Idaho F&G director says wolf hunts going very well
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Story Created:
Feb 2, 2010 at 4:16 PM MST
Story Updated:
Feb 2, 2010 at 4:16 PM MST
02/02/10
BOISE, Idaho (AP) _ The Department of Fish and Game says the
first legal wolf hunt in the lower 48 states in years was a major
2009 milestone.
Director Cal Groen told the Joint Finance-Appropriations
Committee on Tuesday, ``The department and the state did that first
wolf season very well.''
In all, some 25,700 Idaho residents bought wolf tags, with
another 684 people from outside the state purchasing a chance to
shoot one of the big predators. That brought in about $400,000.
So far, 146 wolves have been killed by hunters since the season
began Sept. 1, with six of 12 hunting zones still open.
Groen, who presented his agency's fiscal year 2011 budget
proposal of $85 million, says another big step for the agency was
getting U.S. Forest Service permission to land helicopters in the
Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness to help count wolves.
He says, ``We can finally get a handle on how many wolves we
have through radio collars.''
Environmentalists have sued over the landings, saying they
violate the law that created federal wilderness areas in 1964.
(Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
APNP-02-02-10 1015MST<
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