Elk overrun Rocky Mountain National Park(Park service weighs options, including a controversial hunt)?
Posted by admin on October 31st, 2010 filed in Garden Bird ControlROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK, Colo. - In Rocky Mountain National Park, the only thing more popular than the breathtaking scenery is the elk.
There are traffic jams and lawn chair gatherings just to watch — and listen — to the elk’s bugle.
But these majestic beasts have become just a little too comfortable here. According to park officials there are about 1,000 too many.
Some 3,000 of them now hang around in places they shouldn’t be. Grass that’s usually knee-high has been nibbled down. White-barked aspen trees are now scarred black by voracious elk appetites.
“You have a lot of dead trees in this area,” says the park service’s Kyle Patterson. “So you have no regeneration. No new growth.”
And the elk are pushing other wildlife out, says park service biologist Therese Johnson — songbirds, woodpeckers, various sorts of butterflies and other insects, and beaver.
Roving bands of elk wander into the nearby town of Estes Park, munching on lawns and gardens. And on the golf course, there’s new meaning to the phrase “play through.”
Police Chief Lowell Richardson now battles his own unique gang problem.
“We’ve actually had pedestrians or residents attacked by an elk during calving season,” Richardson says.
Possible solutions are in a 500-page proposal from the National Park Service, including:
Inject the females with birth control.
Bring a few wolves down from Yellowstone and let the laws of nature take over.
Do nothing … and watch the elk multiply.
The most controversial option is to kill 1,000 elk, using wildlife agents with silencers on their rifles. The park service maintains any killing would be done in the dead of night.
“Having that done in front of park visitors,” says Vaughn Baker, the superintendent of Rocky Mountain National Park, “that’s probably not part of the part experience we want to have out there.”
But down on the banks of the Big Thompson, the idea of shooting elk doesn’t sit well with tourists like Mitchell Dugger.
“I think there’s some better ways to do it,” he says, “than taking them out with guns.”
For the next two months the park service will chew over the public’s response to how it plans to control what’s become too much of a good thing.
QUESTION
List three effects to nature that have been caused by the large number of Elks in the Rocky Mountain National Park.
Considering the list of possible solutions to reduce the number of elks, which one do you think is the best option and why?
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October 31st, 2010 at 4:51 am
Auction off some archery tags and let real hunters go in there and kill some elk. The NPS could make some extra money and it would be no more dangerous than bringing in wolves again. I also would agree with the transplant idea above.
Injecting the cows with birth control is just grotesque - anyone should be horrified by that idea. I’m just as appalled by the idea of agents going out with silenced rifles at night and slaughtering elk by spotlight or night vision scopes.
I think if you bring in the wolves again, in a matter of time, the elk populations will be at a dangerously low level and visitors to the park will be getting attacked by hungry wolves.
October 31st, 2010 at 4:51 am
Here in Arkansas state parks commonly become overpopulated with whitetail.
While tourists in the parks might not like the sight of hunting I’m certain they dont like to view starving and diseased deer either.
We have controlled hunts in our parks that become overpopulated. Archers come in and harvest a set number of does and all the meat is donated to those in need.
It seems downright foolish that they would consider hunting with silenced rifles at night time rather than safely hunting with a bow during daylight. Reintroduction of wolves is only a temporary fix.. then you get to deal with a wolf overpopulation problem later down the road. Birth control.. thats just stupid.