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Alaska takes applications for new wolf control program

Alaska takes applications for new wolf control program

By MARY PEMBERTON , Associated Press Writer

ANCHORAGE

Alaska’s expansion of its lethal wolf control program began Wednesday with
the call for pilot-and-hunter teams to kill wolves in the south-central
part of the state.

The Department of Fish and Game said it is taking applications for a
predator control program about 100 miles northeast of Anchorage in the
Nelchina basin, an area bordered by four mountain ranges.

The state already has a wolf control program under way near the Interior
town of McGrath where pilot-and-hunter teams are allowed to shoot wolves
from planes. The Nelchina plan requires pilots to land the planes before
killing the animals.

The wolf-killing programs have prompted a Connecticut-based animal rights
group to launch a boycott of Alaska’s estimated $2 billion a year tourism
industry.

The Board of Game wants to remove about 140 wolves from an
8,000-square-mile area in the Nelchina basin. Applications are available
at Fish and Game offices. About 30 permits are expected to be issued
initially, with the first being approved as soon as Jan. 22, said Bruce
Bartley, a spokesman with Fish and Game in Anchorage.

Residents of the Nelchina area will get first consideration, Bartley said.

The board last month approved specific plans to extend Alaska’s lethal
wolf control program to the Nelchina area.

The board had previously approved the killing of about 40 wolves in a
1,700-square-mile area near McGrath. Three one-month permits were issued
in November and December, but unfavorable weather conditions have
prevented any wolves from being killed so far, Fish and Game spokeswoman
Cathie Harmes said Wednesday.

Pilot-and-hunter teams have said conditions will improve in February and
March for tracking wolves.

Bartley said the game board has heard complaints for years from McGrath
and Nelchina area residents that bears and wolves are eating too many
moose calves, leaving too few moose for people to eat.

The Nelchina basin area had a similar land-and-shoot program that ended in
1995. After that, the wolf population in game management Unit 13 more than
doubled, Bartley said.

Now, between 70 percent and 90 percent of moose calves in Unit 13 are dead
within five months, Bartley said, and the moose cows on average are
getting older and producing fewer calves.

The moose population has declined by more than half in recent years.

“It is a vicious cycle,” he said.

The predator control program near McGrath began last spring with the
relocation of 75 black bears and eight grizzlies. State wildlife
biologists say the relocation effort boosted the summer moose calf
survival rate 20 percent.

The next phase of the program calls for killing dozens of wolves this
winter, a time when moose calves are most vulnerable to being eaten by
wolves.

Harmes said within the next two weeks officials will decide whether to
renew the McGrath permits or issue additional permits. Conditions should
improve in spring because there will be more light, and likely more fresh
snow and low winds, she said.

Unlike the McGrath area, the board determined that land-and-shoot could
work in the Nelchina area because the area has fewer trees and bushes. The
area also tends to get more fresh snow _ good for tracking _ and the
weather is more stable, Bartley said.

If land-and-shoot doesn’t work to drive down the wolf population, the
board could consider an aerial program like that under way in McGrath.

Priscilla Feral, president of the Darien, Conn.-based Friends of Animals,
said she was disappointed that Alaska is expanding its wolf control
program. So far, the group’s efforts to stop the program in court have
failed.

Friends of Animals, which was behind a successful tourism boycott a decade
ago, organized 30 protests the first weekend after Christmas in cities
nationwide. Feral said 18 more will be held from Jan. 17-19.

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