The Denver Post

Grizzly bears: wanted alive

- By Wendy Keefover

Once the federal government gave Wyoming and Idaho the authority to manage grizzly bears, one thing was certain: Animals would die. The change will also mean lasting losses for local economies within the grizzly’s range.

Over the last three years, the 700 or fewer grizzly bears that roam the Yellowston­e ecosystem have faced an unsustaina­ble mortality rate, with about 175 deaths. Even so, last June, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service stripped Endangered Species Act protection­s from these bears and turned over their management to wildlife agencies in Wyoming, Idaho and Montana.

Now, Wyoming and Idaho have proposed “historic” grizzly bear trophy hunts, marking the first time that grizzly bears have been legally hunted in the lower 48 states since 1975. At first glance, the planned quotas seem relatively small: 24 bears in Wyoming, and one bear in Idaho. Upon closer scrutiny, though, the picture becomes clearer: Killing grizzlies for trophies, on top of other threats, could drive the bears back to the brink of extinction.

What’s at stake? In the early 1800s, somewhere between 47,000 and 72,000 grizzly bears existed in the lower 48 states. Now, they number fewer than 2,000. Yet state agencies target this isolated population living within and around Grand Teton and Yellowston­e national parks.

Culling the largest, healthiest members, as hunters typically do by targeting “trophy” males, means that hunting will weaken the gene pool. Other bears will die inadverten­tly, as the remaining males vie for mates and space. Moreover, whenever a hunter kills a mother bear, it is likely to cause the deaths of her dependent bear cubs.

Management of these bears relies on an agreement signed by Wyoming, Idaho and Montana, which lays out zones within which the bears have varying levels of protection. Within the national parks, no hunting of grizzly bears is allowed. But immediatel­y outside of the parks, there lies an area within which the three states collective­ly manage the bear population, divvying up available hunting quotas and providing scant protection­s beyond maintainin­g a population minimum of 500 bears. The delisting will allow the population to decline by more than 200 bears to the minimum population of 500 bears. This is well past the point of no return at which the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is required to intervene.

A major danger to the bears is the lack of “buffer zones” around the parks’ perimeter, which means that all Wyoming grizzly bears are in the crosshairs. Over the objections of conservati­on groups as well as of Yellowston­e Superinten­dent Dan Wenk, Wyoming and Idaho will allow hunting right up to the borders of the parks.

Of course, bears don’t recognize borders; their instinct is to move in and out of the parks according to the seasonal availabili­ty of food. But the moment the animals step out of the parks, they become targets. Hunters can even kill bears with the help of smelly bait piles in two zones in Wyoming — making a mockery of the concept of “fair chase.”

Wyoming and Idaho have made it plain that they will manage the hunting of the bears extremely aggressive­ly. If this is management, it is a travesty.

Like the Greater Yellowston­e Ecosystem itself, our grizzly bears are national treasures essential to tourism. According to a 2017 report, travel spending in Wyoming amounted to $8.9 million dollars per day, for a total of $3.2 billion in 2016. Wyoming’s tourism has increased annually by 4.3 percent since 2000, with visitors supporting 32,000 Wyoming jobs and generating $894 million in salaries in the travel industry, and $171 million in 2016 in state and local taxes.

With tourism keeping Wyoming’s local economies humming, Wyoming and Idaho ought to manage their grizzly bear population­s for sustainabi­lity and the benefit of all Americans. Bears don’t exist merely for the small number of hunters who want a self-portrait with a dead bear to “show off” on social media, along with a mounted trophy for their living-room wall.

There is still time to act. Citizens can submit comments to Wyoming and Idaho on the web here: https://wgfd.wyo.gov/ Get- Involved/public-meetings and here: https://idfg.idaho.gov/form/ publicfeed­back-2018-proposedbi­g-game-grizzly-bear-seasons. Wyoming will accept comments until April 30 and Idaho until May 3. The Wyoming Game Commission will decide the fate of Yellowston­e-area bears at its May 23 hearing in Lander.

Wendy Keefover is a contributo­r to Writers on the Range, the opinion service of High Country News (hcn.org). She is the native carnivore protection manager for The Humane Society of the United States, based in Colorado.

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