Managing Game on the Wind River Reservation

Elk, deer, moose, mule deer, bighorn sheep, pronghorn and other wild ungulates that migrate freely across Wyoming’s vast landscapes also cross more than two million acres of tribal lands on the Wind River Indian Reservation in central Wyoming. Here tribal sovereignty, the political authority retained by the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho since before Wyoming statehood, influences wildlife conservation dynamics.

The Shoshone and Arapaho have authority to manage game on the reservation under tribal regulations. The joint Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho Tribal Game and Fish Department manages big game species. Since 1972, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologists have assisted the tribes with big game management. Within the reservation, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department has a management role only on private property owned by non-Indians, such as the lands of the Riverton Reclamation Project.

The tribes were early to recognize the importance of undeveloped habitat for wildlife. In the late 1930s, decades before the passage of the 1964 Wilderness Act, they created the Wind River Roadless Area, which prohibited development in a prime hunting ground encompassing 188,000 acres of the Wind River Range.

The Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho tribes first instituted a tribal game code on the Wind River Reservation in 1947, rescinded it in 1953 and reimposed it in 1984. Since then, ungulate populations, including mule deer like these, have steadily increased. BLM photo.

Game numbers fluctuate

Game populations on the Wind River Indian Reservation fluctuated under a variety of management regimes throughout the 20th century. In 1906, lands north of the Wind River were opened for non-Indian homesteading. For the next 35 years, the state of Wyoming regulated hunting seasons and harvest quotas north of the river. Pius Moss, an Arapaho elder, said this led to plentiful game in that area, particularly in the Owl Creek Mountains. Meanwhile, subsistence hunting by tribal members reduced game numbers south of the Wind River.

After 1939, wildlife management on the northern portion of the reservation returned to the tribes. Ungulates rebounded when the tribes instituted a game code in 1948, restricting harvest to one bull elk and one buck deer during a September–December season. In 1953, the tribes rescinded the code, defaulting to unrestricted harvest.

In 1979 and 1980, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist Bruce Smith interviewed tribal members who said game numbers had further declined with 4-wheel-drive travel, high-powered rifles, and other factors. Fish and Wildlife Service biologists and the Tribal Game and Fish Department counted low numbers during aerial surveys in the late 1970s. They recommended regulating hunting to boost game populations.

Leaders of both tribes drafted a new game code in 1979 to reinstate harvest quotas and hunting seasons. The concept grew controversial due to differing perspectives on tribal sovereignty, subsistence hunting rights, game conservation and the accuracy of wildlife surveys. The Shoshone Tribe adopted the game code and several Arapaho Business Council members supported it, but the Arapaho General Council, an assembly of tribal voters, voted not to adopt it. Ultimately a U.S. District Court ruling ended the stalemate between the tribes, and the code was implemented in 1984.

Today some who opposed the game code still feel it was unwarranted. Others assert the code restored migratory big game populations to numbers that allow sustainable harvest. As of 2017, the reservation was home to about 10,000 elk, an increase from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service estimate of 2,550 in 1982. Today, 1,000 Shoshone and Arapaho tribal members actively hunt big game on the reservation.

Governmental, tribal wildlife agencies work together

In the decades following the enactment of the game code, the Tribal Game and Fish Department worked with the Wyoming Game and Fish Department and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to release pronghorn and bighorn sheep on the reservation to boost their numbers.

Northern Arapaho leaders started planning to reintroduce Yellowstone bison near Wind River Canyon in 2009, but ultimately the Arapaho General Council decided against it, largely due to concerns of potential brucellosis transmission to cattle. The disease can cause cattle to abort their young. In 2016 and 2017, the Eastern Shoshone Tribe reintroduced 20 bison to the reservation, the start of what some hope will one day become a much bigger herd of wild, free-roaming bison.

Through all these changes, migratory ungulates—and more recently grizzlies
 and wolves—have moved freely across the boundaries of the reservation and into the mountains of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. In 2018, the Tribal Game and Fish Department, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the University of Wyoming began mapping elk- and deer-migration corridors on the Wind River Indian Reservation in detail, gathering information that will aid management on these interconnected landscapes in the heart of Wyoming.

Recovery of Ungulate Herds

The Wind River Indian Reservation is home to many wild, migratory ungulates—cloven-hoofed animals—on a landscape that remains largely undeveloped. Big game populations (see graph, above) have increased since the 1980s due to tribal leaders managing sustainable harvest as directed by the game code, implemented in 1984. Graph from Wild Migrations: Atlas of Wyoming’s Ungulates, Oregon State University Press © 2018 University of Wyoming and University of Oregon.

Migration Routes near Wind River

Animals find prime winter range in the foothills of the Owl Creek Mountains and Wind River Range, and summer in the adjacent mountains, sometimes undertaking long-distance migrations north to the Absaroka Range or west to the Gros Ventre Range. A cooperative effort to study and map the mule deer and elk migrations of the Wind River Indian Reservation began in 2018. Map from Wild Migrations: Atlas of Wyoming’s Ungulates, Oregon State University Press © 2018 University of Wyoming and University of Oregon.
Animals find prime winter range in the foothills of the Owl Creek Mountains and Wind River Range, and summer in the adjacent mountains, sometimes undertaking long-distance migrations north to the Absaroka Range or west to the Gros Ventre Range. A cooperative effort to study and map the mule deer and elk migrations of the Wind River Indian Reservation began in 2018. Map from Wild Migrations: Atlas of Wyoming’s Ungulates, Oregon State University Press © 2018 University of Wyoming and University of Oregon. Click to enlarge


Editor’s note: Thanks to the following consultants on the Wind River Indian Reservation who worked with the author on the Wild Migrations project: James Trosper (Eastern Shoshone, Northern Arapaho), High Plains American Indian Research Institute, University of Wyoming; Eastern Shoshone Tribe: Jason Baldes, Curtis Barney, Roberta Engavo, Zedora Enos, John Washakie; Northern Arapaho Tribe: Mark Soldier Wolf, Herbert Welsh, Crawford White. And thanks to Wyoming Humanities, which supported development of this article.

Resources

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Illustrations

  • The photo of the mule deer was taken by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. Used with thanks.
  • The map of migration routes and the graph of ungulate populations on the Wind River Indian Reservation are from pp. 132-133 of Wild Migrations: Atlas of Wyoming’s Ungulates, Oregon State University Press, © 2018 University of Wyoming and University of Oregon. Used with permission and thanks.