Feds Reject Idaho Plan to Kill WolvesFeds nix Idaho plan to kill up to 43 wolves to boost elk numbers,
saying science isn't solidBOISE, Idaho, Sep. 23, 2006
By JOHN MILLER Associated Press Writer
(AP) Federal officials have rejected Idaho's plan to kill up to 43 wolves
in north-central Idaho to boost elk numbers, saying scientific data gathered
by the state do not justify the action.
At a recent meeting, federal officials told Steve Nadeau, Idaho Fish and
Game Department's large carnivore manager, that state studies of elk declines
in the Lolo region didn't adequately demonstrate wolves are the primary cause.
"We agreed the wolves are playing an important role in limiting recovery.
The question comes down to whether or not there's an unacceptable impact,"
said Jeff Foss, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service field supervisor in Boise.
"Based on the information that was provided at the meeting, the service didn't
feel it had enough at that time to draw (that) conclusion."
-snip-Last January when the state's proposal was unveiled, conservation groups came
to the same conclusion as the federal scientists. They argue that poor habitat,
not wolves, is the main reason Lolo elk now number less than a quarter of the
16,500 counted in the region north of the Lochsa River in 1989.
-snip-