Free: Contests & Raffles.
Deer numbers were mostly brought back by the ban on commercial hunting. There was a time when they were shot year around in unregulated numbers. Private hunters and sportsmen's groups put an end to it.Bison were hunted down to near extinction out of greed.
The market for buffalo was a serious problem for them, but what really led to their near extirpation was a military tactic to eliminate the buffalo to move the indian tribes out of the great plains- no buffalo=no indians....it was that tactic that led to the mindless slaughter and waste of buffalo.I don't mind having wolves around, and there's absolutely no doubt that they had a part in honing the genetics of ungulate populations. In today's altered environment, our hunting could replace wolf predation and maintain healthy herds. But, we're going to be sharing with wolves- like it or not... I think we can support both wolves and robust herds if we manage habitat properly. If we would properly harvet the forests, treat weeds, replant forage species, protect some core habitats, and manage ourselves a little better- we could have a pile of wildlife.
So, to put it in a nutshell, if we still had millions of buffalo, then the wolves wouldn't be much of a problem. I guess that is probably accurate. Not sure of the historical accuracy of exterminating the buffalo as a "military tactic". I have never seen any evidence that the Army spent any time or resources shooting buffalo. No doubt that the extermination of the bison "won" the Indian Wars against the plains tribes, but I don't think that it was a tactic or that the Army did it intentionally. It was market hunters that did the exterminating. It just happened to work out in the Army's favor.
Lots of good thoughts by lots of smart people, but nobody really nailed what I want to know. So I must rephrase...How is it that with wolves living here for millenia that ungulate numbers were in the tens/hundreds of millions when white settlers arrived and not numbering in the thousands? For contemporary comparison consider consider the Lolo zone where elk numbers have gone from about 16,000 to about 2,000in about a decade.(?)
...I don't mind having wolves around, and there's absolutely no doubt that they had a part in honing the genetics of ungulate populations....