The Department of Natural Resources closed the season Wednesday afternoon after hunters and trappers had killed 178 wolves, which was 59 more than the state’s target of 119. Hunters and trappers exceeded their target in all six of the state’s management zones.
Hunters and trappers blew past Wisconsin’s wolf kill target in
less than 72 hours, forcing a premature end to a hunt that initially
wasn’t supposed to happen for another nine months and raising the
ire of animal rights activists.
The Department of Natural Resources closed the season Wednesday
afternoon after hunters and trappers had killed 178 wolves, which
was 59 more than the state’s target of 119. Hunters and trappers
exceeded their target in all six of the state’s management zones.
The agency estimated that about 1,000 wolves roamed the state before
the hunt began. The department’s population goal is 350.
The season began Monday and had been scheduled to run through
Sunday. DNR officials announced Tuesday that the hunt would end
Wednesday afternoon because so many animals had been killed in the
first two days.
The wolf season has been one of the most contentious outdoors issues
that Wisconsin has grappled with in the last 20 years. Animal rights
advocates have argued that wolf populations are too small to support
hunting and that the animals are too majestic to kill. Farmers and
rural residents, though, say wolves are killing their livestock and
pets.
Wisconsin law hands wolf hunters and trappers significant advantages
during the season. Unlike with deer hunting, wolf hunters and
trappers can operate at night and use dogs to corner wolves. Snow
cover also aids tracking.
Wayne Pacelle, president of animal rights group Animal Wellness
Action, said in a statement Wednesday that killed Wisconsin wolves
didn’t stand a chance. “Traps are set like landmines for
unsuspecting animals and the hunters are deep into the woods and out
of the range of communication, and they can easily claim they didn’t
get the ‘stop the hunt’ notice before they killed their wolf,” he
said.
Collette Adkins, carnivore conservation director for the Center for
Biological Diversity, an Arizona-based nonprofit that works to
protect endangered species, issued a statement calling the Wisconsin
hunt “a reckless slaughter.”
Hunters and trappers exceeded the state’s kill target during
Wisconsin’s 2012, 2013 and 2014 seasons, which were held before the
wolf was placed back on the federal endangered species list.
Wisconsin law requires the DNR to give 24-hour notice of wolf
hunting zone closures, which means hunters and trappers can keep
killing wolves for another day after a closure is announced. If they
kill a wolf after the zone is closed, they would face a $330 fine.
The DNR announced on Tuesday that three zones would close at 10 a.m.
Wednesday and the remaining three would close at 3 p.m.
The Trump administration removed federal protections for wolves in
January, returning management to the states. Wisconsin law requires
the DNR to hold an annual hunt between November and February. The
department was preparing for a November hunt when Republican
lawmakers demanded the season start before the end of February,
saying they were worried the Biden administration might re-list
wolves before November and deny Wisconsin hunters a season.
The DNR resisted, but hunter advocacy group Hunter Nation won a
court order earlier this month that forced the immediate launch of a
wolf hunting season. The DNR still plans to hold a November wolf
hunting season.
Keith Warnke, the department’s fish, wildlife and parks
administrator, told the agency’s policy board during a meeting
Wednesday that hunters had exceeded the limit. None of the board
members expressed any reaction to the news. The board’s chairman,
Fred Prehn, said the target was too low given the population goal of
350 wolves and that the November target should be set to get closer
to that goal.
Warnke said he didn’t know if that would be safe for the overall
population, but that the department would use that 350-animal goal
to inform its decisions. He said new population estimates are
expected in April.
Lawmakers in neighboring Minnesota have introduced dueling bills that would ban wolf hunting and establish a season.