Records Fall During Sheep Week
Bozeman, Montana. January 25, 2022. The Wild Sheep Foundation (WSF) recently concluded its 45th convention, Sheep Week®, with record amounts raised again for wild sheep conservation.
At this premier event for raising dedicated funding for state, provincial, territorial, and tribal wildlife agencies through the auctioning of their special conservation permits, eleven permits were sold for record amounts, with one tying and existing record. From these twelve permits alone, $2,274,500 million was raised.
WSF is entrusted by these wildlife agencies to auction their special conservation permits, primarily for wild sheep but also for other coveted big game species.
“This was another big year for state, provincial, territorial, and tribal wildlife conservation efforts,” said Gray N. Thornton, president and CEO of the Wild Sheep Foundation. “The fact that a handful of individuals stepped at these levels to benefit entire populations in exchange for the opportunity to hunt one special animal is the definition of paying it forward. That’s the definition of conservation.”
The new records include:
- $285,000 – Taos Pueblo Rocky Mountain bighorn, Gorge Hunt ($200,000 in 2021)
- $305,000 –Wyoming Rocky Mountain bighorn ($135,000 in 2021)
- $310,000 – New Mexico Rocky Mountain bighorn ($240,000 in 2021)
- $210,000 – New Mexico Desert bighorn ($193,000 in 2021)
- $80,000 – Navajo Nation (61,000 in 2021)
- $200,000 – Taos Pueblo Rocky Mountain bighorn (tie $200,000 in 2021)
- $187,500 – Colorado Mountain bighorn ($180,000 in 2021)
- $175,000 – Nevada Desert bighorn ($165,000 in 2021
- $32,500 – Nevada Pronghorn ($27,500 in 2021)
- $345,000 – Oregon Rocky Mountain bighorn ($60,000 in 2017)
- $67,500 – Wyoming Moose ($210,000 in 2021)
- $77,000 – Nebraska Elk ($33,000 in 2020)
In all, an astounding $4,794,000 was raised from conservation permits alone in three evening auctions. Depending on the permit, eighty-five to one hundred percent of these funds are directed to these fish and wildlife agencies for big game species conservation, management, and enhancement programs. The balance that WSF retains is also directed to wild sheep and habitat conservation through its mission programs. Agencies depend on these funds and the Wild Sheep Foundation to raise them. According to the Western Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies, 74% of all wildlife agency wild sheep conservation funding comes from either an auction or raffle conservation permit.
Other Sheep Week® auction highlights include:
- $360,000 – Montana Rocky Mountain bighorn
- $230,000 – Yukon/Kluane Dall’s sheep
- $240,000 – New Mexico Big Game Enhancement Package
- $235,000 – Alberta Minister’s Rocky Mountain bighorn
- $120,000 – California Rocky Mountain bighorn, Cady Mountains
- $300,000 – Arizona Rocky Mountain bighorn
- $165,000 – Idaho Rocky Mountain bighorn, non-Hells Canyon
- $165,000 – British Columbia Rocky Mountain bighorn
“WSF is privileged to be able to market and sell these special permits,” Thornton explained. “Wild sheep would simply not exist in the numbers they are today without this specialized economy built for their benefit. This isn’t about maintaining populations; we’re looking to grow them, and the generosity of sheep hunters is absolutely making this possible.”
A conservation sheep permit entitles the successful bidder the opportunity to hunt for one sheep without the need to apply and hope to draw a limited number of tags. Of the estimated 85,000 bighorn sheep and 100,000 thinhorn sheep in existence today in Canada, the U.S., and Mexico, all tags issued annually by agencies represent a harvest of only1-3 percent of the total wild sheep population if hunters are 100% successful.
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The Wild Sheep Foundation (WSF), based in Bozeman, Mont., was founded in 1977 by wild sheep conservationists and enthusiasts. With a membership of more than 8,500 worldwide, WSF is the premier advocate for wild sheep and other mountain wildlife and their habitats. WSF has raised and expended more than $135 million on wild sheep habitat and population enhancements, education, and conservation advocacy programs in North America, Europe, and Asia to “Put and Keep Wild Sheep On the Mountain”®. These and other efforts have increased bighorn sheep populations in North America from historic lows in the 1950-60s of 25,000 to more than 85,000 today. www.wildsheepfoundation.org.