Feds keeping Northern Rockies wolf listed for now
BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — The government won't immediately try to take
gray wolves in the Northern Rockies off the endangered species list, a
federal wildlife official said Tuesday.
Ed Bangs, a U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service coordinator, said the government in the next week
expects to withdraw a rule that declared wolves fully recovered. That
rule, issued in March, would have allowed public hunting for the
region's approximately 1,500 wolves.
Wildlife agencies in
Montana, Idaho and Wyoming have already started preparations for such
hunts. But they had been in doubt since July, when U.S. District Judge
Donald Molloy blocked the states from going forward pending resolution
of a lawsuit by environmentalists.
"Hopefully, they'll go back to
the drawing board and come up with a new plan that better protects
wolves," said Earthjustice attorney Doug Honnold, who had sued on
behalf of a dozen environmental groups that argue wolves in the region
remain imperiled.
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The decision to withdraw the recovery rule is
subject to final approval by the Department of Justice. Molloy also
would have to sign off before it could take effect.
In his July
injunction against the planned hunts, Molloy raised concerns about
whether wolves would have enough genetic diversity, through breeding,
to sustain their population.
Molloy also questioned Wyoming's
lack of regulations on the killing of wolves. Outside Yellowstone
National Park and adjacent areas, wolves are classified as predators,
allowing them to be shot on sight.
Bangs, coordinator for the
government's Northern Rockies wolf recovery program, said he still
believes there are enough wolves to merit public hunting. But he said
the government needs to adequately explain why wolves no longer need
federal protection before making a new proposal.
"This means you
do away with the de-listing rule and give it back to the Fish and
Wildlife Service to think about more," he said. "There's going to be a
thorough, fine-toothed comb going through it to decide what we can do
better."