baiting period in Wisconsin provides wolves increased opportunity to discover and defend bait sites. This (is) based on observations of wolves using bait sites for food as documented by cameras, tracks and the stomach contents of a captured wolf. Bear hunters using dogs frequently start their dogs at bait sites, and it seems reasonable to expect that dogs in Wisconsin would be more likely to encounter wolves that are in the proximity of and potentially defensive of bait sites.”
Therefore, instead of having some vague “policy-driven discussion” as the summit’s goal, perhaps Tiffany and Jarchow should get specific. Do they want more deer in the Northwoods, which is mostly a function of habitat and winter severity; or do they want fewer wolf-killed hounds, sheep and calves?
Then again, maybe they simply want to cap the wolf population at 350, 500, 1,000 or some other number determined by a show of hands. If so, why make wolves the exception in Wisconsin’s current approach to managing large wildlife?
We no longer target specific population goals for deer or bears. With deer we simply ask if a county’s herd should go up, down or stay the same. And with bears, we’re content to hold them at roughly 30,000, which is 18,700 more than the longtime goal of 11,300.
And if Tiffany and Jarchow think deer management is all about predator management, then why ignore bears? Recent DNR studies in northwestern Wisconsin linked bears to nine (20 percent) of the 46 radio-collared fawns killed by predators in spring and summer from 2011 to 2013. Further, bobcats were linked to six (13 percent) of the dead fawns, coyotes to five (11 percent), and wolves to one (2 percent); but 17 (37 percent) couldn’t be tied to a specific predator based on evidence at the death site.
For those reasons and more, expect the Tiffany-Jarchow wolf summit to simply restate best guesses and half-baked assumptions. But shouting them more loudly won’t make them true.
Patrick Durkin is a freelance writer who covers outdoors for USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin.
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