Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Bob33 on May 05, 2023, 08:56:01 PMAnother era.Another era largely responsible for our crappy mountain goat numbers today. You can't manage mountain goats the same way you manage deer/elk/etc which was a mistake our state made for decades before trying to correct the issue.Our issue today is that literally every single goat population in our state is decreasing and I don't think WDFW has any idea why. My personal opinion - climate change (specifically warmer weather pushing them to spend more time in timber) is leading to higher than normal predation. Of course higher than normal predation is drastically exacerbated by extremely high predator numbers (cougars, wolves, coyotes all having negative impact.) It seems to me there may be some disease issue at play. I've been seeing very low kid recruitment in recent years (as in last 3-4 years relative to the 2x decades before that I spent watching goats.)Unfortunately goats receive a low priority in research funding with our state so I honestly don't think WDFW has any real idea how bad (or not) things actually are other than low helicopter counts in recent years (which has been negatively impacted by extremely warm summers pushing goats out of traditional visible habitat.) Also, the relocation from Olympic National Park to the Cascades was all planned 4-5 years ago before the established herds (think Goat Rocks, Baker Wilderness, Boulder River, Naches, etc.) started really taking a downward trend. As such those 300+ goats were relocated to smaller, more isolated herds in the cascades in hopes of those herds starting to grow. In hindsight, it should have been a goal to bolster the established herds and help promote stronger genetic diversity in those herds. (One other side note, recent research done by WWU has shown extremely low genetic diversity in almost all goat herds in our state. Goats are not crossing major highways (I90 and I2 being the big contributors, but even smaller highways like Hwy 20 being a contributor as well.) Additionally goats from individual herds are showing relatively little cross breeding with other herds (Baker/Boulder River herds, Goat Rocks/Naches herds/etc. Even Canadian goats like Cathedral Park north of Pasayten and Pasayten goats are not travelling back and forth.) Historic data suggests young males relatively frequently moved from one herd to another helping to bolster genetic diversity and that does not seem to be happening now. I don't know how this plays into declining goat numbers or what specifically has changed recently as opposed to the past in this regard but it's certainly something worth noting as genetic diversity has been shown to be integral to long term herd health in mountain goats. See Fest-Bianchet research for more info on that. It's pretty fascinating stuff.)And that just brings up the entire issue with the ONP relocation. Eliminating that herd is terrible for our goats in WA state. The ONP herd was the only herd doing well in our entire state and relocating half of that herd was a great idea. But maintaining the remaining half as a "nursery herd" or sorts to help augment the other goats in our state would have been a far better solution than complete eradication. I think there's one thing everyone can agree on which is the desire to see healthy herds here in our state. Hopefully the downward trends of our established herds can serve as a wake up call to WDFW bios to get a better grasp on what's going on so we can continue to promote healthy and robust goat populations throughout the suitable terrain in WA state.
Another era.
It baffles me that the apparent decline has "apparently" been known for years yet they choose to mostly eradicate the largest population in the state with the ONP debacle. Instead of taking greater care to work in conjunction with NP officials and relocate every goat they could get there hands on. Even if it took a couple summers...I'm also a firm believer that wdfw has poor math silks as well. Under counting herd's seems to be a common issue. I'm not a north cascades guy but IMO central Cascade goats appear in similar numbers throughout my travels as they did 20-30 year's ago.
Quote from: fishngamereaper on May 10, 2023, 03:23:31 PMIt baffles me that the apparent decline has "apparently" been known for years yet they choose to mostly eradicate the largest population in the state with the ONP debacle. Instead of taking greater care to work in conjunction with NP officials and relocate every goat they could get there hands on. Even if it took a couple summers...I'm also a firm believer that wdfw has poor math silks as well. Under counting herd's seems to be a common issue. I'm not a north cascades guy but IMO central Cascade goats appear in similar numbers throughout my travels as they did 20-30 year's ago. From what I understand, the mortality rate of the goats that did get relocated was pretty high and after the initial capture... they got pretty smart and were hard to catch. I believe they did release over 300 into the cascades, but I'm not sure what the survival rate was.
The WDFW bio gave one of the most political answers I have ever heard, and I am stealing it for my day job! "feel free to call since discussions with hunters are important and valued by the Department. The communication between the Department and our hunting population has been horrible in the past, I believe it is getting better, but overall direct one-on-one conversations has always been the best method."...that means, call me and I will tell you in person, over the phone, with no paper trail to bite me is the ass, but ya, we are reducing numbers of permits to slowly do away with hunting. He even contradicts himself saying how from 2010-2020 the goat population was dropping but then says in 2017 it was at its peak...uh, if its dropping then its past its peak. I am not bashing on the bio...in fact, I applaud him for his answers and asks for a phone call instead of an email so it can't be put on a forum like this one and his bosses fire him. smart dude right there!Grade
Quote from: actionshooter on May 10, 2023, 10:20:28 PMQuote from: fishngamereaper on May 10, 2023, 03:23:31 PMIt baffles me that the apparent decline has "apparently" been known for years yet they choose to mostly eradicate the largest population in the state with the ONP debacle. Instead of taking greater care to work in conjunction with NP officials and relocate every goat they could get there hands on. Even if it took a couple summers...I'm also a firm believer that wdfw has poor math silks as well. Under counting herd's seems to be a common issue. I'm not a north cascades guy but IMO central Cascade goats appear in similar numbers throughout my travels as they did 20-30 year's ago. From what I understand, the mortality rate of the goats that did get relocated was pretty high and after the initial capture... they got pretty smart and were hard to catch. I believe they did release over 300 into the cascades, but I'm not sure what the survival rate was.I heard survival rate was under 50%. :'(
Quote from: grade-creek-rd on May 11, 2023, 02:47:41 PMThe WDFW bio gave one of the most political answers I have ever heard, and I am stealing it for my day job! "feel free to call since discussions with hunters are important and valued by the Department. The communication between the Department and our hunting population has been horrible in the past, I believe it is getting better, but overall direct one-on-one conversations has always been the best method."...that means, call me and I will tell you in person, over the phone, with no paper trail to bite me is the ass, but ya, we are reducing numbers of permits to slowly do away with hunting. He even contradicts himself saying how from 2010-2020 the goat population was dropping but then says in 2017 it was at its peak...uh, if its dropping then its past its peak. I am not bashing on the bio...in fact, I applaud him for his answers and asks for a phone call instead of an email so it can't be put on a forum like this one and his bosses fire him. smart dude right there!Grade but ya, we are reducing numbers of permits to slowly do away with hunting.Based on our current commission, I don't doubt this for a second. I logged on and watched a couple of their live sessions and I am dumb founded how this commission is putting any value on keeping hunting a lawful act. The sheep, moose and goat hunts will be the first to go, and the rest will be death by a 1000 cuts. Sadly, I don't see a conservative or even moderate politician who will be able to run against Bob Ferguson for the Governor's race. You don't like Jay Inslee.........Wait until he is replaced by someone much worse