Good News for Elk and Elk Hunting

elk-in-woods

The withdrawal of controversial habitat security standards by the U.S. Forest Service illustrates that our public lands do, indeed, belong to us all and we can all have an influence on how they are managed. It also shows the value of hunters uniting and working together.
In response to concerns by Montana hunters and various hunting conservation organizations, the Helena-Lewis and Clark National Forest recently dropped an amendment to the Divide Travel Plan that would have changed habitat security standards. The Forest Service decided, instead, to return to time-tested, science-based, big-game habitat security standards.

“We’re pleased that they dropped the amendment and went back to the old standards,” says Gayle Joslin of Helena Hunters and Anglers, an affiliate of MWF. “Standards are measurable and definable at the landscape level and this recognizes vegetative cover as an important thing.”

As those of us who have crawled through dense, dog-hair lodgepole thickets; climbed up and down steep, slippery slopes covered in of tag alder, and slowly worked our way through piles of blowdown in dark spruce bottoms in pursuit of wild elk . . . well, elk aren’t easy to hunt. But that’s a good thing. If hunting were too easy, there’d be less elk and more hunting restrictions such as limited permits. Or, in many places, elk flee to private lands off limits to hunting. What makes some places tough to hunt is what wildlife biologists call ‘habitat security’. Numbers of hunters, hunting-equipment technology, open-road density and the percentage of terrain covered by forests and other vegetation can all influence elk vulnerability and habitat security. Protecting and enhancing habitat security and reducing vulnerability often results in healthier, more balanced elk herds; good bull-to-cow ratios; more mature bulls in herds; higher calf survival rates and, therefore, more and better hunting opportunities.

Extensive, cooperative research between the Forest Service, state fish and game agencies and several timber companies in the 1970s and 1980s helped define terms such as “bull elk vulnerability” and “habitat security,” and led to the development of standards that the Forest Service has used when developing management plans. When the Helena-Lewis and Clark National Forest decided to adopt new standards, MWF, Helena Hunters and Anglers, Anaconda Sportsmen’s Association, Montana Backcountry Hunters and Anglers and the Clancy-Unionville Citizens Task Force filed a lawsuit against the Forest Service calling for further analysis and justification for the change. In response, the Forest Service decided to avoid litigation and drop the amendment.

“I believe it’s in the best interest of the public for me to withdraw the Record of Decision for the Amendment for the Divide Travel Plan Area Divide Travel Plan,” Forest Supervisor Bill Avey stated in a decision letter dated December 2.

This is good news for wild elk, and good news for those of us who hunt wild elk.

David Stalling is the Western Field Rep. for Montana Wildlife Federation. Reach him at dstalling@mtwf.org

Adding to our Public Lands Heritage

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Attacks on public land are so common these days that it seems hunters, anglers and other outdoor enthusiasts are constantly on the defensive.

But in fact, Montana hunters keep picking up wins on the public lands front. In fact, we’re adding public lands. And that’s a good thing for wildlife, for hunting opportunity and for wildlife watchers and other recreationists.

This week that can continue. The Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission will consider the addition of 640 acres to the Lost River Wildlife Management Area in Hill County, located in the north-central part of the state.

The addition will help with habitat for deer, antelope and numerous other non-game wildlife species. It will add to the area’s hunting opportunity for upland game birds and big game. And it will also have the benefit of increasing access to adjoining public lands.

It’s a win, win, win. Wildlife gains habitat on lands that are specifically for that purpose. Hunters have more state land to pursue game. And hunters gain even more hunting opportunity by gaining access to other public lands.

It’s exactly how the Habitat Montana program is supposed to work. It’s also why it’s so vital that this program that protects habitat and increases access continues.

Nick Gevock is the conservation director for the Montana Wildlife Federation.

Montana Hunters, Anglers Laud Today’s Progress in Protecting the Badger-Two Medicine

TonyBynum - Badger-Two Medicine Photo Credit: Tony Bynum

Montana hunters and anglers are celebrating today’s announcement of the cancellation of additional oil and gas leases in the Badger-Two Medicine Area. U.S. Secretary of Interior Sally Jewell joined U.S. Senator Jon Tester, Blackfeet Nation Chairman Harry Barnes and Devon Energy Corporation President and CEO David Hager to announce that, through a collaborative agreement, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has canceled 15 additional oil and gas leases in the Badger-Two Medicine area of the Lewis and Clark National Forest in northwestern Montana. Devon Energy owns an interest in these federal leases.

The Montana Wildlife Federation (MWF) has been working cooperatively with the Badger Two Medicine Alliance and other partners to help protect the unique array of fish, wildlife, habitat, and related hunting and fishing opportunities in the area.

“We fully support responsible gas and oil development in appropriate places,” says David Chadwick, the Executive Director of MWF, “But this is one place that is too wild, too special, and too important to drill. With a tremendous diversity of wildlife — including elk, bighorns, mule deer, mountain goats and grizzlies – and one of the last strongholds for native westslope cutthroat trout, the Badger-Two Medicine area offers some of the best hunting and fishing in Montana. We plan to keep it that way.”

Bighorn Sheep, Boating Issues Top Fish and Wildlife Commission Agenda

Bighorn sheep conservation issues will be front and center this week when the Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission holds its monthly meeting in Helena.

The Commission will hear a presentation on management issues surrounding bighorns, which are struggling in the state with disease and other issues. It will also consider a bighorn sheep transplant from the Missouri River Breaks, bighorn Hunting District 482, to the south end of the Beartooth Wildlife Management Area to boost the herd there.

Commissioners will also consider additions to the Lost River and Fleecer Mountain wildlife management areas. In addition, commissioners will discuss prohibiting marmosets and tamarins as exotic species in Montana through rulemaking.

In other issues, commissioners will consider several boating issues that affect waters throughout the state. Among them are petitions for no-wake zones for Wood’s Bay and Cromwell Channel on Flathead Lake, a no-wake zone on the Madison River between Ennis Lake and the Madison Dam, and no-wake zones on Fort Peck Reservoir in the Duck Creek Bay and Bay of Park Grove areas.

The meeting will be held 8:30 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 17 at the Montana WILD Center, 2668 Broadwater Ave. in Helena.

Montana, Wyoming Sportsmen Laud Federal Renewable Leasing Rule

wind-turbines

Hunters, anglers, and other public land users stand to benefit from a new renewable energy leasing rule released by the Department of Interior today. The rule sets up a process for competitive leasing and environmental review for renewable energy projects on public lands. This new rule will help protect our habitat for fish and wildlife and access for hunting and angling while charting a course to a cleaner energy future.

The Bureau of Land Management’s new solar and wind leasing rule will help establish stability and consistency across BLM field offices in permit review, which will provide greater certainty and predictability for energy companies. Consistency and transparency will better provide information to the public, the energy companies, and to investors. It will also establish a leasing process for more efficiently issuing permits, which can speed up permitting time and protect natural resources.

“The BLM’s new rule strikes a balance between energy development and wildlife habitat. I’m glad to see this balance, as a public land hunter. As an American, I’m also glad to see our country work on becoming more energy independent” said Eric Wendt, an avid big game hunter out of Billings, MT.

The Bureau of Land Management’s new solar and wind leasing rule will be essential while considering the needs of fish and wildlife populations and the interests of hunters and anglers when large-scale renewable energy projects are proposed. The leasing rule includes provisions that establish rates and fees to ensure the public get a fair return. Other provisions create designated leasing areas that promote the use of low-conflict development and take a region-wide approach to mitigating the impacts from development.

“The new rule will help us anticipate and avoid harm to fish and wildlife habitat,” said Dave Chadwick, Executive Director of the Montana Wildlife Federation. “This is a smart, balanced approach to developing renewable energy on public lands that avoids conflicts with wildlife and other public land users.”

“This rule will set us up for future solar and wind development that avoids the conflicts we’ve seen in the past over other energy sources,” said Chamois Andersen, Executive Director of the Wyoming Wildlife Federation. “We can build wind and solar projects without harming the West’s prized fish and wildlife habitat and public access.”

Jeff Lukas – MWF Elk Campaign Manager

Jeff Lukas

Elk Campaign Manager

Jeff Lukas is a passionate conservationist who has been fishing and hunting his entire life. Whether it’s floating a small stream chasing trout, pursuing elk in the high country, or waiting in a blind for ducks to set their wings, Jeff is always trying to bring more people afield to show them what we are trying to protect. He loves being in the arena, and he will never shy away from conversations about the beautiful and unique corners of Big Sky country.