Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Columbia press. (Astoria, Or.) 1949-current | View Entire Issue (April 27, 2018)
T he C olumbia P ress 2 April 27, 2018 Oregon’s wolf population grew 11 percent and breeding pairs increased Wildlife biologists counted 124 wolves in Oregon during the winter, an 11 percent increase over the number counted last year. The count is based on veri- fied wolf evidence such as vi- sual observations, tracks and remote camera photographs and is considered the mini- mum known wolf population, not an estimate of how many wolves are in Oregon. Twelve wolf packs were documented by the Ore- gon Department of Fish and Wildlife at the end of 2017. Eleven packs were successful breeding pairs, meaning that at least two adults and two pups survived to the end of the year. It was a 38 percent increase in breeding pairs from 2016. “The wolf population con- tinues to grow and expand its range in Oregon,” said Rob- lyn Brown, ODFW wolf co- ordinator. “This year, we also documented resident wolves in the northern part of Ore- gon’s Cascade Mountains for the hands of humans. • Just over half the docu- mented wolf locations were on public lands, 44 percent were on private lands, and 2 percent were on tribal lands. Courtesy ODFW An adult and pup from the Catherine Pack on private proper- ty in eastern Union County in May 2017. the first time.” Other highlights from the report: • The 12 wolf packs docu- mented had a mean size of 7.3 wolves, ranging from 4 to 11 wolves. Another nine groups of two or three wolves each also were counted. • Known resident wolves can be found in Baker, Grant, Jackson, Klamath, Lake, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa and Wasco counties. • Twenty-five radio-collared wolves were monitored, in- cluding 19 wolves that were radio-collared during 2017. • Four collared wolves left the state (two to Idaho, one to Montana, one to Washing- ton). • Thirteen wolf deaths were documented, 12 of them at i LLegaL taking of woLves Four wolves were killed il- legally in 2017, two in areas of the state where wolves re- main on the federal Endan- gered Species List (west of highways 395, 78 and 95). Three of the poaching inves- tigations are ongoing, with rewards of $2,500 to $15,000 offered for information. The fourth case, involving a wolf trapped and then shot in Union County, was prosecut- ed. The defendant was penal- ized with 24 months of bench probation, 100 hours of com- munity service, a hunting/ trapping license suspension of 36 months and a $7,500 fine paid in civil restitution to ODFW. He forfeited the firearm and all trapping-re- lated items seized during the investigation and was sentenced to an additional $1,000 court fine. L ivestoCk depredation ODFW investigated 66 re- ports of livestock depreda- tion by wolves and confirmed wolves were the culprit in 17, compared to 24 confirmed depredations in 2016. ODFW confirmed losses of 11 calves, one llama, one al- paca and 23 domestic fowl to wolves in 2017 (compared to 11 calves, 7 sheep, one goat and one llama lost in 2016.) During 2017, 24 percent of known wolf packs depredat- ed livestock, compared to 57 percent in 2016. Since 2009, 75 percent of confirmed wolf depredations have occurred on private land with most during four months -- May, August, Sep- tember and October. “It is encouraging to see the continued recovery of Ore- gon’s wolf population into more of their historic range,” Gov. Kate Brown said. “(Still), ongoing issues of poaching and livestock dep- redation must be carefully considered as we explore more effective management and conservation practices.” C latsop C ounty ’ s only Independent Weekly neWspaper Published by Clatsop County Media Services LLC Send news or address changes to: 5 N Highway 101 #500, Warrenton OR 97146 Cindy Yingst, Publisher/Editor (news@thecolumbiapress.com) 503-861-3331 Peggy Yingst, Advertising Director (ads@thecolumbiapress.com) 802-579-1948 D.B. Lewis, Circulation (circulation@thecolumbiapress.com) 503-861-3331 Postage paid at the Warrenton Post Office All content copyrighted by Clatsop County Media Services LLC