Is the region being loved to death?
BOZEMAN, MONT.» How in the face of such recreation pressure can the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem be protected?
It was a query Scott Christensen, director of conservation for the Bozeman-based Greater Yellowstone Coalition advocacy group, posed to a large group gathered in Bozeman on April 23 — academics, land managers, conservation group members and a few motorized recreationists — for the coalition’s two-day symposium titled “Our shared place: The present and future of recreation in Greater Yellowstone.”
Tackling such a broad topic across a vast landscape is no small challenge. The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem is a 34,000square-mile area with Yellowstone National Park at its vital heart. Spread across the corners of three states, the ecosystem encompasses five national forests. More than onethird of that acreage is managed as wilderness, much of which contains the largest predator in the lower 48 states — the grizzly bear.
Recreationists flock to the region to fish, hunt, camp, hike, backpack, raft and canoe. They backcountry ski, snowmobile, motorcycle and ride ATVS. More and more people are moving to the area to be closer to such activities and the environment in which they take place — the forests, mountains, lakes and streams.
More than 4.1 million people visited Yellowstone National Park last year. From that it’s estimated about 7 million people visited the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. Most are coming in June, July and August.
With more active people crowded into one wild space, what will the effects be on wildlife, the land and its waters? At what point does selling, building upon and using the resource compromise the very wildlands that first enticed everyone to the region? And how can so many people ever come to an agreement on controlling or even reducing use?
Yellowstone National Park — which has seen a 50 percent increase in visitation just since 2000 — has been studying many of these questions.
“We tend to look at problems in isolation,” said Christina White, outdoor recreation planner for Yellowstone. “This is very complex. Our biggest challenge is understanding how we operate as a system, and how does it change over time.”
Sustainable recreation is the new buzz word, said Wendi Urie, recreation program manager for the Custer Gallatin National Forest, which has 68 percent of its lands in wilderness. Yet what’s sustainable about 39 percent growth in the forest’s visitation between 2008 and 2013?
“A lot of what we hear about daily is people and how they use the area — trail conflicts,” Urie said.
The forest staff is also fielding a lot more questions that relate to recreation, better trail systems, signage, better access, being more responsive to new technologies and activities, in addition to safety since more users are urban, she said. “So how do we balance all of that?”