Free: Contests & Raffles.
93 94 winter kills have something to do with these numbers. But the wolves are not helping
It would be helpful to see the data normalized for hunter numbers. If harvest decreased by 50%, and hunter numbers decreased by 50% the per hunter harvest would be unchanged.How much of the reduction in overall harvest is due to fewer hunters, versus the same number of hunters killing fewer animals?
wolves kill elk-lots of them and you cant twist the stats with gee maybe less guys are hunting!
Quote from: idaho guy on August 04, 2014, 02:25:38 PMwolves kill elk-lots of them and you cant twist the stats with gee maybe less guys are hunting! Are you saying that Idaho has the same number of elk hunters now that it did before wolves were introduced? If so, what incentive does IDFG have to address wolves?
Quote from: Bob33 on August 04, 2014, 02:34:34 PMQuote from: idaho guy on August 04, 2014, 02:25:38 PMwolves kill elk-lots of them and you cant twist the stats with gee maybe less guys are hunting! Are you saying that Idaho has the same number of elk hunters now that it did before wolves were introduced? If so, what incentive does IDFG have to address wolves? I would say to prevent the other areas from dramatic losses!
Quote from: walleye1 on August 04, 2014, 11:37:28 AM93 94 winter kills have something to do with these numbers. But the wolves are not helpingI noticed this also, some big swings in the numbers in the late 80's early 90's prior to the wolves.
We suspect that cougar predation can keep a prey population at an unnaturally low density (a “predator pit”).Holling (1959) demonstrated that additive mortality due to predation could interact with density-dependent prey dynamics (Figure 2.2) to create either 1 or 2 stable equilibrium densities for the prey population. The theoretical basis is strong, and it isplausible that such dynamics exist for some predator-prey systems. In vertebrate predator-prey systems, the higher equilibrium (near but somewhat below the carrying capacity set by food resources) is considered the natural state of affairs, but following a catastrophe (such as severe winter weather, drought, a tornado, a disease epidemic, or isolation of a population segment by a freeway), mortality from predation can, in theory at least, keep prey at an equilibrium far below food-based K – a situation referred to as a “predator pit” (Haber 1977, Bergerud et al. 1983, Messier 1994).
should have read that post first- I change my answer NO there are not less hunters in idaho! I did read that out of state tag sales were down though