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Idaho Fish and Game

Stock photo of a gray wolf

Fish and Game completes targeted wolf management actions in Unit 4 to support elk recovery

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Effort focused on improving elk survival by lowering predation by wolves

Idaho Fish and Game completed targeted wolf management actions on Feb. 21 and 22 that removed three wolves from Unit 4 in the Panhandle elk zone. This marks the first time such actions have been implemented in Idaho’s Panhandle Region.

The effort, when combined with recent success of local trappers, substantially reduced the size of a single wolf pack in a key part of the unit.

Recent data indicate that elk numbers in Unit 4 have declined, with predation on elk calves a contributing factor. To promote elk population growth, Fish and Game continues to address overall predation impacts by offering expanded opportunities to harvest black bears, mountain lions and wolves in Unit 4 through extended seasons and additional-tag availability. In addition, Fish and Game has worked with the U.S. Forest Service for years to improve habitat for elk in Unit 4 and will continue to do so.

Stock photo of a gray wolf

Fish and Game prioritizes regulated hunting and trapping as the primary tools for managing wolf populations; however, targeted control actions are used to address specific conflicts and in situations where hunting and trapping have not been sufficient to meet management goals. 

Due to a 2024 federal court injunction affecting wolf trapping seasons, harvest of wolves by trappers has declined statewide, including in Unit 4, affecting progress toward the state’s wolf population goal and the ability to reduce wolf predation on elk.

The primary goal of the recent action was to reduce predation and improve elk survival in a population that is underperforming. Similar management efforts have been conducted annually in the Lolo elk zone in the Clearwater Region over the past decade. The objective is not to eliminate wolves, but to maintain a smaller, self-sustaining wolf population in Unit 4 that reduces predation risk on elk populations. 

The effort was conducted under the guidance of Fish and Game’s 2024–2030 Idaho Elk Management Plan and in alignment with the Idaho Fish and Game Commission-approved 2023–2028 Idaho Gray Wolf Management Plan, which strives to balance wolf conservation in Idaho with responsive and effective conflict resolution. 

For more information or questions about the recent wolf management actions, please contact the Panhandle Regional office at (208) 769-1414. 

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