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The creatures were once abundant across North America, but by the 1930s had been largely exterminated outside Alaska and Canada. About 300 wolves in Wyoming are still under federal protection because the government has not approved the state's management plan. Last year, about a dozen wolves were killed in Wyoming during a brief period when the state management plan declared wolves wandering outside established recovery zones could be shot and killed on sight. That policy was later scrapped by a federal judge. Idaho officials and hunting guides say the opening weeks of the season are likely to be slow. Outfitters said they are not booking trips for hunters exclusively looking to bag a wolf. But guides are encouraging clients to buy wolf tags to have handy when tracking deer and elk later this fall. "Any success we have with wolves will be more of a happenstance sort of thing," said Richard Huff, a guide for Silver Spur Outfitters and Lodge near Grangeville. Wolves are difficult to track because they move 30 to 50 miles a day, and hunters can't use bait or artificial calls. "But I can tell you if I see one it's going to be adios," Huff said.
[Associated
Press;
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