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Game & Fish says it will feed elk at Dell Creek

The department will seek a temporary special permit for Winter 2021-22

JACKSON HOLE, Wyo. — With the future of supplemental winter feeding of elk in question, Wyoming Game and Fish Department says it will follow through with plans to feed in Dell Creek this winter.

Game and Fish has requested a permit from the U.S. Forest Service to maintain elk feeding operations at the Dell Creek feedground for the 2021-22 winter. The department, in partnership with the USFS, is working to allow for continued feeding of elk this winter at the location.

“Game and Fish believes a recent court decision provides clarity in what was required to continue feedground operations at Dell Creek, and we’re interested in a pathway forward,” said Richard King, chief of the Game and Fish wildlife division.

The Dell Creek elk feedground is situated at the northern edge of Sublette County. Over the 2020-21 winter, 529 elk attended the location for supplemental feed. The main purpose of the feedground is to mitigate brucellosis disease concerns.

“Not having the ability to feed at Dell Creek could have dire consequences in terms of dispersing elk that could spread brucellosis to cattle, cause damage to private land and result in elk frequenting the highway,” King said.

Game and Fish is committed to maintaining feeding operations at Dell Creek and says it has no intention of closing the feedground.

“We’re planning to continue our operations for this year and will exercise best-practices for elk feeding at Dell Creek, just like we do with all other department-operated elk feedgrounds. That includes beginning feeding as late as possible, patterning feed to spread out elk and ending feeding as soon as reasonable,” King said.

The department is continuing a public process to gather input on Game and Fish’s elk feedgrounds management plan. The elk feedgrounds steering team, charged with developing a long-term feedgrounds management plan for the agency, consists of 13 Game and Fish personnel closely tied to the elk feedgrounds program along with five representatives from partnering federal agencies, which include the National Elk Refuge, Bridger-Teton National Forest, Bureau of Land Management and Grand Teton National Park.

“Given the growing complexities of feedgrounds, I feel strongly we are at a point where we needed to talk to the public and give all the facts on the department’s approach,” said Game and Fish director Brian Nesvik, “People may be familiar with feedgrounds as it relates to their interests but don’t know the ‘why’ behind the Game and Fish decisions. This is an educational effort.”

Elk have utilized feedgrounds in northwest Wyoming since the early 1900s. Approximately 14,000 elk benefit from supplemental feeding during the winter months on 22 separate Game and Fish-operated feedgrounds in Teton, Sublette and Lincoln counties.

An additional 8,000 elk are fed at the National Elk Refuge in Jackson managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Supplemental feeding is a complicated and often contentious issue with biological, social, economic and political considerations.

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