Free: Contests & Raffles.
Zager said researchers don't have all the information they need, but they realize "we've got to get rolling and make decisions based on the information we have."Here's what researchers know for sure about elk and wolves in Idaho, he said:-- Elk herds are declining.-- Wolf packs are growing -- well above original objectives.-- The number of elk harvested by hunters has been declining, from around 25,000 in the mid-1990s, when wolves were reintroduced to the Northern Rocky Mountains, to roughly 15,000 last year.-- Elk hunting seasons and quotas have been reduced for 2009, but the impacts of wolves are likely to go unchecked.-- Wolf management through hunting is scheduled to begin this fall, but likely will be challenged in court by animal protection groups.-- Wolves have become the most important factor in predation on elk.However, they're not the only factor."Wolves have given cougars a huge favor by taking the spotlight. Cougars are still a significant factor (in elk mortality)."-- Forest fire suppression also is a factor in elk declines.-- The effects of wolves on elk vary dramatically in various game management units.Bottom line: "We still need to be monitoring wolves and elk like crazy," Zager said.
I apologize for this, but I have to be a smart a$$.If the electricity to a town is suddently disrupted....a car is found sitting dead next to a broken off electric pole....the front of the car is all smashed in.....but no one will confess to the actual impact....I still think it is pretty safe to assume the car knocked out the electricity to the town....... That is my scientific explanation for the idaho trilogy.......wolf/elk/idaho.....
Kain thankyou, I don't know if your link qualifies as proof to everyone, but it speaks volumes when researchers and F&G personnel are pointing out the obvious, and all of central Idaho is screaming the very same thing.wolfbait did you look at kains link.......