Wolf hunt starts with archery season
Montana’s second regulated wolf hunt
kicked off Saturday, Sept. 3, with the start of the archery
season.
The statewide quota for 220 wolves
includes archery season, early rifle season in wilderness areas and
the general big game season that opens in late October.
Northwest Montana is divided into wolf
districts with quotas ranging from three to 19 wolves. The smallest
quota is in a district that covers parts of the Bob Marshall
Wilderness, where rifle hunting will start Sept. 15. The first
harvested wolf in the 2009 season was shot in the wilderness.
Fish, Wildlife and Parks Region 1
wildlife manager Jim Williams reminds hunters that if a wolf is
harvested, hunters must report the kill within 12 hours so the
state can keep tabs on quotas. Once quotas are met, districts will
be immediately closed.
By last week, nearly six thousand $19
resident wolf licenses had been sold, along with forty-two $350
nonresident licenses. FWP license bureau chief Hank Worsech said he
expects license sales to pick up before the general big-game season
and approach numbers similar to those in 2009.
A total of 15,414 wolf licenses were
sold to Montana residents in 2009 for the state’s first-ever
regulated wolf hunt, along with 88 nonresident licenses.