U.S. proposes end of grizzly-baiting ban
in Alaska's national preserves
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[May 22, 2018]
By Laura Zuckerman
(Reuters) - The Trump administration has
proposed rescinding Obama-era rules barring sport hunters from using
bait to lure and kill grizzly bears in Alaska's national preserves, as
is allowed in other parts of the state, the National Park Service said
on Monday.
The plan, pushed by Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and assailed by
environmentalists as inhumane, would give state wildlife managers the
discretion to decide what kinds of bear-hunting methods are permitted
across 20 million acres (8 million hectares) of national preserve lands
in Alaska.
Alaska in 2005 began allowing grizzly-baiting for the first time since
statehood as part of a predator-control program to boost populations of
big-game animals popular with hunters such as moose in the state's vast
interior.
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The practice of using anything from stale doughnuts and lard to
honey-drenched dog food to attract grizzlies into the open for hunters
to more easily shoot them was banned in Alaska's preserves in 2015 by
the Park Service under then-President Barack Obama.
The agency determined then that bear-baiting was biologically unsound,
potentially unsafe and "inconsistent with federal law authorizing sport
hunting in national preserves in Alaska."
The 2015 rule also prohibited sport hunters, for similar reasons, from
using artificial lighting to enter black bear dens as a way of
surprising adult animals and their cubs inside, and barred the trapping
of gray wolves during their denning season.
The Zinke proposal would likewise lift those restrictions to allow the
state Department of Fish and Game to set hunting and trapping rules as
its deems appropriate within national preserves, according to Park
Service spokesman Peter Christian.
Grizzly bears are believed to number about 30,000 throughout Alaska,
while an estimated 100,000 black bears roam the state, according to Fish
and Game data.
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A coastal brown bear walks along the banks of the Chilkoot River
near Haines, Alaska October 7, 2014. REUTERS/Bob Strong/File Photo
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Alaska officials have said that increased killing of predators such
as grizzlies was necessary to increase opportunities for successful
hunting of moose and other game creatures favored by sportsmen.
Environmental groups denounced the proposal as unethical and cruel,
and said the hunting and trapping practices at issue are also
disruptive to the natural predator-prey dynamic.
"The Department of Interior under Secretary Zinke is enabling
Alaska's war on bears and wolves in national preserves," said Jim
Adams of the National Parks Conservation Association.
Veteran hunting guide Thor Stacey, director of government affairs
for the Alaska Professional Hunter Association, said his group
strongly backs the move to abolish existing restrictions.
"This was a case of the federal government overstepping and trying
to usurp the state's authority to manage its wildlife," Stacey said.
The proposed rule change, to be published in the Federal Register on
Tuesday, marks the latest Obama-era environmental regulation that
the Republican administration of his successor, President Donald
Trump, had sought to roll back since taking office in January 2017.
(Reporting by Laura Zuckerman in Pinedale, Wyoming; Writing by Steve
Gorman; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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