Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: buckfvr on January 13, 2014, 11:02:50 AMQuote from: JLS on January 13, 2014, 10:07:04 AMI highly doubt blacktails will be protected in 20 years, but again that's just my humble opinion.Not in that sense, but I could see no shooting zones restricting fire arms along much of the I-5 corridore, east and west into developed areas.........so many dang people over there.......That would be a very legitimate concern.
Quote from: JLS on January 13, 2014, 10:07:04 AMI highly doubt blacktails will be protected in 20 years, but again that's just my humble opinion.Not in that sense, but I could see no shooting zones restricting fire arms along much of the I-5 corridore, east and west into developed areas.........so many dang people over there.......
I highly doubt blacktails will be protected in 20 years, but again that's just my humble opinion.
Quote from: JLS on January 13, 2014, 11:59:27 AMQuote from: buckfvr on January 13, 2014, 11:02:50 AMQuote from: JLS on January 13, 2014, 10:07:04 AMI highly doubt blacktails will be protected in 20 years, but again that's just my humble opinion.Not in that sense, but I could see no shooting zones restricting fire arms along much of the I-5 corridore, east and west into developed areas.........so many dang people over there.......That would be a very legitimate concern.When I say protected, what I meant was that hunting would be severely limited from what it is now. Maybe protected isn't the correct term.
If Wolfbait wanted to say that wolves are exacerbating problems created as a result of poor deer/elk habitat I could buy into that. But to say that better and more habitat wouldn't change things is just downright wrong. Poor and decreasing habitat is part of the problem. Very much so.
Agreed, and until there are substantial changes to habitat, introducing additional predators is stupid.
According to this article Aspenbud, you're off. The increase in deer population is due to habitat changes created by the oil boom. The caribou are being killed off by the wolves.An example this morning of a common blog attack is Cry Wolf: An Unethical Oil Story. DeSmogBlog. Carol Linnitt.The facts are basically these. Note that this does not follow the exact same logic as “Cry Wolf” above. Alberta has already killed 500 wolves using poison bait and the entire array of methods that conservationist hate. This includes strychnine which kills all the scavengers too. The planned wolf cull is to kill 6000 wolves over the next 5 years. Why? All the industrial activity in the northern forest creates deer habitat. A big increase in deer, creates more wolves to eat them. Mountain caribou are also edible, but usually not bothered much by wolves due to their rarity. However, the larger wolf population means more caribou get eaten as what we might call “by-catch,” to use a fishing example. Mountain caribou can’t stand this pressure even though the absolute number of caribou killed is small. So the big wolf killing program is the government-dirty oil complex’s effort to save the caribou.""A big increase in deer, creates more wolves to eat them." Not the other way around.
you can have the best habitat in the world. And the prey animals won’t use it because they’re afraid of getting killed or having their young killed. So this is a hot, emerging topic and these indirect effects of this are greater in some cases than the direct mortality effects. No one talks about this much either.Importance of habitat: Habitat is irrelevant. Everything biologists have told you about habitat being the overriding consideration is totally and absolutely wrong. Remember those two examples I showed earlier — Banff National Park and Yellowstone National Park. And they’re national parks. The habitat’s still there. Nobody’s driven any oil wells or gas wells there. No one’s ripped them up for tar sands or done anything else like that but, you know, the elk are no longer there because of predation.Read more @ http://prfamerica.org/speeches/16th/WolfRecovery.html
Quote from: wolfbait on January 14, 2014, 10:09:05 AMyou can have the best habitat in the world. And the prey animals won’t use it because they’re afraid of getting killed or having their young killed. So this is a hot, emerging topic and these indirect effects of this are greater in some cases than the direct mortality effects. No one talks about this much either.Importance of habitat: Habitat is irrelevant. Everything biologists have told you about habitat being the overriding consideration is totally and absolutely wrong. Remember those two examples I showed earlier — Banff National Park and Yellowstone National Park. And they’re national parks. The habitat’s still there. Nobody’s driven any oil wells or gas wells there. No one’s ripped them up for tar sands or done anything else like that but, you know, the elk are no longer there because of predation.Read more @ http://prfamerica.org/speeches/16th/WolfRecovery.htmlSo were the elk and bison I saw in YNP last winter really just a figment of my imagination?
Yeah, sometimes I dislike being in the position I am in. Due to my job, I cannot quite say what I feel on this issue. At times I feel throttled or choked and cannot speak my mind. I fully understand how folks would want to just knock them down and walk away. It almost feels like we are waiting for a few sacrificial "lambs". A few citizens mauled or killed. Even after this occurs I am not convinced this will have the impact on public opinion about wolves. I will not be the victim. I don't climb trees well and it will be showtime with lots of lead flying.
Quote from: JLS on January 14, 2014, 10:37:40 AMQuote from: wolfbait on January 14, 2014, 10:09:05 AMyou can have the best habitat in the world. And the prey animals won’t use it because they’re afraid of getting killed or having their young killed. So this is a hot, emerging topic and these indirect effects of this are greater in some cases than the direct mortality effects. No one talks about this much either.Importance of habitat: Habitat is irrelevant. Everything biologists have told you about habitat being the overriding consideration is totally and absolutely wrong. Remember those two examples I showed earlier — Banff National Park and Yellowstone National Park. And they’re national parks. The habitat’s still there. Nobody’s driven any oil wells or gas wells there. No one’s ripped them up for tar sands or done anything else like that but, you know, the elk are no longer there because of predation.Read more @ http://prfamerica.org/speeches/16th/WolfRecovery.htmlSo were the elk and bison I saw in YNP last winter really just a figment of my imagination?No, they were real. You were able to see them because your tinfoil hat was not obstructing your view.