Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: DOUBLELUNG on December 06, 2014, 09:07:07 PMOne of the worst trends I've seen in recent times, is the tolerance of the scientific community for politically correct activism perpetrated as science. Until the last 30-50 years, even minor misconduct would get a researcher run out of the scientific community and roundly denounced. As a scientifically educated former scientist, I find this extremely offensive. This research is exactly that. Pretty disingenuous stuff really.
One of the worst trends I've seen in recent times, is the tolerance of the scientific community for politically correct activism perpetrated as science. Until the last 30-50 years, even minor misconduct would get a researcher run out of the scientific community and roundly denounced. As a scientifically educated former scientist, I find this extremely offensive.
WAcoyotehunter: You have brought up many good points...I think there may be some misunderstanding though...The state legislature funded the large carnivore research lab at WSU to evaluate non-lethal alternatives, including retrospective analyeses like this one. I don't believe WDFW specifically sought to send money to that lab...even though the acknowledgements suggest WDFW fully supported and paid for this work.On point 1 - I think that is the general consensus...their conclusions are not solid given the nature of the data they used. The authors did acknowledge the geographic scale is large and not focused on the pack level...which makes it much more difficult to say killing a few in a pack actually led to increased depredation by that pack in subsequent years. Point 2 - I didn't look...if that is the case that is surprising and suggests some uncareful work (and review of the work!)Point 3 - R2 values are still statistically signficant...that is what the p-value indicates below those R2 numbers. Sample size plays a big role in whether R2 values are statistically significant (i.e., not a matter of chance)...a few dots and an R2 of 0.85 may not be significant, whereas a R2 of .45 with a lot of data points...may still be significant and indicative of a meaningful trend. Regardless of R2 values though, as others have mentioned, correlation does not prove causation. Point 4 - Reviewers are typically kept anonymous, and while authors can suggest reviewers it is ultimately an editorial decision. Scientific editors are usually very concerned with maintaining integrity and are unlikely to seek out "favorable" reviewers.
Quote from: KFhunter on December 03, 2014, 08:56:51 PMQuote from: billythekidrock on December 03, 2014, 08:46:42 PMWhy is it interesting? This is not new news.Good affirmation to not go around half-assed killing wolves - gotta do it right. WDFW half assed killed the wolves on the sheep conflict in Stevens CO, they wacked the alpha female then quit the job before they got even 25% of them making the situation worse rather than better. They need to go in and get at least 25% of them according to this article, 50% would be a marked improvement. 100% would be best. 25% of the statewide population...not 25% of a pack. The increase in depredation with less than 25% harvest is what I found new and interesting btkr...had not seen an estimate provided like that for wolves before.
Quote from: billythekidrock on December 03, 2014, 08:46:42 PMWhy is it interesting? This is not new news.Good affirmation to not go around half-assed killing wolves - gotta do it right. WDFW half assed killed the wolves on the sheep conflict in Stevens CO, they wacked the alpha female then quit the job before they got even 25% of them making the situation worse rather than better. They need to go in and get at least 25% of them according to this article, 50% would be a marked improvement. 100% would be best.
Why is it interesting? This is not new news.
Quote from: idahohuntr on December 03, 2014, 09:10:38 PMQuote from: KFhunter on December 03, 2014, 08:56:51 PMQuote from: billythekidrock on December 03, 2014, 08:46:42 PMWhy is it interesting? This is not new news.Good affirmation to not go around half-assed killing wolves - gotta do it right. WDFW half assed killed the wolves on the sheep conflict in Stevens CO, they wacked the alpha female then quit the job before they got even 25% of them making the situation worse rather than better. They need to go in and get at least 25% of them according to this article, 50% would be a marked improvement. 100% would be best. 25% of the statewide population...not 25% of a pack. The increase in depredation with less than 25% harvest is what I found new and interesting btkr...had not seen an estimate provided like that for wolves before.I think that a 25% reduction of wolves in any given area would produce the results needed to lower livestock losses in that area. For example, it's pretty obvious that killing a wolf in Whitman County will not curb livestock losses in Stevens County, you need to kill wolves in Stevens County or Whitman County and possibly their neighboring counties to reduce livestock losses in either area. Another thing to consider is that Wielgus is who is responsible for the failing Washington cougar management, I think the guy is a predator lover using his position to promote his agenda.
maybe encouraging the wolves to be self-limiting and concentrating on taking the weakest of prey animals and leaving the bigger, stronger ones alone.
PMan said something similar, but it seems to me the answer would be to find packs that are raiding livestock and eradicate the whole pack. Over time, that would shift the genetic profile of the whole population to be more cautious and wary of humans. That would have an added benefit of making them more cautious about their prey too, maybe encouraging the wolves to be self-limiting and concentrating on taking the weakest of prey animals and leaving the bigger, stronger ones alone.
Quote from: magnanimous_j on December 09, 2014, 09:07:18 AMPMan said something similar, but it seems to me the answer would be to find packs that are raiding livestock and eradicate the whole pack. Over time, that would shift the genetic profile of the whole population to be more cautious and wary of humans. That would have an added benefit of making them more cautious about their prey too, maybe encouraging the wolves to be self-limiting and concentrating on taking the weakest of prey animals and leaving the bigger, stronger ones alone.If they gave people the right to shoot on site, wolves would learn very quick, just like they have in ID and WY. They arent dumb animals but the WDFW has shackeld us to an bad Wolf Plan.
Quote from: bearpaw on December 09, 2014, 08:56:36 AMQuote from: idahohuntr on December 03, 2014, 09:10:38 PMQuote from: KFhunter on December 03, 2014, 08:56:51 PMQuote from: billythekidrock on December 03, 2014, 08:46:42 PMWhy is it interesting? This is not new news.Good affirmation to not go around half-assed killing wolves - gotta do it right. WDFW half assed killed the wolves on the sheep conflict in Stevens CO, they wacked the alpha female then quit the job before they got even 25% of them making the situation worse rather than better. They need to go in and get at least 25% of them according to this article, 50% would be a marked improvement. 100% would be best. 25% of the statewide population...not 25% of a pack. The increase in depredation with less than 25% harvest is what I found new and interesting btkr...had not seen an estimate provided like that for wolves before.I think that a 25% reduction of wolves in any given area would produce the results needed to lower livestock losses in that area. For example, it's pretty obvious that killing a wolf in Whitman County will not curb livestock losses in Stevens County, you need to kill wolves in Stevens County or Whitman County and possibly their neighboring counties to reduce livestock losses in either area. Another thing to consider is that Wielgus is who is responsible for the failing Washington cougar management, I think the guy is a predator lover using his position to promote his agenda.I don't think 25% is enough in sheep country and marginal in cattle country. In the wedge I suspect they got 75% of the wolves and that was effective in preventing direct depredation but ineffective in that the wolves still keep the cattle off the higher parts of the range and keep them down low where over grazing is a problem. Before wolves the cattle would disperse all throughout the range and overgrazing wasn't a problem. Had WDFW only killed 25% in the wedge I think the wolves would have absorbed the loss and kept on killing cattle. In sheep country 90% or more is likely to be the only solution, that'll give livestock guardian dogs a chance to do their work and not get killed themselves. Sheep are just too tempting.
Quote from: Special T on December 09, 2014, 09:20:25 AMQuote from: magnanimous_j on December 09, 2014, 09:07:18 AMPMan said something similar, but it seems to me the answer would be to find packs that are raiding livestock and eradicate the whole pack. Over time, that would shift the genetic profile of the whole population to be more cautious and wary of humans. That would have an added benefit of making them more cautious about their prey too, maybe encouraging the wolves to be self-limiting and concentrating on taking the weakest of prey animals and leaving the bigger, stronger ones alone.If they gave people the right to shoot on site, wolves would learn very quick, just like they have in ID and WY. They arent dumb animals but the WDFW has shackeld us to an bad Wolf Plan.That would work. But I think deliberately seeking out the ones with more aggressive genetics will get it done faster.
we need to delist statewide and just use coyote hunting rules for wolves. It sounds drastic, but the actual amount of wolves killed will remain low. They just aren't easy to hunt. It'll educate wolves that humans are bad newsIt'll give livestock owners a measure of controlIt'll give hunters some worth as ranchers allow them on their property to hunt wolvesI'll even advocate for body gripping trap permits in livestock areas, give the trappers some skin in the game with padded footholds. Wolves aren't going to hurt by such rules, they'll still be here, but maybe there'll be a better balance and give the rural landowners some control over their livelihood.