Medicine Hat News

Leaping elk crashes research helicopter

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An elk leaped into a research helicopter that was trying to capture it and brought down the helicopter in a collision that also killed the elk, authoritie­s said Tuesday.

The elk jumped into the chopper’s tail rotor as the aircraft flew about 3 metres above ground in a mountainou­s part of eastern Utah, with its crew trying to drop a net on the elk, said Jared Rigby of the Wasatch County Sheriff’s Office.

The two people on board weren’t seriously hurt, but the elk died of its injuries Monday afternoon.

The state-contracted Texas-based crew was trying to capture and sedate the elk and give it a tracking collar to research its movements in the area about 145 kilometres east of Salt Lake City.

Helicopter­s are a frequently used and essential tool for monitoring remote wildlife in Utah, said Mark Hadley with the state Division of Wildlife Resources.

The tracking collars help wildlife officials monitor elk migration paths and survival rates. The state captures about 1,300 animals each winter, almost all using helicopter­s, and Tuesday’s downing of the helicopter was the first accident of its kind, he said.

The crew had launched a net it catch the animal, but when that didn’t immediatel­y work the pilot started to slow down so someone could jump out and hobble the elk, Hadley said. As the helicopter slowed down, the elk collided with the rotor, Hadley said.

The helicopter was damaged on its tail rotor, right skid and underside, Rigsby said.

State officials will review the incident that appears to have been a fluke accident, Hadley said.

Environmen­tal groups have protested the use of helicopter­s to monitor wildlife.

The group Wilderness Watch is objecting to a plan to study mountain goats using helicopter­s in a central-Utah wilderness area, calling the aircraft “unnecessar­y intrusion into some of our most treasured lands,” according to the Desert News.

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