Friday, May 16, 2025
39.0°F

Expanded wolf hunting rejected

Kianna Gardner Daily Inter Lake | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 years, 2 months AGO
by Kianna Gardner Daily Inter Lake
| February 18, 2020 3:00 AM

The Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission voted Feb. 13 to maintain the wolf hunting and trapping seasons and bag limit in Region 1 per 2019 regulations, despite a proposal on the table to extend the seasons and double the harvest quota.

State wildlife managers had recommended the quota increase from five to 10 wolves and that the region’s season begin on Aug. 15 and end March 31 instead of from Sept. 15 to March 15. In a recent press release explaining the proposal, Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks Regional Wildlife Manager Neil Anderson said biologically, wolf populations are able to “sustain additional harvest opportunity.”

In addition to keeping 2019 regulations in Region 1, which includes Flathead, Lincoln, Sanders and Lake counties, the commission also voted to reduce quotas in two hunting districts north of Yellowstone National Park from two wolves to one.

The two proposals received nearly 1,000 comments online prior to Thursday’s meeting. During the session itself, dozens of people spoke during the public comment period, with some people coming from as far away as Arizona for the occasion.

Some spoke in favor of upping the harvest quotas, pointing mostly to how elk populations can suffer, should wolf populations get out of hand. Mark Lambrecht with the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation was one individual who offered support for both proposals, saying wolves “require management according to biological and social capacities.”

But even avid hunters seemed somewhat divided on the proposals. One man from Missoula, a self-described “conservation-minded sportsman,” said the proposal didn’t seem ethical.

Those who were against the proposals mostly highlighted ways in which wolves contribute significantly to local economies and to Montana’s history and culture. Several said they would actually prefer to see the quotas at zero.

“They are valued intrinsically as wildlife,” said one woman with the Bear Creek Council in Gardiner. “Montana’s economy depends on wildlife watching.”

Even avid hunters at the meeting seemed somewhat divided on the issue.

The commission brought up similar talking points during their own discussions. One member also voiced concerns related to the timeline of the proposal for Region 1, saying it came in late and because a decision on regulations in that area would “have implications for wolf management in other regions,” he thought the proposal should be allotted more time for consideration.

At the end of the evening, Commissioner Richard Stuker’s motion to drop the quota in the two Yellowstone districts and to keep hunting in Region 1 to the 2019 regulations passed unanimously. The five-member commission typically meets on a monthly basis and sets fish and wildlife regulations, approves property acquisitions and more.

Reporter Kianna Gardner can be reached at 758-4407 or kgardner@dailyinterlake.com.

MORE FRONT-PAGE-SLIDER STORIES

Expanded wolf hunting rejected
Daily Inter-Lake | Updated 5 years, 2 months ago
FWP Commission declines to extend wolf season in Region 1
Hungry Horse News | Updated 5 years, 2 months ago
FWP Commission declines to extend wolf season in Region 1
Hungry Horse News | Updated 5 years, 2 months ago

ARTICLES BY KIANNA GARDNER DAILY INTER LAKE

March 16, 2019 7:02 p.m.

Local recycling company starts plastics pilot program

Valley Recycling recently launched a plastics pilot program, making it the second resource in Flathead County to offer various recycling services — a rarity after most locations stopped accepting some recyclables in November following China’s refusal to import American plastics.

May 1, 2019 9:28 a.m.

Permit sought for dog kennel in Echo Lake area

The Flathead County Board of Adjustment will hold a public meeting Tuesday, May 7, to discuss three separate requests for conditional-use permits, including one that would allow for a commercial kennel operation in the Echo Lake Zoning District.

March 8, 2019 1 a.m.

Changes at DMV aim to shorten wait times

Beginning March 14, Flathead County residents will start experiencing shorter wait times at the county Department of Motor Vehicles as the Treasurer’s Office halts its processing of title work for limited liability companies (LLCs) and their registered agents — clientele that accounted for nearly 7,000 of the titles processed by the division in 2018.