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ODFW News Release
For Immediate Release
June 6, 2003

Tag Numbers Approved for Limited Entry Big Game Hunts

Wolf Advisory Committee Appointed

PENDLETON — The Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission Friday allocated 167,281 tags for this fall’s limited entry hunts for deer, elk, pronghorn, bighorn sheep and rocky mountain goat.

The approved tag numbers represent a 3 percent overall decline compared to last fall. However, the number of tags increased slightly for bighorn, pronghorn and Roosevelt elk. A drop in antlerless tags for Rocky Mountain elk and black-tailed deer account for the bulk of the tag reductions. The reductions were necessary because agricultural damage situations have been resolved with elk in eastern Oregon and black-tailed deer populations have declined in western Oregon.

The Commission is the rule-making body for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. The seven-member panel meets monthly to establish policies and administrative regulations for the agency to implement.

Today’s step was the final one in a process that began in the spring of 2002, when staff biologists first presented the Commissioners with a conceptual look at their general 2003 season recommendations. In the fall of 2002, the Commission formally adopted regulations to select the season dates, locations and other specific information for the 2003 regulations. Today’s commission action incorporated the most recent biological data to establish 2003 controlled hunt tag numbers, which were adopted as Oregon Administrative Rules, for many deer and elk hunts and all bighorn sheep, rocky mountain goat and pronghorn hunts.

The process now begins to award controlled hunt tags to those hunters who applied by May 15. Results will be available June 20. Hunters who were not drawn in a lottery to award the limited number of tags may choose to hunt the general seasons for western Oregon deer and/or elk. There is no limit on the number of general season tags sold to hunters. Cougar and fall bear hunting seasons also are managed as general seasons.

Two permanent rule changes were made that will take effect this fall. One was to address some confusion expressed by Oregon hunters about last year’s change in the ‘evidence of sex’ rules. Rules adopted today now provide hunters the option of following either the old rules requiring the scalp with the eyes and antlers attached, or new rules, described in the 2003 Oregon Big Game Regulations, where either the head or reproductive organs must remain attached.

In addition, the Commission adopted a permanent rule that aims to prevent the importation of chronic wasting disease to Oregon. Hunters bringing meat back from states with CWD and cannot import any portion of the head or spinal column unless it has been cleaned of all meat and brain tissue. Allowed carcass parts include: cut and wrapped meat, quarters or other portions without the spinal column or head, boned out meat, hides and/or capes without head, skull plates with antlers attached and no tissue attached, upper canine teeth and finished taxidermy heads.

The following summarizes the Commission’s actions Friday:

Elk:

The Commission approved a 3 percent increase, or 438 tags, in the number of Roosevelt elk tags for 2003 and a 5 percent decline, or 2,224 tags, in the number of Rocky Mountain elk tags for 2003. Statewide, the number of controlled elk tags will decline 3 percent to 60,570 tags compared to 2002.

Roosevelt elk populations in western Oregon look healthy this year and 75 percent of population surveyed met the biological management objectives bull to cow ratios. With healthy populations, the Commission increased antlerless tags to address agricultural damage situations. In contrast, the bull to cow ratios in eastern Oregon’s Rocky Mountain elk dropped in 2003 and only 38 percent met the biological management objective.

The Commission gave preliminary approval for the 2004 general and controlled elk season dates and the addition of 12 cow hunts and the deletion of eight cow hunts. Three of the deleted hunts and thee of the added hunts will allow the annual weapons rotation in southwest Oregon. The other hunt changes were preliminarily approved because population and damage-reduction goals have been achieved or to address new agricultural damage situations.
 
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