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Email: timberwolfinfonetwork@gmail.com

Idaho Fish and Game to kill more wolves

Idaho Fish and Game to kill more wolves

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Three Idaho wolves have been killed by federal hunters in recent weeks and state officials have authorized the destruction of 10 more, due to recent attacks on livestock that left some 63 sheep dead and five injured.

While disease and other causes result in most livestock deaths in Idaho, state Department of Fish and Game officials say these wolf control actions are needed to curb future attacks.

At least 43 sheep were killed since August by wolves of the Lick Creek pack, which roam western Idaho near the Snake River. Elsewhere in the state, other wolves killed 20 more sheep in the last week.

So far this year, federal and state agents have killed 26 wolves in Idaho, and another nine have been legally killed by ranchers whose livestock were threatened or attacked.

Since January, Fish and Game has had day-to-day management over central Idaho wolves — including the Lick Creek pack — that are listed as “experimental, nonessential” and can be killed if they’re preying on cattle or sheep. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service still manages wolves north of U.S. Interstate 90, where the animals are listed as “endangered.”

Currently, Idaho has about 650 wolves, up from 35 introduced in the state in 1995 and 1996. The state eventually wants to hold legal hunts for the predators, once federal protections are lifted.

More than two-thirds of 32,000 sheep and lamb deaths in Idaho last year were due to weather, disease, old age and complications from giving birth, the state agency said.

Predators including wolves, coyotes, bear and mountain lions were responsible for 32 percent of the deaths.

Domestic dogs killed 300 lambs in 2005 — the same number killed by wolves that year.

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