Home World News Canada news N.W.T. bush pilot makes plea to end ‘fruitless’ aerial wolf cull
Canada news

N.W.T. bush pilot makes plea to end ‘fruitless’ aerial wolf cull

Share
n w t bush pilot makes plea to end fruitless aerial wolf cull
Share
wolves stock photo

A bush pilot with more than 35 years of experience ferrying wildlife researchers over the N.W.T. barrenlands says a plan to kill wolves by air is “an utter waste of time, money and professional careers.” 

Dave Olesen made the comment in a nine-page letter to the Wek’èezhìı Renewable Resources Board (WRRB) on Friday, the last day for the public to submit comments on the N.W.T. and Tłı̨chǫ governments’ joint wolf management plan. 

The plan calls for killing 60 to 80 per cent of wolves that prey on the Bathurst and Bluenose East caribou herds every year for the next four years. On-the-ground harvesters will be given the first chance to take out the wolves, followed by marksmen in a helicopter in late March if on-the-ground kills aren’t sufficient. 

“I have real concerns about the wisdom, the efficiency and what I predict will ultimately be the fruitless outcome of this program,” Olesen wrote. 

Pilot project results

The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (ENR) has said killing wolves, which can kill and eat 23 to 29 caribou per year, is necessary to address a dire situation. Populations of both caribou herds have plummeted to the point where N.W.T. harvesters were banned from hunting any Bathurst caribou in 2016, and harvesters are only allowed 173 bulls from the Bluenose East herd per year. 

Similar restrictions are in place in Nunavut, where the animals migrate each summer.  

A pilot project that ran this past April and May gave a taste of how successful an aerial wolf cull might be.

In 10 days during those two months, a total of 36 wolves were shot by marksmen in helicopters, according to a draft report posted to the WRRB public registry. 

Olesen compared the effort to starting in Wekweeti, flying around the entire planet at the 64th parallel, and arriving back in Wekweeti having killed 36 wolves. He condemned the project as “difficult and dangerous” as well as “incredibly expensive.” 

He also raised the possibility that there are fewer wolves on the barrenlands than the department believes. ENR estimated there were 49 wolves in the Bathurst caribou range and 121 in the Bluenose East range. 

Olesen said he flew over the area in 2018, 2019 and February and March of this year, and didn’t see any wolf or kill site, which he says are unmistakable in wintertime. 

“The absence of wolves on the Bathurst caribou range has, since about 2012, been nothing short of astounding,” he wrote.

COVID-19 disruption

The draft report on this year’s hunt notes that bad weather and COVID-19 were both factors in the low kill rate. The pandemic meant that aircraft had to be based in Yellowknife rather than other communities, which meant time was wasted ferrying to starting points. 

The pandemic also meant that lab tests to determine whether the kills were humane had to be postponed. 

In an emailed statement to CBC, an ENR spokesperson said, “We have heard loud and clear from our communities and co-management partners that more needs to be done to manage predators to support declining caribou herds.”

One other letter submitted to the Wek’èezhìı Renewable Resources Board acknowledged that the desire for a cull is real, but said that’s not a good reason to do it. 

“The easiest purported solutions, in this case a cull, are often done to appease people by offering some solution without knowing that it is the best solution,” wrote Garth L. Wallbridge, who identified himself as an environmentalist and Indigenous person who hunts. 

The board will begin reviewing the materials it’s received next week, and will issue its decision on Jan. 8. 

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Articles
Japanese immigrants fought for Canada during WW I while denied the right to vote
Canada news

Remembering Those Who Served — Japanese Canadians in WWI, Overlooked at Home

It’s strange and a little bitter how memory works. For decades, the...

Advocates concerned temporary immigration cuts don't address systemic issues
Canada news

Cutting Temporary Visas Won’t Fix Deep Problems — But It Will Hurt Some People

A big change is coming. The new Carney government has announced a...

MMA gym owners, coaches ID’d at secretive neo-Nazi event in B.C.
Canada news

MMA gym owners, coaches identified at secret neo-Nazi event in B.C.

Several prominent white supremacist groups convened in Vancouver this summer for a...

Canadian history is dotted with floor-crossers. Voters haven't always been thrilled
Canada news

When MPs Change Sides: Why Floor-Crossing Feels Risky — and Sometimes Pays Off

There’s something a little theatrical about an MP walking across the floor...