FWP Seeks Comments On Bighorn Sheep Reintroduction

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A photo of some bighorn sheep taken on August 30, 2019.
Barry Dale Gilfry

Little Belt Mountains To Start Inhabiting Big Horn Sheep

The State of Montana is seeking public comment on the environmental effects of reintroducing bighorn sheep, a native species, into the Little Belt Mountains in central Montana.

Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks (FWP) opened its comment period earlier this month on July 3.

Wildlife biologist Jay Kolbe says feedback reestablishing the bighorn sheep in its historic range has been positive so far.

“If you have a sheep herd in a fairly wild landscape, we don’t expect a lot of direct conflict," Kolbe said.

Kolbe says the Little Belt Mountains were a natural habitat for bighorn sheep before the turn of the 20th century. That’s around the time that overhunting and disease contributed to the animal’s decline in the West.

According to the environmental assessment, the state began reintroduction attempts in the 1940s.

FWP now hopes to grow the tiny bighorn sheep population wandering the Little Belt Mountains. Kolbe says to do that, it’ll relocate 50 sheep from a healthy herd in northeast Montana’s Fergus County with hopes the population in the mountain range will gradually increase.He says FWP may begin reintroduction as soon as December.

Copyright 2020 Yellowstone Public Radio

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Kayla Desroches reports for Yellowstone Public Radio in Billings. She was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, and stayed in the city for college, where she hosted a radio show that featured serialized dramas like the Shadow and Suspense. In her pathway to full employment, she interned at WNYC in New York City and KTOO in Juneau, Alaska. She then spent a few years on the island of Kodiak, Alaska, where she transitioned from reporter to news director before moving to Montana.