Newsflash

Thompson, Schumaker and Todd kept the Estes Park X Climbing Team competitive at Nationals in July.
 
3/27/08 Feds sued by Wolf Advocate Group
Wild Earth Guardians are suing the Federal Government over their decision not to re-introduce wolves into RMNP.

Feds sued over park elk plan

 

Coalition wants wolves used to thin growing herd

 

By Judith Kohler, Associated Press
Wednesday, March 26, 2008

 

An environmental group is suing the federal government because it says that releasing wolves wasn't seriously considered as an alternative to shooting elk to reduce the growing herd in Rocky Mountain National Park.

 

The lawsuit was filed Tuesday in federal court in Denver by WildEarth Guardians, a coalition of Western environmental groups.

 

It claims that federal officials ignored scientific evidence showing that releasing wolves in Yellowstone National Park has improved the ecosystem by returning the natural predator.

 

The lawsuit, filed with the help of student attorneys at the University of Denver law school, also contends that the Park Service is obligated to conserve endangered species.

 

Wolves were native to Colorado but were eliminated from the state by the 1930s after ranchers, government agents and others shot, trapped and poisoned them.

 

"The Park Service should accept that their elk problem stems directly from a lack of wolves in the region," said Rob Edward of WildEarth Guardians. "It's time to restore the balance of nature in Rocky Mountain National Park."

 

The plan approved last year to cull the elk herd in Rocky Mountain National Park, about 70 miles northwest of Denver, calls for sharpshooters to kill up to 200 elk annually over 20 years. The number killed each year will depend on the herd's size, which fluctuates.

 

The herd, safe from hunters and most predators, has grown to about 3,000 elk. The goal is a herd of 1,200 to 1,700 elk.

 

Park officials want to thin the herd because overgrazing by elk nearly has wiped out aspen and willows, prime habitat for beavers and birds. Elk also roam through yards and gardens outside the park, increasing chances for conflicts with people.

 

Image

   A bull elk making problems with the grass up on Pole Hill outside of Estes Park, Colorado on March 26th, 2008

 

Park spokeswoman Kyle Patterson said she couldn't comment on the lawsuit because she hadn't seen it.

 

She said that park officials considered using wolves to reduce the herd and keep the animals on the move so they couldn't damage the vegetation.

 

The preliminary plan for Rocky Mountain National Park said that wolves would best meet environmental objectives and do the least damage, but didn't recommend that option.

 

 

 
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