The California Department of Fish and
Game (DFG) will begin relocating a 30-year-old Concord-area tule elk
herd to free-range public lands Feb. 13. DFG established the herd at
Concord Naval Weapons Station in the mid-1970s to supply animals for new
or existing herds throughout the state. The four-day operation will move
approximately 46 animals to herds in Lake, Colusa, and Solano counties.
“The Department of Fish and Game’s efforts have helped bring back the
tule elk from the brink of extinction to sustainable numbers,” said DFG
Elk Program coordinator Joe Hobbs. “The herd at the Concord site is no
longer needed for surplus animals, so the department has decided to
remove the elk and set them free on public lands.”
Wildlife experts believe the herd holds as many as five 2-year old
bulls, up to 25 adult bulls, and as many as 16 cows and calves on the
3,000-acre site, located at the south edge of Suisun Bay in Contra Costa
County. The capture has been timed to allow the bulls to drop their
antlers but before the 2006 calving season.
Capture methods may involve the use of a net gun or a tranquilizer
dart shot from a helicopter, ground darting, baiting into a corral trap,
or herding the elk into a corral trap with the use of a helicopter or
ground teams. Ten ground teams made up of DFG wildlife biologists and
volunteers from the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation will conduct the
operation using all-terrain vehicles with attached sleds.
Once an animal is netted, ground crews will move in to subdue it
before transporting it to the base camp. The physical restraint
techniques are designed to protect both the animals and the crew from
injury. A large bull can weigh up to 900 pounds. At the base camp, a
veterinary team will check the animal’s overall health, take biological
samples and then vaccinate it with a broad range of appropriate
antibiotics. After the exam, the elk will then be loaded into stock
trailers and driven to the release sites.
DFG will move the herd to open ranges in the Cache Creek area in Lake
and Colusa counties. A small group of young bulls will move to the
Grizzly Island Wildlife Area in Solano County.
“We believe it’s in the best interest of the elk to allow them to
thrive in a free range environment,” said Hobbs. “At the current site we
don’t have personnel to monitor the elk in case they get caught in
fences, fall into the canal, or have other problems associated with
confined herds.”
The Concord Naval Weapons Station, officially known as Detachment
Concord, has closed the Inland Area of the base under the 2005 Base
Realignment and Closure process. Ownership of the Tidal Area of the
property has transferred to the U.S. Army. Due to workload and budget
reductions, the military placed the area into a reduced operational
status in 1999.
Tule elk’s recovery has been enormously successful. Its numbers have
grown from only one small herd at the turn of the 20th century to more
than 3,800 animals in 22 different herds today. This subspecies of elk
is endemic to California. Tule elk population growth has been so
impressive that DFG no longer has space to establish new herds and must
remove animals in confined herds every few years to keep the population
from exceeding the carrying capacity.
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