Free: Contests & Raffles.
Thanks guys. I guess I'm just having a hard time understanding why they think there should be more here than there are. Seems like with 40-50 years of no hunting and virtually no natural predators except other bears there would be more here if there was supposed to be more here. I'm probably preaching to the choir here I'm sure.
It is difficult to find hard data. This might be helpful:http://westernwildlife.org/grizzly-bear-outreach-project/history/Hudson Bay Company trapping records show that 3,788 grizzly bear hides were shipped from trading posts in the North Cascades area between 1827 and 1859. The decimation of the North Cascades grizzly bear population continued for more than a century with commercial trapping, habitat loss, and unregulated hunting the leading causes of death. The last grizzly bear to be killed in the North Cascades of Washington was in 1967 in Fisher Creek (in what is now North Cascades National Park).This is mostly about Oregon, but mentions Wash a few times: http://www.oregonwild.org/about/blog/oregon-grizzly-country In Lewis and Clark Among the Grizzlies, Paul Schullery uses Seton’s map, the accounts of the Corps of Discovery, and some early Washington State records to suggest that most of Oregon north of the Klamaths (and southwestern Washington) was basically devoid of grizzlies, possibly because of dense indigenous populations in the greater Columbia Basin.
Quote from: Mtnwalker on February 08, 2017, 12:43:35 PMThanks guys. I guess I'm just having a hard time understanding why they think there should be more here than there are. Seems like with 40-50 years of no hunting and virtually no natural predators except other bears there would be more here if there was supposed to be more here. I'm probably preaching to the choir here I'm sure.I don't know why some might think we need more grizzlies in WA but I did listen to a cool podcast of meat eater the other day. In episode 54 he talked with a wildlife biologist about her experiences with field studies and particularly how studies of apex predators (bears, wolves & cats) were highly sought after by biologists. When I saw this post I imagined senior wildlife people pushing these types of projects because of their charismatic nature among the public. Just something to think about.