An idea first floated a dozen years ago to capture wild elk and move them to an area in northeastern Minnesota is two years away from reality — a progression firmed up by the recent hirings of two full-time elk specialists.
This spring, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources big game biologist Kelsie LaSharr was promoted to the new permanent position of elk coordinator to oversee the establishment of Minnesota’s fourth wild elk herd.
Similarly, the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa just hired Makenzie Henk, a wildlife biologist who studied Roosevelt elk in California. She was hired from California’s Catalina Island Conservancy and starts work July 29.
“She’s going to be the elk biologist for Fond du Lac and our lead on all things elk,” said Fond du Lac wildlife biologist Mike Schrage, who has led the band’s exploration of elk starting in 2013. The DNR has become a full-fledged partner in the project, also supported by the Legislature ($2.3 million in 2023), University of Minnesota, the federally funded Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, the Minnesota Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund and Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, among others.
Plans call for the new herd to be located around the Fond du Lac reservation in an area roughly bounded by Cloquet, Cromwell, Floodwood and the St. Louis River. Schrage and LaSharr said the first capture and relocation of animals is planned for the first three months of 2026. The animals will be sourced from two of the three existing wild herds roaming in northwestern Minnesota.
“The number will depend on how many elk will be available,” Schrage said. “We will be trying to move what we consider to be surplus animals.”
Fond du Lac and the DNR expect to capture and move 12 to 20 elk in the first year, Schrage said. The process will be repeated yearly, or as often as possible, until the new northeastern herd is self-sustaining, with a population large enough to be resilient against predation by the region’s wolves and bears.


Ultimately, state-licensed hunters and tribal hunters would be able to harvest a limited number of bulls and cows from the new herd — just as they already do in the northwest region. But as Schrage has said in the past, hunting opportunities won’t be realized for years. Eco-tourism is viewed as another future benefit of the project. Just as in the northwest, the elk won’t be fenced.