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Annual Elk Reduction Hunt At Grand Teton National Park Begins This Weekend

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An annual elk hunt intended to keep the overall population in check begins this weekend at Grand Teton National Park, though likely not without controversy.

The hunt is called for in the park's enabling legislation, passed by Congress in 1950. That legislation directs Grand Teton National Park to jointly develop the hunt with the Wyoming Game and Fish Department, and for the governor of Wyoming and Interior secretary to approve the annual plan. Respective federal and state biologists and administrators have reviewed available biological data and concluded that the 2015 program is necessary for the proper management and protection of the elk, including keeping the herd at or near the population objective.

Earlier this year the National Park Service, Interior Department, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service were sued by the Sierra Club and Western Watersheds Project because the Fish and Wildlife Service had decided that the region's grizzly bear population would be able to withstand the loss of four bears killed over seven years in connection with the elk hunt. 

“Authorizing the killing of four grizzly bears in a national park is not good management for grizzlies or national parks,” Earthjustice attorney Tim Preso said when the lawsuit was filed in April. “The government should be working to eliminate grizzly mortality threats, not handing out authorizations to kill grizzly bears in one of our nation’s premiere national parks.”

And it was a year ago when a Wyoming-based media outlet reported that federal wildlife authorities expect more grizzlies to be killed by hunters than initially thought. 

In November 2012, three elk hunters in the park shot and killed a grizzly that charged within ten feet of them. An investigation later absolved the hunters, saying they acted in self-defense.

For this year's hunt, the areas open to the program, Wyoming Game and Fish Department Elk Hunt Areas 75 and 79, are generally located on the east side of the park, and north of the Gros Ventre River, according to park staff. The Snake River Bottom, between Deadman’s Bar access road to Ditch Creek west of US Highway 26/89/191, is closed to the program. The Antelope Flats area is closed to the program after November 30, and the entire program ends December 13. The areas remain open to park visitors, and the wearing of orange or other bright colors is highly recommended during this time.

Grand Teton staff say the elk reduction program "is an important management tool that differs somewhat from other elk hunting programs in the region. Participants in the program must carry appropriate state license, conservation stamp and permits, use non-lead ammunition, and are limited in the number of cartridges they are able to carry each day. The use of archery, hand guns, or other non-center fire ammunition rifles is not permitted, nor is the use of artificial elk calls. In addition, participants, regardless of age, are required to carry a certified hunter safety card, wear fluorescent orange and carry and have immediately accessible bear spray as a non-lethal deterrent for use during potential bear encounters. Information packets accompanying each permit warn participants of the risk of bear encounters and offer tips on how to minimize the probability of human-bear conflicts."

The need for this reduction program, according to park officials, "stems partly from an intensive management framework that includes annual winter feeding programs on the National Elk Refuge and in the upper Gros Ventre Drainage. Feeding sustains high numbers of elk with unnaturally low mortality rates. A majority of elk that are fed during the winter on the refuge also summer in Grand Teton National Park or use migration routes across park lands. The reduction program targets elk from three primary herd segments: Grand Teton, southern Yellowstone National Park, and the Teton Wilderness area of Bridger-Teton National Forest."

Park rangers will monitor and patrol elk reduction areas to ensure compliance with rules and regulations, interpret the elk reduction program to visitors, and provide participants with information on local conditions associated with this wildlife management program.

An information line for the 2015 elk reduction program is available at 307-739-3681. A brochure on elk ecology and a map showing locations open to these special permit hunters is available online.

Comments

"Park rangers will ...interpret the elk reduction program to visitors..."

Holy guacamole!  I feel sorry for the poor rangers who have to deal with this insanity.  Teton's enabling legislation & FWS feeding need to be changed to end this disgraceful so-called hunt:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/todd-wilkinson/is-grand-teton-hunt-right_b...

http://www.jhnewsandguide.com/news/environmental/onlookers-dismayed-by-e...


Yes, it is so much more humane to let them starve to death.  


Agreed, Tahoma.  Last year's hunt was a grotesque display, as documented by the Traveler report.


Justinh and tahoma.  I'm curious, are you vegans?  Or is shooting that elk somehow more grotesque than the way they kill cattle, pigs and chickens?


I'm not a vegan or a hunter, ec, and have nothing against either group.  Some of my neighbors will be shooting elk nearby soon and I look forward to some fresh liver.

I'm concerned about the safety of the non-hunting public; I think the few other NPS units at least exclude the public when ungulate culling is done.  

The Teton herd reduction 'hunt' would not be necessary if the population was not wildly inflated by supplemental feeding at the nearby FWS refuge, also mandated by local politicians, no doubt.   The taxpayers get screwed at both ends when federal agencies have conflicting, let alone unnecessary, mandates.  The feeding should be phased out, as should the hunt.  If this involves a few years of starving elk until a naturally sustainable herd size is reached, then so be it.

The current arrangement seems not much different than that game farm where Cheney shot his buddy or having a sausage factory in the National Cathedral.


I'm concerned about the safety of the non-hunting public;  

I would guess the safety of the the public in the parks - given the NPS oversight - is greater than that of the public in National Forests during hunting season.  And if you nothing against hunters, why did you feel last years hunt was grotesque?

As to the feeding, you may indeed have a point there.  BTW - I am not a hunter either.  


I'm concerned about the safety of the non-hunting public

I would think the public is safer in the parks with the NPS oversight than the public in the national forest during hunting season.  And BTW - I am not a hunter either.  

 

(sorry for the repeat)  the first one didn't show for 1/2 hr


Tahoma: YOU and others like you are doing all they can to stop this hunt, the feeding program, etc. When the already diminished numbers that migrate to or stick around all year in Jackson/GTNP proper COLLAPSE like the 80 drop off in the North Yellowstone elk herd, after the Invasive sub species wolf dumping. I hope you and the Mangelsens, Mayos, WIlkinsons of the world stay FAR away from any wolves and Grizzly bears that will be starving to death as they will no doubtedly begin to pick off MUCH easier human beings.


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