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Hunting
Wolf Hunting
Washington wolf pop. nearly doubled last year, WDFW states:
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<blockquote data-quote="Mike 338" data-source="post: 774398" data-attributes="member: 41338"><p>dgarrett is correct about 10/80. Poison is how we controlled our predatory canine populations. Disease and starvation will have the greatest impact on the population but it'll be decades before hunters are willing to let the wolf population increase to the point of a major starveout. After that, the populations seem to stabilize on the low side. Until you have to many, there will never be enough disease to crash the population. </p><p></p><p>This opinion can get you tarred and feathered.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mike 338, post: 774398, member: 41338"] dgarrett is correct about 10/80. Poison is how we controlled our predatory canine populations. Disease and starvation will have the greatest impact on the population but it'll be decades before hunters are willing to let the wolf population increase to the point of a major starveout. After that, the populations seem to stabilize on the low side. Until you have to many, there will never be enough disease to crash the population. This opinion can get you tarred and feathered. [/QUOTE]
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Hunting
Wolf Hunting
Washington wolf pop. nearly doubled last year, WDFW states:
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