AZ Elk Being Relocated to WV

Fursniper

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Quote:Arizona elk heading east to West Virginia
January 26, 2018
AZ Game and Fish Dept.


FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — In late February, dozens of elk from Arizona will be establishing a permanent change of residency more than 2,000 miles away.

The healthy, strapping animals were captured earlier this week through a partnership between the Arizona Game and Fish Department and the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources. The Arizona Game and Fish Commission approved the capture and transport as part of West Virginia’s ongoing restoration project at its August meeting.

“We’re pleased to assist the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources in its efforts to restore elk to their native range,” said Jim Ammons, commission chairman. “Helping restore wildlife populations is in keeping with the vision of the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation, using science-based principles to manage wildlife in the public trust.”

The roughly 50 cows and 10 bulls, captured east of Flagstaff, will be quarantined for a minimum of 33 days before being loaded on livestock trailers and transported to the 24,245-acre Tomblin Wildlife Management Area in southwest West Virginia, where they will join nearly two dozen elk received in 2016 from Kentucky.

The elk were captured from a robust population in the northern portion of Game Management Unit (GMU) 5B, which is designated as part of the Winter-Range Elk Management Zone. The department’s recent population surveys and modeling indicate an increasing trend in elk numbers within the capture area. The removal of the elk contributes to maintaining a stable population and will not change the number of hunt permit-tags available to hunters in this area.

The project was an immense undertaking involving staff and volunteers from both state wildlife agencies, representatives from the Arizona Elk Society and the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation (RMEF), and capture crew from Quicksilver Air Inc. The department also coordinated with three major private landowners and the Hopi Tribe in advance of the capture.

West Virginia’s agency, in cooperation with RMEF, covered the costs associated with the capturing and processing of the elk. All costs incurred were paid for with wildlife restoration funds, which are generated by sportsmen who support conservation through their purchase of hunting, fishing and other outdoor equipment, or by donations to RMEF.

From first light until late afternoon, the capture process was repeated several times over the course of two days. A fixed-wing aircraft and three teams of spotters with binoculars would locate groups of elk -- preferably within a five-mile radius of the staging area at Raymond Wildlife Area – and provide coordinates to the helicopter capture crew.

After a short pursuit, a hand-held net gun would be fired to entangle the desired elk, then two crew members (or “muggers”) would step off the helicopter, blindfold the elk and administer a mild sedative to keep it calm, immobilize it with hobbles to facilitate handling and transport, and remove the net.

“We minimize chase time so that the helicopter is only pursuing animals for three to five minutes,” said Amber Munig, the department’s big game management supervisor. “If they start to exceed that, they pull off and let those animals go so we’re not stressing them out too much.”

Once secured in a transport bag, the elk would be flown from a sling below the helicopter to the staging area, where several wildlife managers, biologists, veterinarians and others would evaluate the health of the animal, administer antibiotics and attach an identification tag and GPS tracking collar. The crew then would remove the blindfold and hobbles – and stand back and watch the elk bound into a holding pen with other quarantined animals.

This week’s historic conservation project marks only the second time Arizona has provided elk to another state. In 2000, Kentucky’s elk restoration project received a boost with 26 animals that were captured near Raymond Wildlife Area. At the time, Kentucky hoped to build a statewide herd of between 7,200 and 8,200 elk. Today, officials estimate there are between 10,000 and 15,000 elk in the Blue Grass State.

“One of the reasons we chose Arizona is because it’s one of the few states that has never had a documented case of Chronic Wasting Disease (a neurodegenerative wildlife disease that is fatal to deer and elk), said Stephen McDaniel, director of the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources. While West Virginia’s long-term plans include offering managed hunts, McDaniel added: “The thing we’re most excited about is elk-viewing opportunities.”

Arizona benefitted from the same kind of out-of-state generosity back in February 1913. In an effort to restablish an elk population, sportsmen released 83 elk from Yellowstone National Park into Cabin Draw near Chevelon Creek in GMU 4A, just east of where this week’s capture took place.

Two other transplants of elk from Yellowstone – one south of Alpine and another north of Williams – were considered successes, as Arizona’s elk population today numbers about 45,000 post-hunt adults.

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Nice. And mostly paid for by hunters' dollars and/or hunters' organizations. You can bet HSUS doesn't fund this type of conservation and recovery project.
 
They have done capture and relocate or dumb trades like elk for sage grouse here.
Typically "the experts" kill animals by mishandling or even themselves working out of their environment when doing this.
They have even lost animals in transport traveling the freeway.
Just seems that the game department would be better off staying away from the wildlife handling and treacherous equipment.
 
I have been witness to AZF&G capture and tagging/radio caller of desert big horns here in southern Nevada. Top notch group.
 
The locals here erected a corral system and the captured elk killed themselves in it.
One day the WDFW came by my house looking for bighorn sheep. Apparently they forgot to latch the gate on the transport vehicle and they came out at 55 mph. As survivors they came my way.
I spoke with the USDA shooter several times on thinning assignments and witnessed many adjustments.
Sadly an assisting helicopter landed and a passenger got out incorrectly when the rotating blades ended his life.
 
Me being a WV guy, Can't wait to see this. They have introduced them to PA and KY. Implanting them in WV will certainly fill in the gap. There will be unhappy farmers till they get used to them. Our whitetail deer numbers where we hunt have dwindled lower since I was a young kid hunting/still high numbers along many roads where we can't shoot or hunt. Insurance companies are believed to be lobbying for more liberal kill numbers. (I think we are allowed to kill 7-10 per year legally). I bet an elk will do a number to a vehicle as well as fences, hay fields and grain fields where they can till. That being said, I wouldn't mind hunting them here at home someday after they are established.
 
Wow... That's pretty cool to have a growing herd close to home. I'm sure some will be in favor of this and some not. I agree with BrienM. I too believe the insurance companies have a lot to do with population control when it comes to deer. I have seen are whitetail population decrease over the years. We just don't see the deer like we used to.
 
We have a reintroduced elk herd in the Missouri Ozarks. It's very cool to be bowhunting on a crisp October morning and hear elk bugles whistling from ridge to ridge around you. We had four big bulls hang around in our hunting area all fall and winter. They surely are majestic animals and very fun to see them feeding along right under your treestand!
 
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