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Author Topic: ONP Goat relocation outcome  (Read 8332 times)

Offline Special T

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #30 on: May 07, 2024, 11:06:53 AM »
So in the WDFWs defence spreading goats out ISa good idea, it would be beneficial long term to sportsmen. Overlooking the high populations of cougars, and piss poor follow through to determine deaths is on them. :twocents:
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Offline Practical Approach

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #31 on: May 07, 2024, 11:56:53 AM »
So they were monitoring hundreds of the transplanted goats by GPS tracker, and no one thought to investigate when those GPS Trackers stopped?
No one investigated how they all died?

Sounds like a disfunctional group of monitors.

I believe some of the deaths were investigated, when they were in areas where they could be recovered.  However, I believe many might have died during winter months and were not accessable due to weather and terrain until it was too late to understand the cause of death. 


Offline GOcougsHunter

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #32 on: May 07, 2024, 12:41:13 PM »
really unfortunate.  I got to help with some of the relocations during both years.  Lots of money, energy and time spent in these relocations.  Lots of hope and fingers crossed and obviously had the outcome they did not want.  My belief is that this relocation project was just a function of the most politically correct way to solve the issue.  The public comments were absolutely bonkers and I think the NPS, WDFW, Tribes, USDA, everyone knew what they were up against regardless of the cost.   My hope is that at least a few of them bred to strengthen the gene pool?

I will be watching the Grizzly bear relocation with popcorn in hand...
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Offline Sundance

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #33 on: May 07, 2024, 01:56:08 PM »
My beef was, and still is that I’ve never seen 100% scientific proof that mountain goats weren’t native to the Olympics. I never supported to relocation and culling, this only makes my dissatisfaction with the decision stronger.

That is evidence of absence, and it’s considered a logical no go. Just like me asking you to prove that there isn’t a block of cheese orbiting Jupiter.

Archeological evidence showed no sign, or exceeding murky at best, evidence of hunted goats in pre history. There is a book that I own, that I unfortunately haven’t read yet, that argues that goats in fact did inhabit the Olympics in pre-history.

The author is a Washington native and a full professor of anthropology at University of Missouri-Columbia. So one should believe it is based on sound evidence, though not accepted by the majority of other researchers

https://anthropology.missouri.edu/people/lyman

You’re 100% spot on, the lack of hard evidence to support their existence prior to 1900’s is what the NP’s stood on. I’ve seen goats all over the OP and in really odd places/elevations. The lack of salt and minerals in on the OP has always given me pause, but that alone doesn’t explain why goats couldn’t have existed on that landscape. I watch a friend shoot a Billy off the salt water in AK, so perhaps they would go down to sea level (on the OP) if needed. There were even stories from tribal elders that seemed to support long term goat presence, but stories aren’t  the facts needed. Thank you for sharing that book title, I ordered it and look forward to the read.

Offline argali

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #34 on: May 08, 2024, 08:07:53 PM »
Why didn’t they transplant some to mount linton in pend oreile county and bolster that herd or start anew one? The Wdfw seem like bumbling fools to me!

Offline Sitka_Blacktail

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #35 on: May 09, 2024, 12:06:36 AM »
I don't know if anyone has suggested it, but besides all the other reasons this relocation seems to have been a failure, It might be possible that whatever sedative the animals were given somehow affected them.  It's strange that this population was successfully relocated into the Olympics, but when they were relocated out of the Olympics it was basically a total failure.  What factors were different in the two relocations?
A man who fears suffering is already suffering from what he fears. ~ Michel de Montaigne

Offline Skyvalhunter

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #36 on: May 09, 2024, 05:13:53 AM »
Quite obviously there was an issue in the area with some kind of disease or something if non transplanted goat were also dying there. There was people on this forum crying about how the number of goat permits in areas where permits were few in relation to the population. Without or denying the volatility of population to rapidly decrease on any given year.
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Offline Sundance

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #37 on: May 09, 2024, 07:45:11 AM »
Quite obviously there was an issue in the area with some kind of disease or something if non transplanted goat were also dying there. There was people on this forum crying about how the number of goat permits in areas where permits were few in relation to the population. Without or denying the volatility of population to rapidly decrease on any given year.

Funny, they removed goats from the OP to augment populations in the cascades. Now that the cascade populations are circling the toilet, I bet some wished that the OP goats had been left alone.

Offline 520backyard

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #38 on: May 09, 2024, 03:34:35 PM »
About 6 years ago or so I talked to one of the WDFW biologist involved in this and voiced my concerns that this plan was being implemented and the fact they were going to shoot as many of the goats in the park that they couldn't capture as they could find. I expressed the fact that hunters should be able to reduce those goat numbers in the national park without the wanton waste of the game resource as was being planned. The response was it would be "problematic" and yes I brought up the fact there is hunting in other national parks(Grand Teton, Denali, Glacier Bay. ect),it was a possibility. The biologist was quite sure this was the best plan for the goats and best plan for the state of Washington and the best plan for the feds.

So here we are 6 years later and that plan it seems has gone completely to *censored*. Not good for the goats, not good for the state and not good for the hunters of Washington. Olympic NP made out OK though.

And the thing that keeps running through my mind was when they wanted to do this cull plan originally in the 90's and it caused a public uproar and it was cancelled as a result.
And in 2016-17 there was hardly a peep from the public when they brought the plan back, of course this time they were a bit more sneaky about the PR and public comment and meetings relating to this cull. My how times change.

So next it's Grizzlies huh. What could possibly go wrong it's got all the same players.
Swim hell, the fall will kill ya.

Offline Tbar

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #39 on: May 09, 2024, 03:46:28 PM »
Quite obviously there was an issue in the area with some kind of disease or something if non transplanted goat were also dying there. There was people on this forum crying about how the number of goat permits in areas where permits were few in relation to the population. Without or denying the volatility of population to rapidly decrease on any given year.

Funny, they removed goats from the OP to augment populations in the cascades. Now that the cascade populations are circling the toilet, I bet some wished that the OP goats had been left alone.
Was that an option? The park ran the show,  did NEPA and made the decisions. 

Offline 520backyard

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #40 on: May 09, 2024, 04:10:46 PM »
It would be interesting to see the data on those goats being tracked and exactly how long after being relocated they died. I would think a goat that made it past a few weeks or a month or so would be out of danger from the stress of capture and relocation.
Depredation seems a more likely cause than they succumbed to climate change, although a hard winter does tend to cull the population down. Disease perhaps but then again they should have been able to find out if that was the case.
Swim hell, the fall will kill ya.

Offline Remnar

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #41 on: May 09, 2024, 07:03:27 PM »
Quite obviously there was an issue in the area with some kind of disease or something if non transplanted goat were also dying there. There was people on this forum crying about how the number of goat permits in areas where permits were few in relation to the population. Without or denying the volatility of population to rapidly decrease on any given year.

Funny, they removed goats from the OP to augment populations in the cascades. Now that the cascade populations are circling the toilet, I bet some wished that the OP goats had been left alone.
Was that an option? The park ran the show,  did NEPA and made the decisions.

 :yeah:
Those goats were going to be dead if they werent relocated . So they gave it a shot and it didnt pan out as hoped. A few added goats to the cascades better than no more goats added ...

Also as far as cost I would rather see $ spent on this than MANY others things it gets spent on . :twocents:

Offline Tbar

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #42 on: May 09, 2024, 09:09:54 PM »
Quite obviously there was an issue in the area with some kind of disease or something if non transplanted goat were also dying there. There was people on this forum crying about how the number of goat permits in areas where permits were few in relation to the population. Without or denying the volatility of population to rapidly decrease on any given year.

Funny, they removed goats from the OP to augment populations in the cascades. Now that the cascade populations are circling the toilet, I bet some wished that the OP goats had been left alone.
Was that an option? The park ran the show,  did NEPA and made the decisions.

 :yeah:
Those goats were going to be dead if they werent relocated . So they gave it a shot and it didnt pan out as hoped. A few added goats to the cascades better than no more goats added ...

Also as far as cost I would rather see $ spent on this than MANY others things it gets spent on . :twocents:
Thanks for the common sense post @Remnar . This was a monumental lift by so many. It's frustrating to see all of the negativity around an attempt to make things better in the world of wildlife.  Everyone from volunteer groups to wdfw to many tribes put forth time and resources.  Expectations were not of grandeur but of hope.  Hope has been dashed but it doesn't not take from the incredible effort and careful planning to have this go off so well, to give some a chance that didn’t exist. To all the armchair biologists and should haves on here I hope at some point you are able to witness the selflessness and work that went into this through being involved if given the opportunity. 

Offline fishngamereaper

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #43 on: May 10, 2024, 05:52:45 AM »
The reality is they could of left the goats alone.

The justification for attempted relocation didn't merit giving those goats a death sentence in my book.

In a State that's having a difficult time managing any sort of wildlife you'd hope science and common sense says leave a thriving resource alone and add some protocols to manage it better. Instead of take a chance and hope they survive a mass relocation.

Offline Tbar

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Re: ONP Goat relocation outcome
« Reply #44 on: May 10, 2024, 06:43:16 AM »
The reality is they could of left the goats alone.

The justification for attempted relocation didn't merit giving those goats a death sentence in my book.

In a State that's having a difficult time managing any sort of wildlife you'd hope science and common sense says leave a thriving resource alone and add some protocols to manage it better. Instead of take a chance and hope they survive a mass relocation.
NPS was lead on NEPA. Did you comment? Did you attend the meetings and speak up? There was opportunities for all to be involved in the determination of their existence in the park. Many involved did not support eradicating them but really wanted to make the best of the situation.

 


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