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The Idaho Fish and Game Commission meets in August to set the quota, season dates and other groundrules for the state's 2010 hunt. Jim Unsworth, Idaho Fish and Game deputy director, said the commission's objective is to lower the population to about 520 wolves, a number in line with the state's management goals. At the end of 2009, Idaho had at least 843 wolves. The agency is also considering allowing hunters to obtain more than one wolf permit, especially in some zones where wolves are impacting elk herds. Idaho's first hunt ended in March with hunters bagging 185 wolves, short of the quota of 220. Biologists credited the hunt with stabilizing a species that had been growing at a rate of 20 percent annually. Environmental groups also tried to block last year's hunts, but their request for an injunction was turned down. The lawsuit remains pending, and the groups are scheduled to press their case again during a June 15 hearing before U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy in Missoula. "It's no surprise to us that Montana and Idaho are trying to up the hunt levels," said Doug Honnold with Earthjustice, the plaintiff's lead attorney. "We're going to do everything in our power to pursue the litigation and try to stop the hunts."
--- Associated Press writer Todd Dvorak in Boise, Idaho, contributed to this story.
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