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Smith: Wisconsin opens wolf hunting, trapping season

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The sale of permits brought in $202,720. The sale of licenses ($100 each for state residents, $500 for nonresidents) is expected to bring in about $120,000 more. Through Friday, the DNR had sold 505 wolf licenses to state residents and five to nonresidents.

As Wisconsin deer hunters can attest, a wolf sighting is extremely rare. The animals are extremely wary and move mostly at night.

The North American Model of Wildlife Management is based on science and carefully controlled hunting. It has led to the recoveries of dozens of species now commonly found in Wisconsin, including wood ducks and wild turkey.

But no species has assumed the title of “game animal” accompanied by as much emotion as the wolf. And the appetite among the Wisconsin citizenry for managing the wolf through hunting and trapping will only be known later.

For its part, the DNR intends to go to great lengths to avoid exceeding the harvest quota.

Using a model similar to the sturgeon spearing season, it plans to close a zone if about 95 percent of the quota is reached.

“We are being as careful as possible,” said Thiede. “It is in everyone’s interest that we effectively manage wolves so we are able to retain management of these majestic creatures.”

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