N.W.T. harvesters will get more training to kill wolves, help caribou population - Action News
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N.W.T. harvesters will get more training to kill wolves, help caribou population

The government of the Northwest Territories and theTch government are planning to give more training to people interested in harvesting wolves on the winter ranges of the Bathurst and Bluenose-East caribou herds.

Territory's aerial wolf cull program began in April to reduce caribou predators

The government of the Northwest Territories and theTch government are planning to give more training to people interested in harvesting wolves on the winter ranges of the Bathurst and Bluenose-East caribou herds. (Dawn Villella/The Associated Press)

The government of the Northwest Territories and theTch government are planning to give more training to people interested in harvesting wolves on the winter ranges of the Bathurst and Bluenose-East caribou herds.

Earlier this year, theWek'ezhRenewable Resources Boardapproved the territorial andTch governments' plan to managethe wolf population as a pilot program. It centres around an incentive program for harvesters, who can qualify for at least $1,200 per wolf kill.

Wolves are known to be one of the key predators of theBathurst and Bluenose-East caribou herds.Many researchers saycaribou numbers are at a record low,so wildlife conservation officials and Indigenous governmentshave been working together to preserve the current numbers.

This week, the territorial andTch governmentsput forth their final management plan for review by the resources board for 2021 to 2024.

Getting more people onthe land

There aren't many changes from the initial plan proposed earlier this year, said John Nishi, technical advisor for theTch government, in a press briefing Thursday.

But he said the revised plan includes more details about what harvesters need to be successful and how the governments can help with that.

Tammy Steinwand-Deschambeault, director of culture and lands protection with theTch government, says it's bolstering its workshops for harvesters, so they know how to best hunt the wolves. The governments alsohope to better track the animals forharvesters and provide them with some tools, like skinning knives, so they can complete the harvest themselves.

Steinwand-Deschambeaultalso says people are learning how to harvest the wolves in a culturally appropriate way; she says for many people living in nearby communities, it's important that very little blood leaks from the animal. She says that can help ensure the wolves won't come to the communities.

The purple and green in this graphic show the winter ranges of the Bathurst and Bluenose-East caribou herds from December 2019 to March 2020. The muted green space shows the incentive area for harvesters killing wolves. (Department of Environment and Natural Resources)

Harvesters are also learninghow to best set a snare and how to prepare a pelt, she added.

The governmentsalso want to make sure the information they collect from the hunters over time is "consistent, detailed ... sowe can really understand the effort they've taken to hunt wolves,"Nishi says.

Right now, there is one known wolf harvester in all theTch communities, Steinwand-Deschambeaultsays. But theTch government wants to change that and get more people out on the land.

It hopes the additional training and workshops will help make that happen.

'Not that many wolves on a huge range'

According to the territorial government, there are 49 wolves on the Bathurst winter range, and121 on the Bluenose-East range.

The plan is to reduce those numbers by 60 to 80 per cent.

"Not that many wolves on a huge range," said Brett Elkin, assistant deputy minister for theDepartment of Environment and Natural Resources (ENR), in the briefing. He says where the wolves are located plays a huge part in harvesters' success.

According toRobert Mulders, a carnivore biologist for ENR who was also part of the briefing, the Bathurst herd was far away from the Tibbitt to Contwoytowinter road northeast of Yellowknife this season, which meant so were the wolves.

He says some were heading into boreal areas with deep snow, making it that much harder to catch the wolves.

This year, the territorial government saysharvesters killed 31 wolves in the Bathurst range and 54 in the Bluenose-East range 63 and 45 per cent of the wolves in those areas, respectively. To reach the 60 to 80 per cent goal, the territorial government shot the rest of the necessary wolves in the Bluenose-East range via air.

Miss the briefing? Watch it here: