Congress strips grey wolf endangered species protection         By Daniel
Nasaw

BBC News, Washington



Conservation groups fear the move by Congress could set a dangerous precedent

Politicians in the US Congress have for the first time removed a previously threatened animal from the nation's
endangered species list. The move is the culmination of a long dispute that has pitted the wolves' defenders against
hunters who said the animals were devastating wild game they wanted for themselves.

At the stroke of a pen, US President Barack Obama is expected on Friday to step into a bloody fight between two
American populations with clout in Washington and a loud voice in the news media - wolves and elk.

Tucked into a budget bill Mr Obama was set to sign on Friday is a provision to remove grey wolves in a wide swath of
the American West from the US endangered species list.

The move, sponsored by a bipartisan group of senators from rural western states and one of several policy measures
grafted on to the budget, will eventually allow affected states to manage the size of wolf packs and, hunters say, help
restore elk herds they say have been ravaged by hungry wolves.

But wildlife conservation groups fear it could set a precedent for political interference in a process that has previously
been left to biologists.

Continue reading the main story
Grey Wolf
Largest wild member of the dog family
Lives in packs of two to 12 individuals typically consisting of a single breeding pair and their offspring
Packs inhabit territories of 200-500 sq miles, and will defend their patch against other wolves
In a survey last year, the US found more than 1,600 wolves in the northern Rocky Mountains

The law removes federal protection from grey wolves in Montana, Idaho and parts of three other states. Montana and
Idaho have already planned wolf hunts, and the wolves' champions fear the worst.

"We may soon be witnessing the second large-scale extermination of wolves in the West," said Suzanne Stone of
Defenders of Wildlife, which has fought vigorously to maintain the wolves' federal protection.

Hunters' groups and state wildlife officials say the wolves have wrought havoc on herds of elk and other wildlife, and
killed livestock and even pets.

They say wolf populations have met target recovery goals, and say states need more flexibility to manage the packs
through controlled hunts.

"Unmanaged wolves have destroyed jobs, rural economies, and the opportunity for people to put food on their plate,"
said Don Peay, founder of Sportsmen for Fish and Wildlife, a group of conservation-minded hunters.




The wolf has eaten itself out of house and home. It's not the wolf's fault, it's the federal government's”

Byron Bateman

Hunter

Once abundant in the US, grey wolves were virtually wiped out in the 19th and early 20th Centuries. To prevent the
wolves from killing livestock as ranchers moved into vast stretches of plain, the US government backed an extensive
effort to kill the wolves, with traditional hunting and even poison. By the 1930s they were mostly gone.

In 1973, President Richard Nixon signed the Endangered Species Act, which aimed to prevent the extinction of
imperilled animal species and to aid their recovery.

The grey wolf was added to the list the following year, granting it significant protection from private hunters and from
state and local government agencies.

In 1987, the government embarked on a wolf recovery plan, and later reintroduced Canadian wolves into the west.
Since then the packs have thrived, far exceeding the 1987 goals. Last year, biologists estimated more than 1,600
wolves lived in the northern Rocky Mountains region, up from just over 400 a decade before.

Anti-elk violence




In 2009, the US Department of the Interior deemed the wolf had recovered and removed it from the endangered
species list in the northern Rocky Mountain region, but a series of lawsuits by conservation groups halted the move.

Hunters' groups say wolves have destroyed elk herds
At least 20 species - including the bald eagle and the alligator - have been removed from the endangered species list
after recovering to healthy levels, but those decisions were made by the US Fish and Wildlife Service, not by politicians
in Congress.

The hunters' groups which have pushed for the end of the grey wolf's protection argue the resurgent wolves have
overwhelmed herds of elk, the wolves' prey.

Indeed, wildlife biologists in Yellowstone National Park said in January the elk herd there had dropped 72% since the
1995 wolf restoration.

And in Wyoming, wildlife officials said in 2007 that wolves had contributed "significantly" to the decline in elk
populations.

Resurgence

Hunters say wolf management would allow elk and other game to thrive, putting meat on hunters' tables and luring big-
spending big-game hunters.

"It's a travesty that the grey wolves totally decimated the elk herds," said Byron Bateman, a Utah hunter. "The wolf has
eaten itself out of house and home. It's not the wolf's fault, it's the federal government's."

David Mech, a wildlife biologist who has studied wolf populations for more than five decades, said studies had not
conclusively determined wolves had caused widespread decline in western elk herds, as drought and aggressive
human hunters had also contributed.

But he said he supported the wolf's removal from the endangered species list, in part because wolves had rebounded.

"The public was led to believe that when the wolves reached those recovery levels they would be delisted and
management turned over to the states," he said. "And the public feels very violated."
I know this has nothing to do with the Elk City Dust Devil Club, But than again it does. This is a
huge news item for ATV'ers of all areas. First and foremost, getting the size of packs down to
manageable,is a big safety issue. I have been afraid to go to far in the woods,  myself,or out for
a walk as I know they are there. I have seen, and most of you have seen, the dead animals killed
the day of a fun run on our trails.  

For Elk City this is big news as Canadian Greys are coming into yards and killing our animals,
because they have almost demolished  our moose and elk. Hear's hoping that hunting season
will be opened up. The economy needs it, as much as our own safety. We should all be able to
go into the woods safely. It's our woods too.
Wrote as a personal opinion  by Arlene Evett

But enjoy the Read... And Pray this Passes.