Free: Contests & Raffles.
That is what you get when the citizens are willing to roll over to appease the wolf groups.
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2010/feb/17/actual-wolf-weights-often-skimpier-than-hunters/Here is data from Idaho, funny how similar it is to Montana's.https://gf.state.wy.us/web2011/Departments/Wildlife/pdfs/WOLF_MANAGEMENT_PLAN_FINAL0000348.pdfHere is information from Wyoming Game and Fish, they too state similar sizes.The funny thing is, I don't hear anyone calling for the removal of the Blue Mountain elk herd, when it's been well known and publicized that they have Roosevelt genes within the herd, which were not indigenous to the Blues. Elk from YNP have been moved all over the U.S. Bighorn sheep from Canada and Wyoming have been moved all over. It makes the arguement look pretty silly in my opinion, when hunters try to pick and choose and claim that one situation is entirely different than the other. Look at whitetailed deer. Their sizes vary drastically across the US, but they are still the same species. If you took a large Alberta whitetail and put it in Georgia, it probably wouldn't do well. Same with a Texas brush country whitetail going to Eastern Montana. However, if you took a Colorado alpine mule deer and put it in the North Cascades, I'm willing to bet they would do just fine. Same with a Kansas plains whitetail to the Palouse. Would the sizes be exactly the same? No, but the specificity to the habitat would be.
Quote from: bearpaw on January 20, 2014, 11:54:54 AM That is what you get when the citizens are willing to roll over to appease the wolf groups. I think this is kind of a condescending statement. If they want wolves how is that rolling over? I certainly think they are misinformed, in that the majority of the public thinks that their tax dollars supports wildlife, not license sales and PR money.
Special T, take a look at the map at the end of this document. The harvest locations mirror exactly what I was trying to explain, but probably didn't do a very good job of. Note how few wolves were harvested in the middle third of the state? There are mountains and thousands of elk there. Why haven't they colonized those areas?
Quote from: JLS on January 20, 2014, 12:07:28 PMSpecial T, take a look at the map at the end of this document. The harvest locations mirror exactly what I was trying to explain, but probably didn't do a very good job of. Note how few wolves were harvested in the middle third of the state? There are mountains and thousands of elk there. Why haven't they colonized those areas?The wolves mostly stuck to the Rocky Mountains...So why did the wolves not spread DOWN the Cascades Since they were there first, and from your explanation that would weem the logical line of progression?
Even so BP using the logic given to ME/us wolves from the 90's should have spread south. What is the explanation for it?
Quote from: idahohuntr on January 19, 2014, 09:58:19 PMQuote from: Special T on January 19, 2014, 07:52:09 PMIMO Wyoming understood the problem and delt with the feds correctly from the start, and it has take 10+ years for MT and ID to figure it out... I think you have it backwards...ID and MT figured it out way before WY. I think SpecialT has it right. Wyoming has by far the most reasonable wolf plan that puts the fewest wolves in their state. Washington has the worst plan. That is what you get when the citizens are willing to roll over to appease the wolf groups.
Quote from: Special T on January 19, 2014, 07:52:09 PMIMO Wyoming understood the problem and delt with the feds correctly from the start, and it has take 10+ years for MT and ID to figure it out... I think you have it backwards...ID and MT figured it out way before WY.
IMO Wyoming understood the problem and delt with the feds correctly from the start, and it has take 10+ years for MT and ID to figure it out...
Just because WY played hard ball while ID & MT tired to get along doesnt mean that WY didn't come out better in the end. I think that was a play by the feds to pressure WY, ID & MT. I bet that if the 3 states had hung in tight together they would have been much better off than they are now.
Quote from: Special T on January 20, 2014, 06:08:40 PMJust because WY played hard ball while ID & MT tired to get along doesnt mean that WY didn't come out better in the end. I think that was a play by the feds to pressure WY, ID & MT. I bet that if the 3 states had hung in tight together they would have been much better off than they are now.What would be different/better in Idaho if they played it like Wyoming? Were the feds going to come in and collect every last wolf and move them back to Canada? Under management in Idaho you can kill 5 wolves a year, trap them, hunt them over most of the year etc. The IDFG can hire gunners, trappers, aerial removal etc. What would be different? I believe MT is similar in their liberal harvest and management tools. I don't see where Wyoming has a better deal. In the end, if Idaho and Montana had played like WY, then the several hundred wolves harvested by hunters in 2009 and 2011 would not have occurred and you would have more wolves today. Wyoming's hunts didn't start until 2012...once they figured out their little tantrum was not getting them anywhere.
It should also be noted that they are "Documented" packs which means you have a bunch more than the requirement. There are many ways to skin a cat the documentation game can be slowed by hiring people with little experience, don't provide adequate funding, make the conditions so tight that it makes it really difficult to prove.