Hunting Washington Forum
Community => Advocacy, Agencies, Access => Topic started by: Kain on May 06, 2011, 04:50:02 PM
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Same problem with the grouse. Too many predators. I am torn on this stuff. I want the rabbits to come back but I hate the waste that goes into these programs. I breed rabbits and it is very inexpensive. I have no idea why they cant breed hundreds of them for very little money.
May 6, 2011
Contacts: Matt Monda, WDFW, (509) 754-4624, ext. 216
Chris Warren, USFWS, (509) 893-8020
Pygmy rabbit recovery effort renewed
Renewed field efforts to recover endangered Columbia Basin pygmy rabbits are under way this spring in eastern Washington shrub-steppe habitat.
Up to 100 pygmy rabbits-from captive-breeding facilities and from the wild in Oregon-will be released on the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) Sagebrush Flat Wildlife Area in Douglas County, beginning this month.
"This is what we call a ‘soft release’," explained Matt Monda, WDFW’s north central regional wildlife manager in Ephrata.
"The captive-reared rabbits from our partners at Washington State University (WSU), Northwest Trek Wildlife Park, and the Oregon Zoo, will first be kept in a wire mesh enclosure on the wildlife area to help them transition to life in the wild and to protect them from predators," Monda said.
Keeping the rabbits in enclosures until they become familiar with the site is expected to increase their chance of survival, according to biologists. An earlier effort to release 20 captive-bred pygmy rabbits at Sagebrush Flat Wildlife Area in 2007 was not successful because most fell victim to predators.
Both federal and state authorities have listed the Columbia basin pygmy rabbit as an endangered species. Sixteen of the last-known wild Columbia Basin pygmy rabbits were captured in 2002 and placed in breeding programs at WSU, Northwest Trek, and Oregon Zoo. The captive rabbits were bred to provide rabbits for future releases, but the breeding programs struggled with disease and other limitations of inbreeding from the relatively small founder stock.
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) wildlife biologist Chris Warren of Spokane said that although the captive breeding program has conserved the genetics of the Columbia Basin population, it may be discontinued due to its limitations and high costs.
Warren said wild rabbits from Oregon are being included in the current reintroduction to increase initial numbers and to breed with captive-reared rabbits. Cross-breeding of Columbia Basin pygmy rabbits with those from other states has been approved by USFWS.
Most neighboring land owners have entered into "Safe Harbor Agreements" with USFWS and WDFW, holding them harmless under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) if rabbits disperse to their property and are accidentally injured or killed during routine land uses. Monda said released rabbits will be closely monitored by project staff.
The Columbia Basin pygmy rabbit (Brachylagus idahoensis) is the country’s smallest native rabbit and the only rabbit to dig its own burrows, which makes it dependent on deep soils in shrub-steppe habitat in eastern Washington. It was listed as a state endangered species in 1993. After the state population dropped to fewer than 40 rabbits in Douglas County by 2001, it was listed as a federal endangered species in 2003.
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Well this is one of the things that has changed thru the years as management of WA Fish and Wildlife changed. There use to be a Dept of Fisheries and a Dept of Game, Fisheries obviously handled fisheries issues and the Dept of Game only managed game animals which are species that are hunted. All hunting license fees went to the Dept of Game, which obviously meant hunting fees are supporting programs that support species which are hunted.
THEN the Dept of Game turned into the Dept of Wildlife which basically changed what the Game Dept manages, instead of only managing species which are hunted the new Dept of Wildlife had to manage every type of wildlife, from moose to the pygmy rabbit.
Then in 1994 the Dept of Fisheries and Dept of Wildlife merged to form WDFW.
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I get they have to manage all wildlife now and dont really have a problem with having some hunting license money going towards other animals. I just want that money spent wisely. I see them pour tons of money into sharp tailed grouse, pygmy rabbits and Columbia whitetail and decades later have nothing to show for it.
At some point you have to look at them and figure out if they are incompetent, actively prolonging the recovery for the money or fighting a loosing battle.
All I see is really expensive bird food.
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It is a fact that they want to help an endangered species reproduce, only to become a meal for avian protected species. the last time they did this the monitoring site was marked with a fencepost, just a perch for the raptors.
Same thing for pheasant reproduction, ravens and hawks have it made.
But the avian predators,ravens and magpies are reproducing just fine.
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All magpies are in a constant state of depredation. Shoot em all!
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Has turned into quite the joke with many of the locals.