Learn how to submit comments below
When it comes to iconic public lands cherished by sportspeople, Wyoming’s 3.4-million-acre Bridger-Teton National Forest stands out as one of America’s crown jewels. It’s one of few places left in the Lower 48 where long-distance mule deer, elk, and pronghorn antelope migrations have persisted for centuries. Four species of native cutthroat trout are found in the forest’s cold-water streams. Bighorn sheep, moose, mountain goats, bison, grizzly and black bears, wolves, and mountain lions all call this wild country home.
Sportspeople who know the Bridger-Teton understand that success in this rugged landscape requires careful preparation, patience, and persistence. Ensuring that a revised management plan for the Bridger-Teton National Forest incorporates the values of sportspeople, the wildlife, and wild places we love into the final plan is no different. After 35 years, the process to revise the management plan for the forest is moving forward, and the first step is to provide feedback on the Draft Assessment report.
The Assessment is an outline of the current conditions of the Forest and will be used to guide proposed changes to management of the Forest during the future phases of the revision process. That’s why we need sportsmen and women to help ensure that the Draft Assessment includes the best available science and information. TRCP staff have taken the time to review the assessment and have identified the need for additional big game science and data to be added to the report. Suggested comment language is provided below.
Please submit your comments to the Forest Service to ensure big game populations continue to thrive in this region. Don’t delay, comments are due August 24!
Suggested Comments for the Draft Forest Plan Assessment:
Big Game Migration
Wyoming is home to some of the last remaining long-distance big game migrations in North America, many of which bisect the Bridger-Teton National Forest. I appreciate the efforts of federal land managers to follow the direction of the Wyoming Game and Fish when making land management decisions that will impact wildlife populations. I appreciate the inclusion of state designated and identified big game corridors in the draft assessment, however, additional state-led migration research and data, including the iconic Wyoming Range mule deer migration, are missing from the draft assessment. Forest planning regulations require the best available scientific information to be included in the Assessment, and in order to meet this requirement, additional research and data must be included. Please include, at a minimum, big game habitat maps relevant to the planning area from the USGS Migration Atlas Volumes One through Four.
Outdoor Recreation
As an avid sportsperson, I appreciate the opportunity to explore our public lands throughout the year and recognize their importance to local communities, as identified in the assessment. I have also seen the rapid growth of outdoor recreation on the Bridger-Teton National Forest and want recreation opportunities to be managed to avoid negative impacts to our wildlife populations. Thank you for including current seasonal closures to conserve wintering wildlife and migration corridors along with some research on disturbance impacts. Please expand this section to include the best available scientific information surrounding impacts of recreation on wildlife including summer range, winter range, and dispersed recreation.
Big Game Crucial Range and Parturition
The Supplemental Assessment states “Identifying high priority conservation areas (See Figure 15 and Figure 16) allows managers to focus on key areas to protect. Among the top habitat types to protect are: stopover habitat sites, crucial ranges, parturition areas (i.e., birthing grounds), areas utilized by multiple herds and/or species, travel bottlenecks, and other areas where sensitive behaviors occur” (Page 49). While some of this data is included in the assessment, big game crucial range and parturition areas are not. This information informs managers to how big game use the Forest and should be included in the Forest Plan assessment to create a clear picture of current conditions.
Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the draft assessment. Including the “Best Available Scientific Information” in the Assessment is a crucial step in developing updates to the Forest Plan that incorporates the needs of our local communities, respects the distinct roles of state and federal agencies, and conserves the forest’s outstanding resources for future generations.
The Long Haul
Sportspeople are used to patiently waiting for the right opportunity and persistently pursuing our goals. Getting involved in the Assessment now helps prepare us to engage in the Forest Plan revision over the next few years. The TRCP and our partners will be here to help guide you throughout the process. Thank you for being a sportsperson advocate for the Bridger-Teton!
Check out “The Citizen’s Guide to Forest Planning” to learn more.
More questions or want to get involved? Please contact Wyoming field manager Josh Metten at jmetten@trcp.org.
Learn more about the forest plan revision HERE.








