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Smith: Wisconsin opens wolf hunting, trapping season

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To protect against overharvest, the DNR will issue a maximum of 1,160 licenses. More than 600,000 hunters take to the field on the opener of the gun deer season.

And not all Wisconsin wolf license holders will begin pursuing wolves Monday.

“I’d recommend waiting until after about Thanksgiving,” said John Olson, DNR forbear ecologist, at a wolf trapping education seminar Oct. 6 in Tomahawk.

By late November, pelts are in better condition and tracking snow is more probable, Olson said.

The DNR has established harvest quotas in five zones; each zone is subject to an emergency closure if the quota is reached.

In a state with a rich hunting tradition, the wolf season is unique: There is virtually no living experience.

“It will be a learning experience for all of us,” Olson said.

Only a handful of people, mostly state and federal employees like Dave Ruid of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s wildlife services, have intentionally and with proper authorization trapped or hunted wolves in Wisconsin.

Ruid said the techniques for trapping wolves are very similar to those used for coyotes. At the clinic in Tomahawk, Ruid demonstrated a wolf set. It used a foot-hold trap concealed by dirt and leaves. A dog urine scent was used to mark a nearby log.

Trappers are likely to achieve higher rates of success, said Ruid. Of the 1,160 licenses issued in Wisconsin, 238 have some trapping experience or have purchased a trapping license in the past, according to the DNR.

Hunters face longer odds. In Montana, 18,700 licenses were sold in 2011 and hunters killed only 166 wolves.

Wisconsin regulations allow night hunting and the use of bait.

The use of dogs to pursue wolves is blocked through at least Dec. 20 by an injunction in Dane County Circuit Court. None of the other states allows the use of dogs in wolf hunting.

The legislation that authorized the wolf hunt also changes the method of payment for wolf depredation in Wisconsin.

The money used to come out of the Endangered Resources Fund; it now will come from sale of wolf permits and licenses.

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