Other views: Bentz needs to do homework on wolves
Published 6:00 am Saturday, April 13, 2024
Recently, Rep. Cliff Bentz discussed wolf management in a forum in Pendleton.
During his presentation, Bentz is said to have made several misleading statements about wolves and their impact on game animals.
For example, Bentz is quoted as saying: “I was told the day before yesterday that the population of moose in northern Idaho is now zero, where there used to be a significant population.”
Moose have declined in some parts of Idaho, including northern Idaho, as well as in other western states, such as Utah, which lack wolves. Moose numbers in north Idaho are a guess because the Idaho Fish and Game hasn’t done a moose population count since 2000. However, Idaho Fish and Game believes the most significant factor in the decline in northern Idaho is fire suppression policies.
“Recently burned forests with new growth are great moose habitats. But wildfire suppression reduces good moose habitat. We need wildfire to open up dense forests. Old-growth forests are too dense for moose,” says wildlife biologist Kara Campbell in a Salt Lake Tribune article on Idaho moose.
Nevertheless, moose are not scarce in Idaho. Even with 1,337 wolves, the Idaho Fish and Game Department says there are 10,000-12,000 moose in Idaho, up from about a thousand a half-century ago. Maybe the presence of wolves is why Idaho now has so many moose compared to the past.
Bentz also claimed the wolf population in Minnesota has grown like weeds in July, and “populations of deer in the Minnesota area have been dramatically reduced.” Again, Bentz needs to do his homework.
In a 2022 paper by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, the state had an estimated 2,691 wolves, about more or less what it has had for decades. The agency reports that from spring 2020 to spring 2021, the average weighted deer density within the pack-occupied wolf range increased by 16%. In other words, Minnesota’s deer population has increased even with thousands more wolves than Oregon.
In fact, despite the thousands of wolves in the state, Minnesota has nearly a million deer. By comparison, in 2022, Oregon had an estimated population of 178 wolves and 438,000 deer.
We see the same situation with elk. When wolves were reintroduced into parts of Montana in 1995, there were an estimated 89,000 elk in the state. Today, according to the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks, the state is home to 143,310 elk and about a thousand wolves.
The same situation has been observed in Wyoming. The Wyoming Game and Fish estimates there are 109,000 elk in the state. Indeed, elk are so numerous in some parts of the state that Game and Fish sells unlimited elk tags to reduce the herds. Wyoming has about 330 wolves.
To the degree that wolves do influence game numbers, other factors like other predators (bears, cougars, coyotes), habitat loss, disease (chronic wasting disease), and insects (ticks and parasites), even collisions with vehicles are often more critical in determining game population numbers than wolf predation.
Bentz needs to learn a bit more about wolves. He can’t say that wolves dramatically reduce game numbers across the landscape.