Category Archives: Wildlife
This Christmas, Show the Hunters that You Care
Judging by the frost on the grass and the ice on the birdbath, it’s time to start thinking about Christmas shopping. This year, your gifts can make a statement—they can show the hunters that you care.
Now don’t get me wrong, I don’t mean you should show hunters that you care about them—no, quite the opposite—I mean you can show the hunters that you care about wildlife. And what better way than purchasing a pro-wildlife/anti-hunting book, like Exposing the Big Game: Living Targets of a Dying Sport?
You’re probably not the type to camp out in front of Wal-Mart for the best deals on Asian sweatshop-produced, future landfill-clogging plastic trinkets, or you wouldn’t be here reading this post this morning–you’d be out there battling the crowds. Well, you won’t have to stand in line and risk being plowed through by some crazed shopper driving a Humvee or lose your tot in a crowded superstore while attempting to purchase Exposing the Big Game. You can order copies online from the comfort of your own home. If you’re not a fan of Amazon.com, feel free to email me at exposingthebiggame@gmail.com for signed copies sent directly to your doorstep. Or you can ask your local “brick and mortar” bookstore (which is more than likely on the verge of going out of business) to order in a copy or copies for you. And of course, Exposing the Big Game is also available in e-book form.
Each year there are a dozen or so new pro-hunting books on the market, while Exposing the Big Game is the only anti-hunting book to come out in decades, and the only one still in print. Don’t let the hunting industry think you’re indifferent about wildlife issues; Tis the season to show them that you care!
http://www.earth-books.net/books/exposing-the-big-game
Numbers down for antelope, pheasant hunting near Havre
Oct. 23, 2013
Overall hunting numbers were down, but hunters took more of some upland birds and waterfowl in the Havre area during the weekends of Oct. 12-13 and Oct. 19-20, according to numbers gathered from Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks Region 6 game check station outside Havre.
“Over the first two weekends of the season, harvest for most species has been down,” said FWP Havre-area wildlife biologist Scott Hemmer. “Antelope numbers and licenses have remained low since the winter of 2010-11, and this fact is reflected in the check station harvest being down 92 percent from the long-term average. Most antelope hunters reported having to hunt harder to find animals, but most have reported good horn growth in the bucks they did find and harvest this year.”
The general antelope season opened Oct. 12, as did pheasant season.
Pheasant harvest has been down slightly from last year, and hunters have reported pheasant hunting as spotty.
Sharp-tailed grouse harvest is down from last year, but Hungarian partridge harvest is up. Duck harvest has remained strong again this year.
Montana’s special two-day youth deer hunt was a week earlier this year, and that resulted in additional mule deer and white-tailed deer being harvested during this reporting period. In previous years, only archery deer hunting was open during this time of the year, Hemmer said.
However, white-tailed deer numbers are still down overall this year in FWP Region 6. That’s due to a long recovery period from a series of especially hard winters and significant outbreaks of epizootic hemorrhagic disease, also known as EHD, in 2011 and again this year.
Elk harvest reported at the check station thus far may have been limited by the temporary closure of the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge, but Hemmer said not enough elk have been harvested yet for a meaningful comparison to past years’ harvest.
Overall, hunter numbers continue to be low so far this year, Hemmer said.
Total hunter numbers are down 6 percent from last year and are still well below those seen prior to the winter of 2010-11.
Wildlife Refuges, Not Hunters’ Playgrounds
October 16th, 2013 by Anja Heister
Once again, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) wants to turn even more wildlife refuges into playgrounds for hunters and other “consumptive users” of wild animals.
The U.S. National Wildlife Refuge System includes 550 national wildlife refuges, thousands of waterfowl protection areas and four marine national monuments, totaling more than 150 million acres. Despite being called “refuges”, more than half of all national wildlife refuges are already open to hunters, trappers and anglers.
Consumptive users also have millions of acres of public and private lands outside the refuge system available to them to pursue their frivolous and violent activities of “recreational” trophy hunting and fishing, and trapping for fur. They should not be allowed in refuges, which often are the last remaining places for animal species already struggling for survival.
Furthermore, as the USFWS’s own 2011 survey has shown, wildlife watchers have already well outpaced and outspent wildlife killing interests. Wildlife watchers are a growing economic force, and their overwhelming preference to see living animals needs to be considered and respected.
Wildlife refuges, as the name indicates, should be true sanctuaries for wild animals where they are sheltered from the killing spree that surrounds them.
What You Can Do:
Please copy and paste the comment below to the USFWS and tell them that hunting, trapping and fishing should not be allowed in national wildlife refuges at all.
Please follow these steps to send your comment to the USFWS:
The Upside of Government Shutdown: Hunting Closures
From: Oklahoma Outdoor News
The government shutdown is causing headaches for Oklahoma outdoorsmen.In addition to campgrounds being closed on areas controlled by the US Army Corps of Engineers and popular destinations like the Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge and the Chickasaw National Recreation Area, popular deer hunts are also being canceled.[!!]
This weekend’s youth deer hunts on the Salt Plains National Wildlife Refuge are canceled because of the shutdown. There were 24 youth hunts which has been scheduled this weekend and another 39 scheduled in two weeks.[How many deer does that equate to?]
Other youth deer hunts which scheduled in the upcoming weeks at federally controlled wildlife refuges are in jeopardy. Bow hunters are not allowed on the Chickasaw National Recreation Area, which was open to buck hunting once again this year. (Boo fucking hoo!]
A spokesman for the Okla. Dept. of Wildlife Conservation said the agency has received numerous calls asking about the controlled hunts. Hunters will be notified if their hunts have been canceled.
The popular archery deer hunts at the McAlester Army Ammunition Plant, however, are expected to go on as planned. [That’s too bad.] The first of six weekend hunts are scheduled next weekend in McAlester.
The Dept. spokesman states “From what we’ve been told, everything here is in good shape. Now they could call us Monday and tell us to shut it down.”
Hunters, campers and anglers will feel the pain of a long shutdown. For Okla. trout fishermen, less rainbow trout will be swimming in the Lower Illinois River in the future if the shutdown continues.
State wildlife officials normally add hatchery-raised rainbow trout to the Lower Illinois River near Gore, Ok. once per week. However every week the agency had been getting those trout from a federal fish hatchery. That will now stop, and trout from the state’s commercial provider only will be added to the river every week until the federal furloughs end.
Interior Department Proposes Expansion of Hunting, Fishing Opportunities in National Wildlife Refuge System
Date: September 24, 2013
Contact: Jessica Kershaw (DOI) 202-208-6416
Vanessa Kauffman (FWS) 703-358-2138
Martha Nudel (FWS) 703-358-1858
Six More Refuges Open to Hunting; 20 Refuges Expand Hunting and Fishing Opportunities
WASHINGTON, D.C. – In advance of National Hunting and Fishing Day on September 28th, Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell today announced that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is proposing to expand fishing and hunting opportunities throughout the National Wildlife Refuge System, opening up new hunting programs on six refuges and expanding existing hunting and fishing programs on another 20 refuges. The proposed rule also modifies existing refuge-specific regulations for more than 75 additional refuges and wetland management districts.
“Sportsmen and women were a major driving force behind the creation and expansion of the National Wildlife Refuge System more than a century ago and continue to be some of its strongest supporters, especially through their volunteer work and financial contributions,” Jewell said. “Keeping our hunting and angling heritage strong by providing more opportunities on our refuges will not only help raise up a new generation of conservationists, but also support local businesses and create jobs in local communities.”
Under the National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997, the Service can permit hunting and fishing along with four other types of wildlife-dependent recreation where they are compatible with the refuge’s purpose and mission. Hunting, within specified limits, is permitted on more than 329 wildlife refuges. Fishing is permitted on more than 271 wildlife refuges.
“Hunting and fishing are healthy, traditional outdoor pastimes deeply rooted in America’s heritage and have long been enjoyed on hundreds of national wildlife refuges under the supervision of our biologists and wildlife managers,” said Director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Dan Ashe. “After careful consideration and review from the Service, this proposal represents one of the largest expansions of hunting and fishing opportunities on wildlife refuges in recent years.”
National wildlife refuges generate important benefits from the conservation of wildlife and habitat through spending and employment for local economies. According to the National Survey of Fishing, Hunting and Wildlife-Associated Recreation, published every five years by the Service, more than 90 million Americans, or 41 percent of the United States’ population age 16 and older, pursued wildlife-related recreation in 2011. They spent more than $144 billion that year on those activities. Nearly 72 million people observed wildlife, while more than 33 million fished and more than 13 million hunted.
The Service manages its hunting and fishing programs on refuges to ensure sustainable wildlife populations, while offering historical wildlife-dependent recreation on public lands.
Other wildlife-dependent recreation on national wildlife refuges includes wildlife photography, environmental education, wildlife observation and interpretation.
The Service proposes opening the following refuges to hunting for the first time:
New York
•Shawangunk Grasslands National Wildlife Refuge: Open to big game hunting.
Oregon
•Baskett Slough National Wildlife Refuge: Open to migratory bird hunting.
•Nestucca Bay National Wildlife Refuge: Open to migratory bird hunting.
•Siletz Bay National Wildlife Refuge: Open to migratory bird hunting.
Pennsylvania
•Cherry Valley National Wildlife Refuge: Open to migratory bird, upland game and big game hunting.
Wyoming
•Cokeville Meadows National Wildlife Refuge: Open to migratory bird, upland game and big game hunting.
Meanwhile, under the proposal, the Service would expand hunting and sport fishing on the following refuges:
California
•Colusa National Wildlife Refuge: Expand migratory bird and upland game hunting.
Florida
•Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge: Add big game hunting. The refuge is already open to migratory bird hunting.
•St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge: Expand migratory bird hunting, upland game hunting and big game hunting.
Idaho
•Kootenai National Wildlife Refuge: Expand upland game hunting. The refuge is already open to migratory bird hunting and big game hunting.
Illinois
•Cypress Creek National Wildlife Refuge: Expand migratory bird hunting, upland game hunting and big game hunting.
•Middle Mississippi River National Wildlife Refuge: Expand migratory bird hunting, upland game hunting and big game hunting.
Indiana
•Patoka River National Wildlife Refuge and Management Area: Expand migratory bird hunting, upland game hunting and big game hunting.
Iowa
•Neal Smith National Wildlife Refuge: Expand migratory bird hunting, upland game hunting and big game hunting.
•Northern Tallgrass Prairie National Wildlife Refuge: Expand migratory bird hunting, upland game hunting and big game hunting.
•Port Louisa National Wildlife Refuge: Expand migratory bird hunting, upland game hunting, big game hunting and sport fishing.
Maine
•Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge: Expand migratory bird hunting, upland game hunting and big game hunting.
Missouri
•Mingo National Wildlife Refuge: Expand migratory bird hunting, upland game hunting and big game hunting.
New Mexico
•San Andres National Wildlife Refuge: Expand big game hunting.
Oregon
•Bandon Marsh National Wildlife Refuge, OR and WA: Expand migratory bird hunting. The refuge is also already open to sport fishing.
•Julia Butler Hanson Refuge for the Columbian White-Tailed Deer, OR and WA: Expand migratory bird hunting. The refuge is already open to big game hunting.
•Malheur National Wildlife Refuge: Expand migratory bird hunting and sport fishing. The refuge is already open to upland game hunting and big game hunting.
Texas
•Aransas National Wildlife Refuge: Add migratory bird hunting. The refuge is already open to big game hunting.
•Balcones Canyonlands National Wildlife Refuge: Expand hunting for migratory birds, upland game and big game.
Vermont
•Silvio O. Conte National Fish and Wildlife Refuge: Expand migratory bird hunting, upland game hunting and big game hunting.
Washington
•Willapa National Wildlife Refuge: Expand migratory bird hunting and big game hunting. The refuge is already open to upland game hunting.
Notice of the 2013-2014 proposed Refuge-Specific Hunting and Sport Fishing Regulations will publish in the Federal Register September 24, 2013. Written comments and information can be submitted by one of the following methods:
•Federal eRulemaking Portal: Follow the instructions for submitting comments to Docket No. [FWS-HQ-NWRS-2013-0074]; or
•U.S. mail or hand-delivery: Public Comments Processing, Attn: [FWS-HQ-NWRS-2013-0074]; Division of Policy and Directives Management; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, MS 2042–PDM; Arlington, VA 22203.
Comments must be received within 30 days, on or before October 24, 2013. The Service will post all comments on regulations.gov. The Service is not able to accept email or faxes.
Comments and materials, as well as supporting documentation, will also be available for public inspection at regulations.gov under the above docket number. In addition, more details on the kinds of information the Service is seeking is available in the notice.
Stop Lion Trophy Hunting
The lion population in Africa is being reduced at an alarming rate – 50 years ago there were 450,000 lions. Today as little as 20,000 remain. Lion Trophy Hunting, especially Canned Lion Hunting (where lions are shot in cages) are largely responsible for the dwindling lion population.
For the right price you can shoot a beautiful male lion, a lioness with cubs or even a lion cub – and this is done while they are in a cage and defenseless.
Canned Lion Hunting is not illegal in South Africa. The SA government also refuses to stop the issue of Lion Hunting permits or to at least limit the number of permits issued.
Sign the petition: https://secure.avaaz.org/en/petition/Stop_Lion_Trophy_Hunting/?dOrYHdb
Wildlife Watchers Outnumber Hunters 5-1
FWP takes measured approach to adding new wildlife stakeholders
LAURA LUNDQUIST, Chronicle Staff Writer September 15, 2013
Autumn can seem distant if you’re a hunter with a license burning a hole in your pocket and more than a month left until rifle season.
Big-game rifle hunters must bide their time, sighting in their scopes or scouting their locations while waiting for Oct. 26. Meanwhile, bird hunters and archers are already out in the fields, enduring summer temperatures as they make the best of the time they have.
Such has been the fall ritual for many Montanans.
But just as fall now has fewer cool days, it also has fewer hunters.
That doesn’t bode well for Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, which depends on sportsmen’s dollars.
FWP is reassessing its finances to decide how much to increase license fees to manage wildlife through another decade. The dwindling number of sportsmen may require FWP to turn to a new funding pool: the nongame user.
Wildlife watchers and photographers are a growing segment of the population that outnumbers sportsmen 5-to-1 nationwide. In 2011, wildlife watchers spent more than $400 million on viewing equipment and travel in Montana.
While some wildlife watchers agree that they should contribute to wildlife agencies, the details of how to target a fee and what it should pay for have eluded managers for more than 20 years.
“State Parks had that challenge, and they got those license-plate fees,” said Montana Audubon Program Director Janet Ellis. “The Legislature needs to figure out how FWP can get a little slice of something like that.”
For a century, sportsmen have been the financial backbone of state wildlife management because of license fees and taxes on guns, ammunition and fishing gear.
Prior to the digital age, such funding was solid.
According to a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service national survey, conducted every five years, the number of hunters with Montana tags has been fairly steady since 1991, bouncing around 200,000.
In 2011, when the number of hunters appears to have rebounded nationwide, 50,000 fewer hunters ventured into Montana’s wildlands, according to the survey.
That estimate is not exact, but FWP financial analyst Hank Worsech said license sales supports that decline.
He calculated that license sales have declined 2.5 percent over the past three years. Last year was the first that nonresident hunting licenses didn’t sell out.
The Wildlife Society calculated a 36 percent drop in the sale of Duck Stamps, required for all who hunt waterfowl, since the 1970s.
Some claim nonresident hunters aren’t coming to Montana due to perceptions that predators have eliminated game.
But states without wolves have similar problems. For instance, Vermont had a 50-percent drop in nonresident hunters.
A more worrying explanation is that older hunters are retiring from the game and fewer youth are coming in. Half of hunters are 50 or older. Young people tend to be more interested in video games and social media.
“Western states are competing for less and less people,” Worsech said.
Fishing has managed to hold on to greater popularity, but it too has seen a decline.
The trend could destabilize future FWP funding.
FWP depends on license sales for half its budget because it receives no money from the state’s general fund. Federal money accounts for most of the rest.
“We operate in a world of, ‘We have a product to sell and we run on the revenue we collect.’ We’re different from other state agencies — we run more like a business,” said FWP Finance Division administrator Sue Daly.
License sales were brisk enough until four years ago. But since 2009, sales totals have decreased while the bills continued to increase, putting the agency in the red.
Part of that deficit is planned.
Montana’s Legislature, like those in several states, considers license fee increases every 10 years. During the ensuing decade, the FWP bottom line slides from black to red as inflation rises.
This time, it’s different.
Fewer license sales have combined with inflation to force the bottom line down faster. To slow the decline, FWP cut some programs, and committees are proposing to eliminate some discounted licenses.
If the negative-sales trend continues, legislators will have to hike license fees significantly to keep the budget on par.
That’s bound to prompt complaints from some hunters.
But some, like Randy Newberg, think Montana’s fees are low considering the hunting opportunity they provide and the conservation efforts that benefit the state economy.
“We need to tie (fee increases) to an annual consumer price index. Small increases are easier to swallow than a big increase,” Newberg said. “If hunters aren’t willing to pay more, they’re saying, ‘I’m willing to give up my seat at the table.’”
That table may get a bit more crowded in the next few years.
“I’m trying to sell my members on (fee increases) because there is pushback,” said Montana Wildlife Federation spokesman Nick Gevock. “But we need to look beyond hunters and anglers because everyone enjoys wildlife. Funding will be the conservation challenge of the 21st century.”
FWP has watched as other states recently confronted that challenge.
Wyoming Game and Fish had to cut its 2014 budget by $4.8 million because of declining license sales and the Wyoming Legislature’s refusal to approve a fee increase.
Last summer, after watching its license sales decrease by 25 percent, Idaho Fish and Game organized the Idaho Wildlife Summit to find alternative funding.
“As far as trying to find non-consumptive funding, that was never the overall plan. But we knew we were plowing new ground,” said Idaho game spokesman Mike Keckler. “Since then, the regional working groups have helped us come up with a few ideas for funding nongame programs.”
Keckler said the summit was meant to renew enthusiasm for wildlife.
But some hunting groups weren’t enthusiastic because wildlife watchers include wolf watchers. So controversy overshadowed the search for solutions.
Some groups, such as Sportsmen for Fish and Wildlife, accused the Idaho Summit and the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies of favoring wildlife viewers and photographers over hunters.
Non-consumptive users shouldn’t have a say in the wildlife management that sportsmen have paid for, according to a Lobo Watch blog post written by Toby Bridges.
Big Game Forever spokesman Ryan Benson said wolves caused the financial problem, along with associated lawsuits.
“I don’t think we should scrap the user-based model,” Benson said. “States couldn’t protect their wildlife because of a federal program. The federal wolf recovery was a major contributing factor so there should be some help from the federal level.”
In Montana, FWP Commissioner Dan Vermillion recently suggested that wildlife advocates could contribute to that user-based model.
When wolf advocates claimed thousands opposed increasing wolf-hunt quotas, Vermillion suggested that they buy wolf tags. If FWP saw a sudden surge in license sales, then they’d have a better feel for the number of wolf advocates, Vermillion said.
That didn’t go over well with wolf advocates, but Vermillion said FWP needs to find ways to bolster hunters’ contributions.
“I think we’re tricking ourselves if we don’t recognize that Montana and the U.S. are changing. Look at Bozeman – it’s full of wildlife enthusiasts,” Vermillion said. “Hunting and fishing are important, but we need to bring new stakeholders to the table.”
Wolves of the Rockies spokeswoman Kim Bean said advocates would never buy tags because they fund only collaring and lethal control.
Wolfwatcher Coalition executive director Diane Bentivegna said her 250,000 members would send contributions to wildlife agencies in every state that manages wolves but there’s a catch: The money could go only toward non-lethal wildlife programs.
“Under current budgetary structure, we aren’t allowed to say where our contributions go. We would like to introduce legislation that would allow us to fund agencies and have it go toward the programs that we support,” Bentivegna said.
Not every species has a support group, and direct donations aren’t regular enough to help.
Wildlife agencies need to find a vehicle, such as a tax on equipment or a license plate fee, that provides a steady flow of money if non-traditional contributions are to be helpful.
Montana has a non-game donation that residents can make when they file their taxes, but it brings in only about $27,000 a year.
This summer, FWP non-game section chief Laurie Hanauska-Brown organized a meeting to “have the first discussion” with wildlife and birding organizations about how to bring more users in.
“The message can’t be communicated as, ‘C’mon you non-consumptive users, it’s time to step to the table,’” Hanauska-Brown said. “We want to make sure we’re covering all the species so that we can bring more people on board.”
FWP is taking a very long-term approach with non-consumptive funding and will focus on more concrete options first, Hanauska-Brown said.
Newberg, although not opposed, is skeptical that recreational users will step up. He cited the failure of the Conservation and Reinvestment Act in 2000, when several manufacturers and groups rejected a tax on outdoor equipment.
“It was finally their chance to do what hunters do, but they bailed out,” Newberg said. “Hunters and anglers pay an excise tax. It’s disingenuous to say, ‘We want a say in wildlife, but we don’t want to pay for anything.’”
Sea otter return boosts ailing seagrass in California
[Proof that nature can take care of her own, if only we’d step aside and let her…]
Sea otter return boosts ailing seagrass in California
By Suzi Gage BBC News
A sea otter enjoys a crab in California, and helps seagrass in the process.The return of sea otters to an estuary on the central Californian coast has significantly improved the health of seagrass, new research has found.
Seagrass was deemed to be heading for extinction in this region before the otters returned.
But scientists found that the animals triggered a chain reaction of events that boosted the water-dwelling plants.
The research is published in the journal, PNAS.
The urbanisation of California has led to a huge increase in nutrient pollution in coastal waters, from increasing use of nitrogen-rich fertilizers.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote
It’s almost like these sea otters are fighting the effects of poor water quality”
End Quote Brent Hughes University of California
This is said to be the reason for the dieback of seagrass, which has also been declining worldwide.
This research suggests that the hunting to near-extinction of sea otters in the late 19th and early 20th Century may have exacerbated the problem, and conversely that their reintroduction is helping revive ailing seagrass populations, even in the face of hugely nutrient-rich water.
Links in the chain
The researchers assessed seagrass levels over the past 50 years in the Elkhorn Slough in Monterey Bay, and mapped their increases and declines.
They looked at a variety of changes that may have affected the grass, but the only factor that really matched the changes in seagrass was sea otter numbers.
They theorised that sea otters were eating the crabs which prey upon small invertebrates in the water.
These invertebrates eat a type of algae which blooms when there are more nutrients in the soil. It grows on the leaves of the seagrass, shading them from sunlight and causing them to die back.
This is quite a complex cascade of effects, so the researchers tested out their theory by comparing similar estuaries with and without sea otters, and by doing experiments in the lab, and in the field.
These experiments, which included putting cages that sea otters either could or couldn’t access, down on the seagrass, confirmed their hypothesis.
Sea otters have been responsible for improving the health of the seagrass in these estuaries.Brent Hughes, lead author of the study, said: “This estuary is part of one of the most polluted systems in the entire world, but you can still get this healthy thriving habitat, and it’s all because of the sea otters.
“So it’s almost like these sea otters are fighting the effects of poor water quality.”
Hughes described seagrass as “the canary in the coalmine” in terms of predicting levels of nutrient pollution in the water.
Foundation species
It also acts as a nursery habitat for many species of fish and it uses CO2 from sea water and the atmosphere, thus potentially helping with climate change.
Not only that, but it acts as protection to the stability of the shoreline.
Hughes said: “It’s what we call a foundation species, like kelp forest, salt marsh or coral reef. The major problem from a global perspective is that seagrass is declining worldwide. And one of the major drivers of this decline has been nutrient inputs from anthropogenic sources, via agriculture or urban runoff.”
These findings are of particular interest at the moment, as a ban on sea otters moving along the coast to southern California was lifted last year. The ban was in place as there was a fear the sea otters would impinge on fisheries in the area.
Hughes told BBC news: “That’s important because there’s a lot of these kind of degraded estuaries in southern California because of all the urban runoff from places like Los Angeles and San Diego.
“Coastal managers will now have a better sense of what’s going to happen when sea otters move in to their systems.
“There’s a huge potential benefit to sea otters returning to these estuaries, and in to these seagrass beds that might be threatened.”









