Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Trump Jr.’s prairie dog hunt raises eyebrows

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HELENA, MONT. >> Donald Trump Jr. will be targeting more than just Montana’s Republican voters this weekend when he helps Greg Gianforte campaign for an open U.S. House seat.

A prairie dog hunt is also on the agenda for the four-city tour for President Donald Trump’s son and Gianforte, a technology entreprene­ur up against Democrat Rob Quist in the May 25 election for the seat vacated by Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke.

“As good Montanans, we want to show good hospitalit­y to people,” Gianforte said. “What can be more fun than to spend an afternoon shooting the little rodents?”

Trump is lending Gianforte some star power to fuel his campaign after Republican congressio­nal candidates had close calls in special elections in Kansas and Georgia. The president’s son, an avid hunter and angler who last visited Montana in November, is looking to shore up support from the hunting-friendly state after his father won Montana by 20 percentage points over Democrat Hillary Clinton.

Prairie dog hunting is a way for landowners to control the population of the rodents, classified as “agricultur­al pests” because of the damage they can do to crops. They are also a nongame species, meaning there are no hunting limits or hunting seasons. Killing them is a popular pastime among some hunters who looking to keep their shooting skills sharp during the offseason when they can’t hunt wild animals like deer and elk.

However, prairie dogs also are listed as a species of concern by the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks because their numbers have declined and because of threats like disease.

Their numbers haven’t declined to the point that protective measures must be taken so they’re managed like other wildlife, though, agency spokesman Greg Lemon said.

The Humane Society of the United States condemned Trump’s hunting plans, saying prairie dogs are an important species for the Great Plains because more than 100 other animals depend on the prairie dog either as food or move into the burrows they dig, said Lindsey Sterling Krank, the organizati­on’s director for its Prairie Dog Coalition.

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