- Banned
- #101
The insinuation that wolves have little effect on moose, deer and elk populations is laughable.
Are there other factors- sure.
Heres a question for these supposed experts; If you knew of these many factors as they claim, then why would they inject an uncontrolled apex predator into the equation devastating Elk and moose populations further?
One only has to Google 'Wolf populations in Yellowstone' to produce charts that show as the wolves rise the elk decline- drastically. They finally leveling off with wolf population control in effect. [note; I posted a bunch of these charts in the ELK section of this forum under a similar thread]
The arrogance of this 'Pro Wolf' crowd is a joke. They claim they know what will happen with introducing these predators into a drastically changed ecosystem that has what- 1000x the human population of the 1800's when the humans decided wolves and people don't mix.
We have seen from experience in Yellowstone and the surrounding states that there are many secondary and tertiary uncontrollable effects. The lawsuits alone extract a huge price on the states and wildlife agencies. Huge economic costs. Loss of hunting opportunities...and on and on. We saw how poorly the reintroduction in Yellowstone accounted for all of the negatives.
Make no mistake, these quasi experts claim all sorts of supposed benefits to disguise the real reason they want wolves; they think it would be "Cool."
Its the definition of insanity to make the same mistake again.
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Yeah, the wolves have impacted elk hunting so much since 1979 (when I could buy ONE elk tag in MT, ONE elk tag in ID, and ONE elk tag in WY per year). In Montana, I had to draw a special permit to kill a cow, now I can buy B-tags OTC, as a NR. I can now how have 3 elk tags in WY, 2 elk tags in ID, and 3 elk tags in Montana. My opportunities have not declined for killing elk since wolf reintroduction, and that's a fact that is not disputable. My opportunities to kill elk in all 3 of the wolf states is greater now than prior to wolf reintroduction.
Your assertions that wolves have decreased elk hunting opportunity doesn't reconcile with reality...at all. I have 3 WY elk tags in my pocket right now...and I'll fill all 3.
Yet again, the wolf issue brings out lots of raw emotion and no facts to back up the laundry list of unfounded assertions.
Plus, at the end of the day, there isn't no amount of whimpering by you that is going to change things.. That ship sailed when wolves were listed, wayyyy prior to reintroduction.
Wolves have been actively managed ever since they were reintroduced and continue to be managed today. No different than lions, black bears, fur bearers, trout, catfish, walleye, elk, moose, goats, sheep, non-game, etc. etc. etc.
I've seen nobody on these threads make the claim that wolves don't kill big-game, small game, each other, livestock, pets, etc. Not sure why you keep making those claims? Maybe you hang out too much on the PETA pages?
I'll continue to be an active participant in management and the decision making process with all wildlife just like I've been doing for the last 40 years. Not going to lose my mind over another predator/trophy game animal to manage and hunt.
In less than 2 months I'll be hunting bighorn sheep in Wyoming in wolf/griz central, hope to luck out and fill a wolf and black bear tag while I'm at it. You know, do something other than whimper on the net...