Wildlife scientist’s family slams Elk Foundation for wolf stance

Wildlife scientist’s family slams Elk Foundation for wolf stance
This undated image provided by Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks shows a wolf in Montana. Hunters in Montana have shot about 160 wolves as the season came to an end in mid February, 2012, falling short of the state’s 220-animal quota. (Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks)

WILDLIFE ISSUES -- The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation has removed all references to its Olaus Murie conservation award after the researcher’s family objected to the group’s policy on wolves.

The Missoulian has the full story .

In a letter to RMEF President David Allen, Olaus Murie’s son, Donald Murie, said the organization’s “all-out war against wolves” is “anathema to the entire Murie family.”

RMEF started giving the Olaus Murie Award in 1999 and has presented it five or six times since then to standouts in the field of wildlife science. The Murie family has no involvement with funding or chosing the award.

Murie, who died in 1963, “was a renowned biologist and one of the country’s great champions of wildlife and wilderness,” according the website of the Wilderness Society, where he served as director.

Murie published pioneering research on the elk herd in Jackson Hole, Wyo., and became “an early, staunch defender of predators and their crucial role in ecosystems,” the site says.

Incidentally: Montana just authorized a 2012-2013 wolf trapping season to help beef up the hunting season that failed to take the quota of wolves sought by wildlife managers last year.

This week, within 24 hours of opening registration for the state's first wolf trapping certification course -- a prerequisite to getting a wolf-trapping license -- 110 people had signed up.


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