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Quote from: vandeman17 on January 08, 2021, 08:39:35 AMHey Hydro, still waiting for you to answer my question. If game animals are owned by the voters and thus, the decisions on their management done per ballot initiatives, are you assuming those same voters study data? And if those same voters decide they don't want anymore wolves at all, should they be allowed by voter initive to kill em all?Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
Hey Hydro, still waiting for you to answer my question. If game animals are owned by the voters and thus, the decisions on their management done per ballot initiatives, are you assuming those same voters study data?
Again, don't confuse science with policy.How the voters want to manage their wildlife is policy - and whether its science/data based or not is irrelevant. Voters could absolutely change the policy on wolves or any wildlife or any other public resource. Science and data do not set/decide policy...science and data inform policy and management. Once there is an established policy, science can inform how best to achieve such policy, giving information on costs/benefits/risks/consequences etc.Example:Voters, through initiative and/or selection of elected officials, decide they don't want wolves.Policy = no more wolves (per initiative, or modification of all the necessary state and federal laws)Science = how best to eradicate wolves (poison, trap, aerial gunning...what are the costs, efficacy, risks of each method etc.)
Quote from: idahohuntr on January 08, 2021, 10:15:29 AMAgain, don't confuse science with policy.How the voters want to manage their wildlife is policy - and whether its science/data based or not is irrelevant. Voters could absolutely change the policy on wolves or any wildlife or any other public resource. Science and data do not set/decide policy...science and data inform policy and management. Once there is an established policy, science can inform how best to achieve such policy, giving information on costs/benefits/risks/consequences etc.Example:Voters, through initiative and/or selection of elected officials, decide they don't want wolves.Policy = no more wolves (per initiative, or modification of all the necessary state and federal laws)Science = how best to eradicate wolves (poison, trap, aerial gunning...what are the costs, efficacy, risks of each method etc.) Then why would one continue to present data as their justification for introduction of wolves?
Quote from: vandeman17 on January 08, 2021, 10:17:24 AMQuote from: idahohuntr on January 08, 2021, 10:15:29 AMAgain, don't confuse science with policy.How the voters want to manage their wildlife is policy - and whether its science/data based or not is irrelevant. Voters could absolutely change the policy on wolves or any wildlife or any other public resource. Science and data do not set/decide policy...science and data inform policy and management. Once there is an established policy, science can inform how best to achieve such policy, giving information on costs/benefits/risks/consequences etc.Example:Voters, through initiative and/or selection of elected officials, decide they don't want wolves.Policy = no more wolves (per initiative, or modification of all the necessary state and federal laws)Science = how best to eradicate wolves (poison, trap, aerial gunning...what are the costs, efficacy, risks of each method etc.) Then why would one continue to present data as their justification for introduction of wolves?For all the same reasons people present data as their justification for not introducing wolves.
Quote from: idahohuntr on January 08, 2021, 10:40:47 AMQuote from: vandeman17 on January 08, 2021, 10:17:24 AMQuote from: idahohuntr on January 08, 2021, 10:15:29 AMAgain, don't confuse science with policy.How the voters want to manage their wildlife is policy - and whether its science/data based or not is irrelevant. Voters could absolutely change the policy on wolves or any wildlife or any other public resource. Science and data do not set/decide policy...science and data inform policy and management. Once there is an established policy, science can inform how best to achieve such policy, giving information on costs/benefits/risks/consequences etc.Example:Voters, through initiative and/or selection of elected officials, decide they don't want wolves.Policy = no more wolves (per initiative, or modification of all the necessary state and federal laws)Science = how best to eradicate wolves (poison, trap, aerial gunning...what are the costs, efficacy, risks of each method etc.) Then why would one continue to present data as their justification for introduction of wolves?For all the same reasons people present data as their justification for not introducing wolves.Majority of voters don't educate themselves on stats, no matter what side of the aisle they sit on, especially on items like these where they have little to no skin in the game.
Quote from: vandeman17 on January 08, 2021, 10:45:26 AMQuote from: idahohuntr on January 08, 2021, 10:40:47 AMQuote from: vandeman17 on January 08, 2021, 10:17:24 AMQuote from: idahohuntr on January 08, 2021, 10:15:29 AMAgain, don't confuse science with policy.How the voters want to manage their wildlife is policy - and whether its science/data based or not is irrelevant. Voters could absolutely change the policy on wolves or any wildlife or any other public resource. Science and data do not set/decide policy...science and data inform policy and management. Once there is an established policy, science can inform how best to achieve such policy, giving information on costs/benefits/risks/consequences etc.Example:Voters, through initiative and/or selection of elected officials, decide they don't want wolves.Policy = no more wolves (per initiative, or modification of all the necessary state and federal laws)Science = how best to eradicate wolves (poison, trap, aerial gunning...what are the costs, efficacy, risks of each method etc.) Then why would one continue to present data as their justification for introduction of wolves?For all the same reasons people present data as their justification for not introducing wolves.Majority of voters don't educate themselves on stats, no matter what side of the aisle they sit on, especially on items like these where they have little to no skin in the game. Hence my initial statement: How the voters want to manage their wildlife is policy - and whether its science/data based or not is irrelevant.
Quote from: idahohuntr on January 08, 2021, 10:55:04 AMQuote from: vandeman17 on January 08, 2021, 10:45:26 AMQuote from: idahohuntr on January 08, 2021, 10:40:47 AMQuote from: vandeman17 on January 08, 2021, 10:17:24 AMQuote from: idahohuntr on January 08, 2021, 10:15:29 AMAgain, don't confuse science with policy.How the voters want to manage their wildlife is policy - and whether its science/data based or not is irrelevant. Voters could absolutely change the policy on wolves or any wildlife or any other public resource. Science and data do not set/decide policy...science and data inform policy and management. Once there is an established policy, science can inform how best to achieve such policy, giving information on costs/benefits/risks/consequences etc.Example:Voters, through initiative and/or selection of elected officials, decide they don't want wolves.Policy = no more wolves (per initiative, or modification of all the necessary state and federal laws)Science = how best to eradicate wolves (poison, trap, aerial gunning...what are the costs, efficacy, risks of each method etc.) Then why would one continue to present data as their justification for introduction of wolves?For all the same reasons people present data as their justification for not introducing wolves.Majority of voters don't educate themselves on stats, no matter what side of the aisle they sit on, especially on items like these where they have little to no skin in the game. Hence my initial statement: How the voters want to manage their wildlife is policy - and whether its science/data based or not is irrelevant. exactly so when our personal, first hand experiences with how wolves are impacting areas we hunt are being discounted and "data" is the rebuttal, its garbage.
Quote from: KFhunter on January 02, 2021, 11:33:33 PMHe's right about personal attacks, if nothing else highsideYou hunt Oregon hydro? From your avatar it looks like it going off elk species and understory. You've got *a lot* to learn about wolves. I appreciate your passion for the outdoors, but you're about 10 years behind E Washington and 15 behind Idaho.You could learn here, or you could piss everyone off. Your choice. Sent from my SM-G965U using TapatalkYes, I’m in Oregon and hunt a few other states as well. I’m open to learning and I hope everyone else here is as well. All I ask for are decent citations and critical thought. Whether I piss everyone off is of no concern to me. If hunters get mad at facts and observations that is their problem and not my own. I have a folder of studies used by state wildlife agencies to dictate their management decisions, or personal opinions. If hunters want science, I can do science. If this is a science based management forum, as a couple posters have claimed, then hopefully the cognitive dissonance is kept to a minimum. About me: I chase 20 lb steelhead, big morels, big elk, and big deer. But I’m happy with 10 lb steelhead, small morels, small elk, and small deer. I love the outdoors. Cheers.
He's right about personal attacks, if nothing else highsideYou hunt Oregon hydro? From your avatar it looks like it going off elk species and understory. You've got *a lot* to learn about wolves. I appreciate your passion for the outdoors, but you're about 10 years behind E Washington and 15 behind Idaho.You could learn here, or you could piss everyone off. Your choice. Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
Quote from: Hydrophilic on January 07, 2021, 09:48:23 PMQuote from: Platensek-po on January 07, 2021, 09:34:46 PMDid you look at the data for mule deer populations in those units???Wenaha went from 2600 to 1350 in the last 4 years with an objective of 4K.Minam went from 2600 to 1700 in the last 5 years and has objective of 7k.Walla walla declined from 1900 to 1500 with an objective of 1900. Also that same data says that walla walla has a 100% fawn winter survival rate. That’s gotta be good data. Also keep in mind those numbers are all estimated.Wenaha has a management objective of 4K for elk in that unit. It’s currently half that.The calf to cow ratio in minam and wenaha has gone down. As has the ratio of calf to cows for Roosevelt elk in general. So looking at the data put forth by ODFW there are places where the elk are now above MO and places that are well below. Would be interesting to see a correlation of ag or private land vs wild. https://www.dfw.state.or.us/Wolves/docs/2019_Oregon_Wolf_Plan.pdfIn the odfw wolf management plan they state they have reached the management objective in the eastern part of the state and according to their own numbers are 3 times above the population goal for the area they inhabit. So by their own admission they are above objective and they also state that human take could increase by 5 to 10 percent without causing a population decline. Meaning they could have a hunting and trapping season to manage The population that is above population goals but they don’t. In their management plan I found no mention of civilian control of population at all. Curious as they admitted to having multiple problems with wolf interactions. They also state the goal to manage wolves like other game animals in the state but they are not doing that. So they are not even sticking to their own management plan. Montana and Idaho have stable wolf populations even with hunting and trapping. So why not include that as a management plan for a species that is 3x above its population numbers?And what about Zebra in Africa? Mule Deer are an entirely different conversation. Wenaha has had a large elk MO for a long time, it doesn't mean the herd is unhealthy, it means there is a Management objective for where they would like the herd to be, depending on many situations. Quality hunting opportunity, land owner complaints, over browsing sensitive habitat, etc. Wenaha used to have a pretty lousy elk population way back when...decades before the wolves. It has been increasing steadily. Please, what are your thoughts on increasing elk populations in those 3 units with wolf populations? What are your thoughts on Idahos current elk population compared to the 1995 elk population when wolves were reintroduced. And what are your thoughts on record levels of elk harvest in Idaho - "For the sixth straight year, Idaho elk hunters harvested more than 20,000 elk, good for the second best stretch in the state's history"? Don't dodge me. Let's have a discussion.I’m sorry I guess I didn’t realize that wolves don’t eat mule deer. I said it before and I’ll tell you again. Harvest numbers are not scientific. They are based on self reporting by hunters. There are a bunch of factors that can increase harvest numbers. License sales increase, better opportunity because of elk being pressured into more accessible areas. Let’s look at the actual data from ODFW. Did you notice that the bull and calf to cow ratios are down? Meaning that the weakest members are being picked off creating a different herd dynamic. Again do you believe that mule deer fawns had a 100% survival rate in walla walla for 5 straight years? ODFW does. Why are you dodging me on the population numbers of wolves and their management objective? It clearly states they have 158 wolves and their objective is 48-49. Are we talking about IDaho or Oregon or Colorado? You want to talk data but then dismiss other data put forth from the same source. I asked you about scientists asking for a natural migration of wolves into Colorado instead of a forced introduction and.... it would seem you are dodging me not vice versa. Idaho also manages its populations and has a steady population of wolves. Pregón admits to having more wolves than their objective but doesn’t touch them. Did you even read the management plan??
Quote from: Platensek-po on January 07, 2021, 09:34:46 PMDid you look at the data for mule deer populations in those units???Wenaha went from 2600 to 1350 in the last 4 years with an objective of 4K.Minam went from 2600 to 1700 in the last 5 years and has objective of 7k.Walla walla declined from 1900 to 1500 with an objective of 1900. Also that same data says that walla walla has a 100% fawn winter survival rate. That’s gotta be good data. Also keep in mind those numbers are all estimated.Wenaha has a management objective of 4K for elk in that unit. It’s currently half that.The calf to cow ratio in minam and wenaha has gone down. As has the ratio of calf to cows for Roosevelt elk in general. So looking at the data put forth by ODFW there are places where the elk are now above MO and places that are well below. Would be interesting to see a correlation of ag or private land vs wild. https://www.dfw.state.or.us/Wolves/docs/2019_Oregon_Wolf_Plan.pdfIn the odfw wolf management plan they state they have reached the management objective in the eastern part of the state and according to their own numbers are 3 times above the population goal for the area they inhabit. So by their own admission they are above objective and they also state that human take could increase by 5 to 10 percent without causing a population decline. Meaning they could have a hunting and trapping season to manage The population that is above population goals but they don’t. In their management plan I found no mention of civilian control of population at all. Curious as they admitted to having multiple problems with wolf interactions. They also state the goal to manage wolves like other game animals in the state but they are not doing that. So they are not even sticking to their own management plan. Montana and Idaho have stable wolf populations even with hunting and trapping. So why not include that as a management plan for a species that is 3x above its population numbers?And what about Zebra in Africa? Mule Deer are an entirely different conversation. Wenaha has had a large elk MO for a long time, it doesn't mean the herd is unhealthy, it means there is a Management objective for where they would like the herd to be, depending on many situations. Quality hunting opportunity, land owner complaints, over browsing sensitive habitat, etc. Wenaha used to have a pretty lousy elk population way back when...decades before the wolves. It has been increasing steadily. Please, what are your thoughts on increasing elk populations in those 3 units with wolf populations? What are your thoughts on Idahos current elk population compared to the 1995 elk population when wolves were reintroduced. And what are your thoughts on record levels of elk harvest in Idaho - "For the sixth straight year, Idaho elk hunters harvested more than 20,000 elk, good for the second best stretch in the state's history"? Don't dodge me. Let's have a discussion.
Did you look at the data for mule deer populations in those units???Wenaha went from 2600 to 1350 in the last 4 years with an objective of 4K.Minam went from 2600 to 1700 in the last 5 years and has objective of 7k.Walla walla declined from 1900 to 1500 with an objective of 1900. Also that same data says that walla walla has a 100% fawn winter survival rate. That’s gotta be good data. Also keep in mind those numbers are all estimated.Wenaha has a management objective of 4K for elk in that unit. It’s currently half that.The calf to cow ratio in minam and wenaha has gone down. As has the ratio of calf to cows for Roosevelt elk in general. So looking at the data put forth by ODFW there are places where the elk are now above MO and places that are well below. Would be interesting to see a correlation of ag or private land vs wild. https://www.dfw.state.or.us/Wolves/docs/2019_Oregon_Wolf_Plan.pdfIn the odfw wolf management plan they state they have reached the management objective in the eastern part of the state and according to their own numbers are 3 times above the population goal for the area they inhabit. So by their own admission they are above objective and they also state that human take could increase by 5 to 10 percent without causing a population decline. Meaning they could have a hunting and trapping season to manage The population that is above population goals but they don’t. In their management plan I found no mention of civilian control of population at all. Curious as they admitted to having multiple problems with wolf interactions. They also state the goal to manage wolves like other game animals in the state but they are not doing that. So they are not even sticking to their own management plan. Montana and Idaho have stable wolf populations even with hunting and trapping. So why not include that as a management plan for a species that is 3x above its population numbers?
Quote from: Platensek-po on January 07, 2021, 09:34:46 PMDid you look at the data for mule deer populations in those units???Wenaha went from 2600 to 1350 in the last 4 years with an objective of 4K.Minam went from 2600 to 1700 in the last 5 years and has objective of 7k.Walla walla declined from 1900 to 1500 with an objective of 1900. Also that same data says that walla walla has a 100% fawn winter survival rate. That’s gotta be good data. Also keep in mind those numbers are all estimated.Wenaha has a management objective of 4K for elk in that unit. It’s currently half that.The calf to cow ratio in minam and wenaha has gone down. As has the ratio of calf to cows for Roosevelt elk in general. So looking at the data put forth by ODFW there are places where the elk are now above MO and places that are well below. Would be interesting to see a correlation of ag or private land vs wild. https://www.dfw.state.or.us/Wolves/docs/2019_Oregon_Wolf_Plan.pdfIn the odfw wolf management plan they state they have reached the management objective in the eastern part of the state and according to their own numbers are 3 times above the population goal for the area they inhabit. So by their own admission they are above objective and they also state that human take could increase by 5 to 10 percent without causing a population decline. Meaning they could have a hunting and trapping season to manage The population that is above population goals but they don’t. In their management plan I found no mention of civilian control of population at all. Curious as they admitted to having multiple problems with wolf interactions. They also state the goal to manage wolves like other game animals in the state but they are not doing that. So they are not even sticking to their own management plan. Montana and Idaho have stable wolf populations even with hunting and trapping. So why not include that as a management plan for a species that is 3x above its population numbers?And what about Zebra in Africa? Mule Deer are an entirely different conversation. Wenaha has had a large elk MO for a long time, it doesn't mean the herd is unhealthy, it means there is a Management objective for where they would like the herd to be, depending on many situations. Quality hunting opportunity, land owner complaints, over browsing sensitive habitat, etc. Wenaha used to have a pretty lousy elk population way back when...decades before the wolves. It has been increasing steadily. Please, what are your thoughts on increasing elk populations in those 3 units with wolf populations? What are your thoughts on Idahos current elk population compared to the 1995 elk population when wolves were reintroduced. And what are your thoughts on record levels of elk harvest in Idaho - "For the sixth straight year, Idaho elk hunters harvested more than 20,000 elk, good for the second best stretch in the state's history"? Don't dodge me. Let's have a discussion.Idaho Elk population 1995 (year wolves were reintroduced): 112,333Current: 120,000Source: IDFG