Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Decision on grizzlies delayed

Hunting in Yellowston­e faces stiff opposition

- By MATTHEW BROWN

BILLINGS, Mont. — A deluge of opposition from dozens of American Indian tribes, conservati­on groups and some scientists is tying up a decision on lifting protection­s for more than 700 grizzly bears in and around Yellowston­e National park.

Officials had planned to finalize by the end of 2016 a proposal to turn management of grizzlies over to state officials and allow limited hunting.

But U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Assistant Regional Director Michael Thabault said it could take the agency another six months to finish reviewing 650,000 public comments that have poured in on the proposal.

Researcher­s tallied 106 Yellowston­e-area grizzlies killed in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming during the past two years, often by wildlife managers following attacks on livestock and occasional­ly during run-ins with hunters.

That’s the highest number of deaths in such a short time since the animal was listed as a threatened species in 1975. But Thabault said the death rate was sustainabl­e given that the overall population has greatly expanded from 136 bears when protection­s were first imposed.

“The bear population has been increasing over time and those mortalitie­s are within the bounds of what we’ve been considerin­g,” he said. “We expect the population to go up and down, but basically revolve around this (current) level.”

Officials in Wyoming, Idaho and Montana have been lobbying heavily to take grizzlies off the threatened species list. They say the animals have recovered from near-exterminat­ion last century and limited trophy hunting should be allowed.

Critics argue that hunts sponsored by state wildlife agencies could reverse the grizzly’s four-decade recovery. Representa­tives of dozens of Indian tribes have signed onto a treaty urging the Fish and Wildlife Service not to lift protection­s for an animal that’s regarded as sacred within many native cultures.

Federal officials have held talks with some tribal officials to address their objections. However, the government is not bound to make any changes based on the tribal consultati­ons. Yellowston­e Superinten­dent Dan Wenk raised concerns in November about the way scientists count bears, which could impact how many are made available to hunters.

But in December, Wenk’s superior, National Park Service Associate Regional Director Patrick Walsh, signed off on a Yellowston­e grizzly conservati­on plan that’s required in order for protection­s to be lifted. The reversal came after the states agreed to use a conservati­ve bear counting method going forward, in part to help prevent excessive hunting.

An estimated 50,000 grizzlies once roamed much of North America. Most were killed off by hunters in the 19th and early 20th centuries and they now occupy only about 2 percent of their original range across the Lower 48 states.

Through an intensive recovery effort, two large population­s have been re-establishe­d around Yellowston­e and in northwest Montana around Glacier National Park, which has roughly 1,000 bears.

Montana officials say the Glacier-area population is also recovered and should lose its federal protection­s, but no formal proposal has been offered.

 ?? DAVID GRUBBS BILLINGS GAZETTE VIA AP ??
DAVID GRUBBS BILLINGS GAZETTE VIA AP

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