Free: Contests & Raffles.
YNP has been doing this for 20 years, has there been any instance of the Elk population increasing?If you look at the graph jon.brown509 tossed up the answer is no. If it were stock market graph it'd be a bear market for sure. If YNP is the test pond of what we'll be seeing then I see no indication of the possibility of Elk populations increasing with the introduction of wolves. As yourself have stated the wolves have leveled out in YNP - yet the Elk continue to decline.
http://www.ktvq.com/news/gardiner-elk-hunt-falls-victim-to-wolves/Gardiner elk hunt falls victim to wolves GARDINER - One of the consequences of "Living with Wolves" is the elimination of a special late season elk hunt near Gardiner that has been part of the Montana hunting scene for the past 35 years. The January hunt was firstconducted in 1976, to help manage elk migrating out of Yellowstone National Park. At that time, the park's northern herd had reached as many as 12-thousand animals. But once wolves were reintroduced to the park, the northern herd's numbers started declining. In 2005, game managers counted 9,545 elk. Three years later that figure had dropped to 3,912 animals, and by 2009 the herd's population was down to 3,511 elk. This year, FWP's aerial surveys of the northern herd outside the park's boundaries counted only 2,236 animals.Last week, Montana's Fish and Game Commission voted to end the late season hunt citing elk numbers that had fallen below target levels due to predation mainly from wolves, but also from grizzly bears. The Montana Elk Plan established in 2004 called for a population of between 3-thousand to 5-thousand elk in the portion of the Northern elk herd that winters in Montana.
You approve of wholesale SSS by Idaho residents? You're a direct beneficiary of massive state endorsed poaching. You should be kissing the boots of every Joe Bob you see with a little white SSS sticker on the back of their window.
Aspen bit off more than he could chew so called his big brother huh
Just for clarity I'm lumping all vigilante wolf control in the SSS category. releasing dogs with parvo, poaching, poison carcasses, xylitol etc etc
She's spoiled kids got her on a pedestal
Aspen bit off more than he could chew so called his big brother huhhttp://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/feb/14/idaho-gives-oregon-apology-gets-no-snarling-over-w/My point is ID had a massive anti wolf movement pretty much state wide, hunters took the cue from their governor (who wanted the first wolf tag) as a pretty much green light to SSSWA will never duplicate ID in that since. ID has a better chance at management due to traps, legal harvest, illegal methods it's all cumulative. Not to mention it's easier to see them in the bottom 2/3 of the state. Panhandle is going to struggle just like the bulk of WA will - except they have trapping and co-op funded bounty on them. WA is screwed, the only possibility is recreational hunting, and that is coming VERY slowly due to lack of proactive management and verification of wolf packs. WDFW is making absolutely sure they're fully established before they give us the green light.