Friday, July 9, 2021 CapitalPress.com 9 Cattle Producers win state support to watch for wolves By DON JENKINS Capital Press The Cattle Producers of Washington organiza- tion has been awarded a $397,440 state grant to pre- vent conflicts between cows and wolves in northeast Washington. The amount nearly doubles state support the group got in 2019 and boosts a program running low on money. The cattle- men’s group helps about 20 ranches protect herds in Ferry and Stevens counties. “We’ll probably be able to cover twice as many cat- tle,” said Stevens County rancher Scott Nielsen, the program’s director. “We will go where the need is.” The award was the full amount the Legislature appropriated this year for grants to nonprofit groups to curb wolf-livestock conflicts. Conservation district representatives from four counties evaluated the applications. Fish and Wildlife commented on the proposals. The state Department of Agriculture handles the paperwork. The Northeast Wash- ington Wolf-Cattle Col- laborative, a range-rid- ing program more closely UI cancels weed control tour following incident By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press The University of Idaho canceled the July 8 Snake River Weed Control Tour at its Aberdeen Research and Extension Center after someone sprayed gly- phosate on about 1 acre, destroying plantings in research trials. University research- ers said the herbicide was sprayed from a four- wheeled, all-terrain vehi- cle during the first week of June, killing litchi tomato and quinoa. Litchi is a promising trap crop for pale cyst nematode, an important pest in potatoes. Aberdeen-based UI researcher Pamela Hutchinson said it appears someone from outside the university system acted intentionally. Four-wheeler tracks that weaved between plot stakes were found. The center does not have a sprayer on such a vehicle. An in-house investiga- tion documented damage, said Mark McGuire, who directs the university’s sys- tem of nine research and extension centers and six affiliated centers. That investigation did not iden- tify who caused the dam- age or “who might be inter- ested in destroying these plots,” he said. UI notified local law enforcement immediately and “just really moved into keeping the research going and determining what we can do to resurrect these plots for current research,” he said. McGuire said the uni- versity will analyze sam- ples and the progress of any future plantings. If only glyphosate were sprayed, new plantings would sur- vive because that herbi- cide is for emergent plants and does not stay in soil, he said. Hutchinson said the incident was reported to the Idaho State Department of Agriculture official work- ing on the pale cyst nem- atode project, and to the Bingham County Sheriff’s Office. The sheriff’s office has a service agreement with local police. Aberdeen Police Chief Chuck Carroll on July 1 said there is no evidence to identify a suspect, and the investigation is ongoing. People can call 208-785- 1234 to offer information. “We’ve lost a whole year of research,” Hutchin- son said. She doesn’t have enough seed to replant the litchi trial for the research needed. Pale cyst nematode was found in Idaho in 2006. A major eradication effort has made progress, and PCN has not spread outside reg- ulated areas. Hutchinson, UI’s potato cropping systems weed scientist, said some people worry litchi will spread like a noxious weed. It has not escaped or become weedy since it was first planted in Shelley in 2012 with Idaho Potato Commission fund- ing, she said. And no such problems have occurred in the federally funded Aber- deen project, now in its sixth year. Litchi can be killed the same year it is planted. The work at Aberdeen involves multiple research partners. Planting litchi requires an ISDA permit so it can be tracked. Hutchinson said the research shows litchi will cause PCN eggs to hatch, but will not allow them to grow to maturity and pro- duce more eggs. Weeds must be con- trolled in litchi, including some that can host PCN to maturity, she said. Hutchinson said the quinoa research focuses on herbicides that can kill that crop where it is not wanted, and kill weeds that compete with it where it is wanted. A goal is to pro- duce data useful to the IR-4 Project, a longtime USDA effort to assist in identi- fying and registering pest management products. She said it appears qui- noa was sprayed inciden- tally. It was in the same block as litchi. WDFW The Cattle Producers of Washington organization has been awarded a state grant to prevent conflicts be- tween cows and wolves. associated with environ- mentalists, applied for $156,237, but did receive funding. not However, the wolf-cat- tle collaborate did receive $320,000 directly from the Legislature for range-rid- ers, while the Cattle Pro- ducers were shut out. Fish and Wildlife places a high priority on increasing human pres- ence around cattle to pre- vent attacks by wolves. If the attacks are apparently unstoppable by non-lethal measures, the department resorts to killing wolves, inciting legal and political turmoil. With more money, the Cattle Producers will add conflict monitors and trail cameras. Nielsen said he expects the group will have seven riders watching cattle before mid-July. The cameras will help riders identify where wolves are roaming, he said. “If we are not seeing wolf activity in an area, there’s no reason to spend a lot of time on it,” he said. The Cattle Producers received a $210,600 grant in 2019. In its most recent application, the group said its program needs to grow to meet demand. “I think it’s been a good program. I think it bene- fits the ranchers, and I think they’re buying into it,” Niel- sen said. Ruling goes against USDA sheep experimental station in Idaho By KEITH RIDLER The Associated Press BOISE, Idaho — U.S. officials and a sheep indus- try group have filed notices to appeal a federal court ruling involving an east- ern Idaho sheep research facility long targeted by environmental groups con- cerned about the potential harm to grizzly bears and other wildlife. The U.S. Department of Agriculture and Ameri- can Sheep Industry Associ- ation filed the notices late last month to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. A judge’s ruling in April prevents grazing in sig- nificant areas used by the Agriculture Department’s U.S. Sheep Experiment Station. Grazing was suspended in 2013 following previous lawsuits by environmen- tal groups contending the areas contain key wildlife habitat that is a corridor for grizzly bears between Yellowstone National Park and Glacier National Park. Conservation groups con- tend grizzly bears have been killed because of sheep station activities. The groups also say bighorn sheep, which can acquire deadly diseases from domestic sheep, and greater sage grouse use the area. Grazing resumed fol- lowing the release of a 2017 environmental impact statement considering the effects of sheep grazing on wildlife. The Western Water- sheds Project and two other groups filed a new law- suit in early 2019 challeng- ing the government’s deci- sion allowing sheep owned by the University of Idaho to graze in the Centennial Mountains of Idaho and Montana. A federal judge in April agreed with the environ- mental groups that the gov- ernment hadn’t adequately examined all of the impacts with its 2017 environmen- tal review. “It’s really good news for wildlife that the sheep experimental station is USDA file photo Sheep graze at the U.S. Sheep Experimental Station near Dubois, Idaho. basically down to its head- quarters area, and they’re not going to be graz- ing sheep in the Centen- nial Mountains,” said Erik Molvar, the Western Water- sheds Project’s executive director. The sheep station is operated by the Agricul- ture Department’s Agri- cultural Research Ser- vice. The sheep station supports research using domestic sheep owned by the University of Idaho, some of it involving sheep grazing at higher altitudes. Specifically, Chief U.S. Magistrate Judge Ronald E. Bush ruled the govern- ment hadn’t sufficiently examined the project’s potential effects on grizzly bears and bighorn sheep, and didn’t objectively ana- lyze alternatives. Bush ruled the govern- ment did adequately exam- ine the effects on sage grouse. The sheep station uses grazing allotments not belonging to the Agricul- tural Research Service. Bush ruled that the gov- ernment didn’t adequately examine direct and indi- rect effects of sheep graz- ing on those allotments. He said the government must review the project again in line with environ- mental laws, and until that review is complete, sheep grazing isn’t allowed in those areas. The Agriculture Depart- ment has said that the sheep station conducts research on lands rang- ing from about 5,000 feet to nearly 10,000 feet in elevation. The “lands contain subalpine meadow, foot- hill, sagebrush steppe, and desert shrubland eco- systems,” the agency noted. “This diversity provides unparalleled research opportunities.” The Sheep Experiment Station, based near Dubois, Idaho, has not only been targeted by environmental groups but has also been on the federal budget chopping block under the administra- tions of both President Bar- rack Obama and President Donald Trump. Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson, who rep- resents the area, has played a crucial role in restoring funding. “We’d like to see the sheep station converted into a research station that focuses on native ecosys- tems,” Molvar said. FLAT CARS- THE BETTER BRIDGE • Lower Cost • Custom Lengths up to 90' • Certified Engineering Services Available • Steel Construction Contractor License # 71943 P.O Box 365 • 101 Industrial Way, Lebanon, OR 97355 Office: 541-451-1275 Email: info@rfc-nw.com www.rfc-nw.com S235764-1 WE SPECIALIZE IN BULK BAGS! 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