Las Vegas Review-Journal

Judge again delays grizzly bear hunts in Rockies

Says he needs more time to consider protection­s

- By Matthew Brown The Associated Press

BILLINGS, Mont. — Au.s.judge on Thursday delayed for two more weeks the first grizzly bear hunts in the Lower 48 states in almost three decades, saying he needed more time to consider if federal protection­s for the animals should be restored.

The ruling by U.S. District Judge Dana Christense­n left the fate of the bruins in and around Yellowston­e National Park in limbo, more than a year after federal officials declared the population had recovered from near exterminat­ion.

Up to 23 bears could be killed in the hunts planned in Wyoming and Idaho. Christense­n already delayed them once, in an order that came two days before grizzly season was set to open Sept. 1.

In extending the delay, the judge said there remained “serious questions” regarding whether the government acted lawfully in lifting protection­s on an estimated 700 bears in the three-state Yellowston­e region. He gave no further indication of his position in the case.

Wildlife advocates and Native American tribes requested the additional two-week delay after suing the government to restore the bears’ threatened species status. Attorneys for the federal government and the states of Idaho and Wyoming opposed the delay.

Christense­n said it was justified because killing up to 23 bears would cause “irreparabl­e injury” to those who want grizzlies protected.

“That hardship substantia­lly outweighs the hardship to be endured by the defendants … who must refrain only from hunting grizzly bears for an additional two weeks,” Christense­n wrote.

Wyoming Game and Fish Department chief game warden Brian Nesvik said the agency would abide by Christense­n’s order but was disappoint­ed.

“Wyoming Game and Fish has a strong grizzly bear management program with protection­s for the bear population as a whole but also allows for a conservati­ve hunting season,” Nesvik said in a statement.

Wildlife advocates welcomed the delay. Bethany Cotton with the group Wildearth Guardians characteri­zed the judge’s order as “a stay of execution.”

Wyoming’s hunt has two parts: Outlying areas with a quota of 12 bears, and prime grizzly habitat near Yellowston­e and Grand Teton national parks, where up to 10 bears could be killed.

Hunting in the prime habitat would be stopped if a single female bear were killed. No hunting is allowed in the two parks.

Idaho’s hunting quota is one bear. The Yellowston­e grizzly population has increased from an estimated 136 bears when they were granted protection­s in 1975.

Bears now come into frequent conflicts with humans, through attacks on domestic livestock and people who encounter bears unexpected­ly in the forest.

The Yellowston­e region bears also range across a large portion of Montana, where officials decided against a hunt this year in part to demonstrat­e their commitment to conserving grizzlies.

Montana was the last state in the Lower 48 to allow grizzly hunting, in 1991, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Grizzly bears elsewhere in the Lower 48 remain protected as a threatened species. They are hunted in Alaska.

 ?? Jim Urquhart ?? The Associated Press A grizzly bear roams near Beaver Lake in Yellowston­e National Park in 2011. A federal judge on Thursday delayed grizzly bear hunts in Wyoming and Idaho.
Jim Urquhart The Associated Press A grizzly bear roams near Beaver Lake in Yellowston­e National Park in 2011. A federal judge on Thursday delayed grizzly bear hunts in Wyoming and Idaho.

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