A three-year hunting reprieve for Minnesota's struggling moose population has come to an end this fall with the planned shooting of 38 bulls by three Chippewa Indian tribes.
Twenty-five of those moose already have been killed by members of the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa in a legal hunt that went against the wishes of the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR).
Now the state is negotiating with the Grand Portage and Bois Forte bands for significantly smaller, ceremonial hunts expected to take place before year's end. The targeting of moose in 2016 ends a three-year period when state and tribal game managers stopped moose hunting in the face of an alarming population decline in the state's Arrowhead region.
"We just don't feel it's appropriate to hunt moose in this time when they have declined significantly," said Steve Merchant, DNR wildlife populations program manager.
While there has been no public furor over the renewed harvest of antlered moose by Indian hunters — a practice that state and tribal game managers agree will not threaten the Minnesota herd — the Fond du Lac hunt has added to existing natural resource friction between the state and Indian communities.
Last month, Gov. Mark Dayton and DNR Commissioner Tom Landwehr were strongly rebuked by Minnesota and Wisconsin Chippewa bands for deliberately exceeding the state's 2016 allotment of Mille Lacs walleyes.
Seth Moore, director of biology and environment for the Grand Portage band, said there is no connection between the moose and walleye issues.
He said the 2013-2015 moose hunting hiatus stemmed from sociological concern at a time when uncertainty surrounded a plunge in the state's moose population. From a peak of 8,840 moose surveyed in 2006, the DNR now estimates the population to be under 4,000 animals. Brainworm transmitted by deer is viewed as a prime contributor to the decline, but ticks, predation by wolves and bears, and climate change also have taken a toll.