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"The Matriarch" is Thomas Mangelsen's most famous photo of grizzly No. 399. |
In her opinion, Christensen wrote that her decision wasn't about the "ethics of hunting," but because she believed the FWS "failed to make a reasoned decision" in deciding Yellowstone grizzlies were no longer an endangered species. She also wrote that the agency didn't consider the impact hunting Yellowstone grizzlies would have on five other bear populations in the U.S., which it was required to do, and that its analysis of threats to the roughly 700 Yellowstone grizzlies was "arbitrary and capricious."
Native American tribes and wildlife advocates filed six lawsuits last year after the FWS decision, which were consolidated into the one lawsuit that Christensen decided on, Stelloh reports.
Wyoming issued 22 hunting permits and Idaho issued one for the anticipated Yellowstone grizzly hunt. Some of those hunters had their sights on No. 399, a Yellowstone grizzly made iconic by acclaimed wildlife photographer Thomas Mangelsen. In a recent 60 Minutes segment, Mangelsen talked about how he had documented almost every facet of 399's life for more than a decade, including her giving birth to three sets of triplets and two sets of twins. "There's people here who have said that they can't wait for a season to open so they can shoot 399 because that would be the biggest prize, the biggest trophy," Mangelsen said.
More than 7,000 people entered a lottery to receive one of the Wyoming hunting permits. Mangelsen put his name in and, against all odds, snagged one of the permits. He said that if the hunt were allowed to proceed, he would only shoot with a camera instead of a gun.
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/2QZRSiX Judge halts Yellowstone grizzly hunt, says feds shouldn't have taken them off the endangered species list - Entrepreneur Generations
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