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Colvilles are doing a much finer job of trimming their wolves than our wdfw.
Quote from: boneaddict on December 21, 2015, 09:39:16 AMColvilles are doing a much finer job of trimming their wolves than our wdfw.I hear them howling on the Colville Reservation across Lake Roosevelt from my place all the time. Just a matter of time before they get the bright idea to swim across. When they drop the lake in the winter it's not that far across.
So they're calling it a "re-ireintroducingction" and they're saying pronghorn are a native species. But is there really any proof of that? I've done a lot of reading on this subject in the past and I never found anything that said they were 100% sure that pronghorn had ever existed in Washington state.
“Our understanding is that tribal officials and Nevada where conducting animal health testing,” he said. “The tribe would need to make a decision on what to do if any of the animals tested positive.”Peregrine Wolff, Nevada state wildlife veterinarian based in Reno, said blood samples she drew from pronghorns delivered to Washington are being tested for brucellosis and possibly for tuberculosis, although it might be two weeks after the animals were released in Washington before results are available.“TB testing is extremely expensive and we haven’t worked that out yet,” she said Wednesday.
Cool........... I asked once long ago why Washington didn't have Pronghorns, and was told it was too cold. Bull Oregon has them, and from what I've been reading on the Oregon Regs on hunting they are found in places just a few miles from the Border. not far either In and around Ontario you can find Pronghorn Antelope, and believe in, and around Baker so.....I figured they had to be Native of Washington at one time now from Bones link there's proof that if they hunted them in Waitsburg they sure as heck had some in and around Walla Walla as well. Probably out towards Touchet too.
The biggest issue we have is a lack of habitat. Much of what would have been prime habitat 100 years ago, has been converted to agricultural uses and/or cattle range. I'd be amazed if Washington ever has hunt-able populations of antelope. They tried establishing antelope populations several decades ago and it didn't work, so I'm not sure why it would work now, with even less habitat than what would have been available back then.
Quote from: csaaphill on December 21, 2015, 05:55:03 PMCool........... I asked once long ago why Washington didn't have Pronghorns, and was told it was too cold. Bull Oregon has them, and from what I've been reading on the Oregon Regs on hunting they are found in places just a few miles from the Border. not far either In and around Ontario you can find Pronghorn Antelope, and believe in, and around Baker so.....I figured they had to be Native of Washington at one time now from Bones link there's proof that if they hunted them in Waitsburg they sure as heck had some in and around Walla Walla as well. Probably out towards Touchet too.to cold? If Wyoming isn't to cold then I'm sure washingtons fine