ROYAL BLUE WMA SCHEDULED TO RECEIVE
TRANSPORTED ELK FROM LBL
The
Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency (TWRA) is planning to move 36 elk from
U.S. Forest Service’s Land Between the Lakes (LBL) in Kentucky to the
Royal Blue Wildlife Management Area in Campbell County Tennessee on
Saturday, March 8, 2008.
At approximately 10:00 a.m. (Eastern Time) on Saturday morning, the elk
will be released on Royal Blue, which is part of Tennessee’s 670,000 acre
Elk Restoration Zone. The release location will be on Massengale Mountain
where the first elk were released in 2000.
Plans are to load 36 elk on four trailers on Friday and haul them to the
release site, where they will be held overnight and released the next
morning.
This release is tentative pending results
of disease testing of the animals located in the Elk/Bison Prairie at LBL.
All the elk located in the Prairie have received a clean bill of health
and the results of bison testing should be received by March 1.
The public is invited to come and experience this important event.
Viewers should wear footwear appropriate for rougher terrain and be
prepared to walk some distance.
One of the objectives of LBL elk herd was to provide surplus animals for
elk restoration projects. This will be the second time that elk have been
transported from LBL to Tennessee.
Of
the 36 elk scheduled for release, there are 19 adult bulls, 4 male calves,
9 adult cows, and 4 female calves. All of the elk, except for 5 of the
smaller calves, have been fitted with radio collars, so that researchers
can follow their progress after release.
Prior to this fifth release, there have been 167 elk released over a
four-year period, from 2000-2003, in the restoration zone. Tennessee’s
elk herd currently stands at an estimated 200-250 animals.
The project is a joint effort between U.S. Forest Service, Rocky Mountain
Elk Foundation, Campbell Outdoor Recreation Association (CORA), the UT
Veterinary School, USDA, Animal Plant Health Inspection School (APHIS),
LBL Bugle Corp, LBL Association, and TWRA staff and volunteers.
Mr. Gary Cox of Sundowner of Tennessee in Sweetwater contributed to this
release by loaning two of the four trailers which will be used to
transport the elk. The other two trailers are property of the U.S. Forest
Service and TWRA.
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