BILLINGS, Mont.(AP)
A federal judge has restored endangered species protections for
gray wolves in the Northern Rockies, derailing plans by three
states to hold public wolf hunts this fall.
U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy granted a preliminary
injunction late Friday restoring the protections for the wolves in
Montana, Wyoming and Idaho. Molloy will eventually decide whether
the injunction should be permanent.
The region has an estimated 2,000 gray wolves. They were removed
from the endangered species list in March, following a decade-long
restoration effort.
Environmentalists sued to overturn the decision, arguing wolf
numbers would plummet if hunting were allowed. They sought the
injunction in the hopes of stopping the hunts and allowing the wolf
population to continue expanding.
"There were fall hunts scheduled that would call for
perhaps as many as 500 wolves to be killed. We're delighted
those wolves will be saved," said attorney Doug Honnold with
Earthjustice, who had argued the case before Molloy on behalf of 12
environmental groups.
In his ruling, Molloy said the federal government had not met
its standard for wolf recovery, including interbreeding of wolves
between the three states to ensure healthy genetics.
"Genetic exchange has not taken place," Molloy wrote
in the 40-page decision.
Molloy said hunting and state laws allowing the killing of
wolves for livestock attacks would likely "eliminate any
chance for genetic exchange to occur."
The federal biologist who led the wolf restoration program, Ed
Bangs, defended the decision to delist wolves as "a very
biologically sound package."
"The hunting of wolves clearly wouldn't endanger
threatened wolf populations," Bangs said Friday. "We felt
the science was rock solid and that the delisting was
warranted."
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