
Photo by Whitehorse Star
Harvey Jessup and Environment Minister Currie Dixon
Photo by Whitehorse Star
Harvey Jessup and Environment Minister Currie Dixon
Shooting wolves from helicopters to help boost moose and caribou populations in the Yukon has been taken off the table.
Shooting wolves from helicopters to help boost moose and caribou populations in the Yukon has been taken off the table.
Although aerial wolf-kills in the territory were last used 15 years ago, they were still technically available as a wildlife management tool until Thursday, when Environment Minister Currie Dixon announced a new approach.
Dixon has officially accepted the updated Yukon Wolf Conservation and Management Plan.
That exercise was the product of more than a year of public consultation and meetings.
The 28-page document eliminates aerial wolf-kills as a management tool while placing more emphasis on local control of initiatives to manage and conserve wolves.
The plan requests the minister change the law so than he can authorize higher bag limits for hunters and longer trapping seasons on a case-by-case basis as methods to address wolf problems in specific areas.
Yukoners should work together to develop a wolf-human conflict policy to provide guidelines that set out if and when additional management of wolves is needed, the plan recommends.
The original Wolf Management and Conservation Management Plan was developed in 1992, on the eve of the Yukon government's aerial wolf-kill program in the Aishihik area over four years.
Records indicate 849 wolves were shot from the air between 1982 and 1997 in the Aishihik, Southern Lakes and Finlayson Lake areas to help turn around declining moose and caribou numbers.
In his book Wolves of the Yukon published in 2010, retired government biologist Bob Hayes – who managed the aerial control programs – said they don't work, and shouldn't be used anymore.
Wolf populations eventually return to their previous numbers once the aerial shooting stops, Hayes concluded.
"Today, much has been learned about the impacts, long-term effectiveness, and costs and benefits of this technique,” reads the new management plan in reference to aerial wolf-kill programs.
"There appears to be little interest to focus so much effort on this management approach. The 2011 plan reflects a strong desire for a more complete range of tools to conserve and manage wolves.”
Alaska still uses aerial wolf-kills as a management tool. B.C. hasn't done so since the early 1980s, and there's no record of an aerial program ever being conducted in the Northwest Territories.
The review of the 1992 management plan began in 2010, when the territorial government and Yukon Fish and Wildlife Management Board created a six-member committee
The committee held public meetings across the Yukon, produced a draft of its new plan last July and forwarded its final recommendation to the minister in December.
It contains 27 recommendations.
Management of wolves in the Yukon must include a recognition of their importance to biodiversity, says the plan. It must recognize their social, cultural and economic importance to all Yukoners.
Harvey Jessup, the new chair of the wildlife management board and one of the co-chairs of the review committee, said the emphasis in the plan is on co-operation and collaboration among Yukoners.
Its success depends on it, he said in an interview Thursday.
Jessup said the Environment minister accepted the plan in its entirety, but for one change.
Each of the 27 recommendations assigned responsibility to different parties to follow through on the recommendation, he explained.
Jessup said the assignment of responsibility has been removed, though each of the recommendations has been accepted.
For instance, the plan calls for a change in Wildlife Act regulations to provide the minister with the flexibility to approve different management strategies for changing circumstances, he said.
Jessup said the wolf trapping season runs now from Nov. 1 to March 31.
There may be, however, interest among trappers in northern Yukon to extend the season into April, because it's still winter there in April, he said.
Jessup said providing the minister with the adaptive management tool would mean not having to go through an extensive territory-wide review to change the season across the Yukon.
Similarly, if a local renewable resource council is experiencing an issue with wolves in a particular area, the plan recommends empowering the council to implement a local management strategy with the minister's permission, he explained.
"So we are trying to make this more efficient, if you will, and recognize the interests of the communities and the ability of the renewable resource councils to make recommendations.”
It's no secret that in recent years, there have been discussions in some corners around the need to do something about the wolf population in areas where wolves are increasing pressure on the ungulate populations.
Some of those discussions, it has been said, prompted the review of the Yukon's Wolf Conservation and Management Plan.
It's also no secret that communities from time to time have experienced an abundance of pet dogs killed by wolves, most recently the community of Teslin where signs were actually posted warning residents about the presence of wolves.
Jessup said developing a wolf-human conflict protocol as called for in the new management plan will clarify when and if action should be taken in a particular situation that might have a community on edge.
It would be much like the existing wildlife-human conflict policy in the Wildlife Act that allows for the defence of life and property, even if it means shooting an animal, he said.
Jessup said the wildlife-human conflict policy, however, also stipulates individuals are responsible to keep themselves out of dangerous or threatening situations.
The wolf-human conflict protocol would outline what happens under particular circumstances, in black and white, he said.
The new plan also speaks to respect for wolves and their habitat, and the importance of recognizing the need to maintain that respect.
Goal number one in the management plan reads: "Conserve wolf populations in recognition of the role of wolves in ecosystems and the maintenance of biodiversity.”
The Recommended Implementation Measure: "Provide input to land use planning and environmental assessment processes to protect known dens and mitigate disturbances to wolves during the period of pup rearing.”
Jessup said today's plan, unlike the 1992 blueprint, is fairly well-entrenched, and changing it wouldn't be a matter of simply shifting policies.
The 2011 plan, he said, has been developed under the provisions of public consultation stipulated in the Yukon aboriginal land claim settlements, unlike the 1992 plan that pre-dated the first four land claim settlements in 1995.
Changing it, he said, would require an extensive public review.
• Environment Yukon estimates there are 4,500 wolves in the Yukon.
• In 2011, records show 150 wolves were harvested by trappers, 50 were killed by hunters – 29 by non-resident Yukoners and 21 by resident hunters – and nine were killed by vehicles or other means, for a total mortality of 209 animals.
Figures for the five years from 2007 to the end of 2011 show that:
• A total of 640 wolves were trapped in the five years;
• 320 wolves were hunted – 163 by non-residents and 157 by Yukoners;
• 48 wolves were killed incidentally; and
• Altogether, 1,008 wolves were trapped, hunted or died incidentally in the previous five years.
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Comments (6)
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Billy Polson on May 18, 2012 at 12:52 pm
Easy on poor Dangles...anytime Mike Greico writes he demonizes humans other than himself....it's natural to lash out....just like the wolves would do if Mike tried to pet one.
The article clearly states that aerial killing of wolves is out but folks are still allowed to kill wolves...but argue that reducing their numbers is bad for the ecosystem and you have just lost the audience....wolves are by nature important, and they are very difficult to eradicate...impossible even...unless miners use up all the habitat of their prey.
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Upside Down on May 18, 2012 at 12:45 am
I can put anything as my name here. It's funny how the people who put their real names are the ones who get criticized. I guess there's something to be said for anonymity. Kudos to Mike for sticking his neck out. It's a brave thing to do in this town, and he's braver than me (obviously).
Oh, and JDangles, if you look at the article again, you'll see that the wolf kill wasn't shot down, just the aerial wolf kill.
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Akimajuktuq on May 18, 2012 at 12:40 am
JDangles: the article does not say that there will be no more wolf culls, just that they won't do it by shooting them from helicopters. (Thank you Bob Hayes for your honesty!) Allowing moderate increases in hunting and trapping is the smart way to go, and the most cost effective. (I hope there won't be any more sterilization programs either!)
I am VERY happy to hear that this ineffective, high negative impact "management" tool will no longer be used. Also, the management plan has taken steps to recognize that destroying predators does not "fix" an ecosystem; perhaps they finally considered the harm that has been done in other parts of the world when apex predators are extirpated.
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Jackie Ward on May 17, 2012 at 11:10 am
Hey JDangles, Mike has a right to his opinion. Who cares what the article says. What about the thousands of wolves killed before this decision was made? A lot of people do not like Mike, and your immature comment proves it. He is a hero for the animals. Giving them a voice where there is none. Keep it up Mike. You have my support. If his comment is so negative, prove him wrong. What he said is 100% fact. So it's not Mike that is being negative, but pointing out the real negativity. Usually when people are confronted with facts they resort to personal attacks.
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JDangles on May 17, 2012 at 5:00 am
Wow! who would have thought Mr Grieco would have something to say about the issue! Too bad you missed the entire point of the article, which is that the wolf kill has been shot down, and no longer considered an effective way to manage wolves. Yet you still find something negative to say.
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Mike Grieco on May 16, 2012 at 9:29 pm
Human beings can not peacefully, successfuly manage themselves, and it is a tad arrogant to think we can manage wildlife. Maybe we should try to manage our own greed and bloodlust instead.
Wolves are not the problem. People are.