Free: Contests & Raffles.
The Northern Plains Resource Council, comprised of farmers and ranchers in the Tongue River basin in SE Montana have been fighting the Tongue River railroad and development of the Otter Creek coal deposits for many years. It has nothing to do with sage grouse. They are trying to protect their livelihood from much more dangerous entities than the Wildlands Project.http://wdfw.wa.gov/publications/00727/cwcs_executive_summary.pdf
Quote from: wolfbait on April 05, 2014, 12:00:07 PMThe Northern Plains Resource Council, comprised of farmers and ranchers in the Tongue River basin in SE Montana have been fighting the Tongue River railroad and development of the Otter Creek coal deposits for many years. It has nothing to do with sage grouse. They are trying to protect their livelihood from much more dangerous entities than the Wildlands Project.http://wdfw.wa.gov/publications/00727/cwcs_executive_summary.pdfWhat does that document have to do with this conservation, other than detailing the loss of habitats and a plan to help species imperiled by those losses?
OK.... So you disagree with a "State level" ESA.... Is that what I am hearing? So are you arguing that a species that is doing OK in one state should not be protected in another? I guess i see the point about actual extinction, rather than localized extirpation. But the problem with that is genetic variations.... Like the cougar in FL.... just because we have lots of them, they should still be listed and protected in FL. Just because MT has lots of sage grouse, they should be protected in WA. they are in trouble here and need some help recovering. Having a few populations spread across the region certainly helps the genetics and sustainability of the whole species. Its the "all your eggs in one basket" idea... We are wise to keep all the species on the landscape whenever possible.Of course, the idea of wolves leading to any extirpations is rediculous. Deer/elk are not going to be wiped off the landscape... Although declines are likely.... Wolves are going to have an impact, but your doomsday scenario is unlikely.
I agree that the wolf numbers are flawed, the problem is they cannot accurately determine them without a survey. So they give the bare minimum number to be safe, but I think everyone knows it is higher.
I watched a show last week about the cougars in FL, it looks a lot like these people are having the same problem we are with our wolves, with their game agency purposely underestimating the number of cougars.
Quote from: wolfbait on April 07, 2014, 08:59:45 AMI watched a show last week about the cougars in FL, it looks a lot like these people are having the same problem we are with our wolves, with their game agency purposely underestimating the number of cougars. Purposely biasing count data is not the same thing as having uncertainty in a population estimate. I hope we can all agree estimating the number of wolves, particularly in dense forest habitats like NE Wa and N. Idaho and NW Montana is extremely difficult.If you have evidence of how an agency is intentionally underreporting wolf numbers please post it. Simply stating you think (or some wolf biogist at a University 2000 miles away) thinks the number of wolves is xxxx is not a valid or useful critique. All the state agencies provide details, methods, and wolf number estimates in publicly available technical reports. Your continued blabbering about how wolves are being miscounted because some armchair biologist says the growth rate should be xx% is laughable and only demonstrates your extraordinary ignorance on the subject of estimating abundance of wildlife.
the counts are tough... They have to be able to make a number that they can defend. The counts that are thrown around on here are pretty wild and could NEVER be defended. The state uses collar data to fly an area and get their eyes on the wolves. That's the best way to count and it is expensive. Estimates are not useful for delisting... Actual counts are needed
“I do believe the number is higher, but we don’t know exactly by how much,” Martorello said. “We had good production this last year in a number of packs.” So the WDFW staff only saw one more wolf last year?
Which armchair biologist are you talking about ID? Are you talking about Mech?
Its pretty clear that you don't have a clue about how they are working on wolf issues. They need to be able to DEFEND and justify any number they put out. So, the wdfw cannot say there are 500+ wolves in WA because a guy on an internet forum says its true.... They have to use science and accurate data.
...or a bar stool in Stevens County for that matter.