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- From: floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu (Floyd Davidson)
- Subject: Re: Aerial Wolf Hunting in Alaska
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.042346.5833@raven.alaska.edu>
- Sender: news@raven.alaska.edu (USENET News System)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: hayes.ims.alaska.edu
- Organization: University of Alaska Computer Network
- References: <1992Nov19.200256.8687@ucsu.Colorado.EDU>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 04:23:46 GMT
- Lines: 124
-
- In article <1992Nov19.200256.8687@ucsu.Colorado.EDU> Kenneth R. Brownsberger <brownsbe@ucsu.colorado.edu> writes:
- >I've heard a rumor that aerial wolf hunts are scheduled to begin
- >again soon in Alaska ... the justification being the usual tripe about
- >trying to increase the Moose and Caribou populations by removing
- >their natural predators. Does anyone have any hard FACTS on this?
- >Is this rumor true? Who is responsible for this decision?
-
- The following is copied without permission, so distribution and
- reuse is at your own risk. From the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner of
- November 19, 1992, page 1, by staff writer Kristan Kelly (typos
- and spelling errors are mine, the one sentence paragraphs are
- Kelly's):
-
- ---------
-
- TIPPING BALANCE OF NATURE, Game board passes wolf control areas
-
- The Alaska Board of Game adopted a plan to kill wolves so more
- moose and caribou will be available for hunters in some areas of
- Alaska.
-
- The management plans passed Wednesday and Thursday by the board
- call for the killing of up to 80 percent of wolves in some parts
- of Interior and Southcentral.
-
- Wolf control measures in the mountainous area between Delta
- Junction, Glennallen and Tok drew the most criticism. While
- biologists consider caribou and moose populations healthy there,
- the area is frequently used by hunters from Anchorage and
- Fairbanks. In order to make more game for those hunters, the
- board plans to kill wolves.
-
- The plan allows private citizens with permits to kill wolves by
- spotting them in aircraft and then landing and shooting the
- animals. Trapping and hunting of wolves will not be allowed in
- the area, so biologists will have strict control of the number
- being killed.
-
- Environmentalists said the action was unnecessary because the
- Nelchina caribou herd, which inhabits the area, has increased in
- the last several years.
-
- "This is friends taking care of friends, not biology," said Nicole
- Evans, the executive director of the Alaska Wildlife Alliance.
- "They're turning our public land into moose and caribou hunting
- farms, all at the expense of wolves and bears."
-
- Fairbanksan Dick Burley, the chairman of the game board, said
- although the caribou and moose populations in the area may be
- healthy now, those populations could decrease in the near future
- with the current levels of wolf predation.
-
- The board also approved wolf control to increase the Delta caribou
- herd, which lives between Fairbanks and the Alaska Range, and
- Fortymile caribou herd, which roams the hills north of Tok and
- east into Canada.
-
- With wolf control, biologists hope to increase the Delta herd from
- 5,000 to 10,000. They hope to restore the Fortymile herd to
- 60,000, from the current 22,000.
-
- By gunning wolves in those areas from helicopters, the Alaska
- Department of Fish and Game plans to reduce the wolf population by
- up to 80 percent over three to five years.
-
- The plans call for wolf killing to stop once the caribou herds
- begin to recover.
-
- Biologists point to past wolf control programs where wolves
- rebounded quickly after being drastically decreased. Bruce
- Bartley, information officer at Fish and Game, said there would be
- more wolves in 10 years because there will be more caribou and
- moose for the animals to prey upon.
-
- Hunters endorsed the plan.
-
- "I think the department and board are going in the right
- direction," said Sam Harbo, a Fairbanks hunter and retired
- professor who taught wildlife statistics at the University of
- Alaska Fairbanks.
-
- The board created buffer zones around Denali National Park where
- the wolves will be protected from hunters. Wolves in the
- Fairbanks and Anchorage areas will be protected under the board's
- action as well.
-
- But environmentalists argued that the urban closures were token
- measures, since wolves rarely live in urban areas.
-
- Board members said their plan was the best compromise between
- hunters demanding wolf control and those wishing to protect
- wolves.
-
- "The board is charged with managing game, and that's what we're
- trying to do," Burley said. "I'd say both sides won't like this
- plan. I'd guess if you alienate both sides, you've struck a
- balance that's reasonable."
-
- Dave van den Berg of the Northern Alaska Environmental Center
- said there was no balance in the board's decision. His
- organization tried to compromise with the state and endorsed a
- limited wolf control plan during the three-year public process
- that created the plan adopted Thursday, he said.
-
- "We tried to meet the department halfway and we've been
- steamrolled. They've adopted the harshest array of wolf control
- actions without any real consideration of any other options," van
- den Berg said.
-
- Five of seven board members were appointed by Gov. Walter Hickel.
- However, the two members remaining from past Democratic
- administrations -- Rosemary Maher of Northway and Skip Wallen of
- Juneau -- joined the unanimous vote for the wolf management plans.
-
- The board hopes to have the new regulations on the books by Jan.
- 1. First they must be reviewed by the state Department of Law and
- then signed by Lt. Gov. Jack Coghill.
-
- Environmental groups are already talking about lawsuits and voter
- initiatives to stop wolf control.
-
- --
- floyd@ims.alaska.edu A computer guest of the Institute of Marine Science
- Salcha, Alaska at the University of Alaska at Fairbanks
-