As attitudes toward wild predators shift, Colorado voters weigh a ban on hunting mountain lions

KEVIN CROOKS
Colorado State University

Published: September 25, 2024

(THE CONVERSATION) Hunting large carnivores is a contentious issue in wildlife management and conservation. It’s on the ballot in fall 2024 in Colorado, where voters will consider Initiative 91, a proposed ban on hunting and trapping of mountain lions, bobcats and lynx in the state.
Wildlife agencies often use regulated hunting as a tool for controlling carnivore populations, reducing their impacts on vulnerable wildlife or minimizing the risk of conflict between carnivores and people, pets and livestock. But scientific studies have questioned how effectively recreational hunting achieves these goals. And public attitudes are shifting as participation in hunting declines.
We direct Colorado State University’s Center for Human-Carnivore Coexistence and Animal-Human Policy Center. Together with our colleague Benjamin Ghasemi, we recently surveyed Colorado residents about their perceptions of hunting mountain lions and black bears in the state.
We found that support for hunting depended on the purpose, with most Coloradans disapproving of hunting for trophies or sport. Gender, age and other demographic factors also played roles.
Meet the neighbors
Mountain lions, also known as cougars or pumas, live primarily in the western U.S. and are legally hunted in all western states except California. Black bears, which live mainly in mountainous and forested regions across the continental U.S., are hunted in the majority of states in which they are found.
The Colorado Parks and Wildlife agency estimates that roughly 3,800 to 4,400 adult mountain lions and 17,000 to 20,000 black bears live in Colorado. They are found mainly in the Rocky Mountains, with the eastern edges of their ranges near more human-populated areas in the Front Range.
According to state data, hunters in Colorado killed 502 mountain lions during the 2022-2023 hunting season and 1,299 black bears during the 2023 season.
Both species come into conflict with people in the state. The most common situation is when bears wander into mountain towns in search of garbage or other foods left by humans. Mountain lions are occasionally sighted in urban areas, and on rare occasions have attacked people.
Varying views of hunting
Our study gathered responses from Colorado residents through two public mail surveys. Samples were weighted to be representative of state population demographics, including age, gender, urbanization level, geographical region and participation in hunting.
Respondents’ views on legal and regulated hunting of mountain lions were evenly split, with 41% approving and 41% disapproving. This was also true for black bears: 46% approved of hunting them, and 46% disapproved.
Large majorities disapproved of hunting either animal for trophies, hide or fur, or for recreation. For mountain lions, 78% of respondents disapproved of trophy hunting; for black bears, 86% disapproved of trophy hunting. People also generally disapproved of hunting either species for meat.
Respondents were more supportive of hunts for other reasons. They approved of hunting mountain lions and black bears to protect human safety by 63% and 57%, respectively. And 56% approved of hunting mountain lions to reduce harm to livestock.
Large majorities disapproved of hunting mountain lions with dogs (88%) or recorded electronic calls (75%). Most mountain lions hunted in Colorado are legally taken with the aid of dogs, which chase and then tree or corner the cats. Using electronic calls to attract the cats was permitted in some parts of western Colorado until 2024, when the practice was banned for hunting mountain lions. It remains legal for hunting other carnivores, such as bobcats and coyotes.
Women, younger people, urban residents and people who identified as or leaned Democratic tended to be less supportive of hunting than men, older people, rural residents and Republicans. A study we published in 2022 on the reintroduction of wolves to Colorado found a similar political split, with stronger support for restoring wolves among people who identified as Democratic than among Republicans.
How to coexist with carnivores?
Although Coloradans were generally supportive of using hunting to reduce human conflict with black bears and mountain lions, studies suggest that it might not be the most effective tool to do so.
For example, a recent experimental study in Ontario, Canada, concluded that increased hunting of black bears did not result in less conflict – particularly during years when the bear’s natural food sources, such as nuts and berries, were limited in the wild. A long-term study on bears in Durango, Colorado, also found that availability of natural foods in the wild, and the lure of human food within the city, were the main drivers of clashes with bears.
Conversely, another study in New Jersey – which is more densely developed than Colorado, so bears may be more likely to encounter people – found that well-regulated hunting of closely monitored black bear populations could help reduce conflict.
Similar to its policy with bears, Colorado uses hunting as a management tool for mountain lions. There is limited scientific evidence that hunting mountain lions may prevent conflict with them. A recent study found that juvenile mountain lions from a hunted site in Nevada tended to avoid developed areas. In contrast, young cats from a site in California without hunting did not show any preference for or against areas with people.
Yet, other correlative studies in Washington, California and Canada have suggested that hunting may make the problem worse. According to these researchers, hunting might disrupt the social dynamics and age structure of mountain lion populations, causing young cats seeking new territory to roam into populated areas, increasing their chances of encountering people.
Overall, we believe that more reliable scientific information is needed to guide carnivore management and test assumptions about how effective hunting is at addressing these problems. Continued focus on proactive, nonlethal strategies to prevent conflict is essential.
Ultimately, promoting coexistence between humans and carnivores is often much more about managing people than about managing predators. Changing human behavior is key.
For example, failing to store garbage securely attracts bears. So does filling bird feeders in spring, summer and fall, when bears are active. Steps to reduce encounters with mountain lions include hiking in groups and making noise; keeping dogs leashed in the backcountry; keeping pets indoors at home; and not landscaping with plants that attract deer, the cat’s main prey.
Big cats on the ballot
Colorado’s Initiative 91 would ban hunting and trapping of mountain lions, bobcats and lynx in the state. It would allow for lethal removal of problem animals to protect human life, property and livestock.
Hunting and trapping of bobcats, mainly to sell their pelts in the fur trade, is currently legal in Colorado. On average, hunters and trappers have killed 880 bobcats annually over the past three years, the majority of which were trapped. Hunting and trapping are currently prohibited for lynx, which are listed as endangered in Colorado and threatened nationally, but the proposed ban would protect them if their populations recover.
Coloradans have voted to limit carnivore hunting in the past. They passed a ballot initiative in 1992 to ban bait, hounds and a spring hunting season for bears, and another in 1996 to ban the use of leghold traps, poison and snares.
Our research adds to growing evidence that public views toward hunting and carnivores are shifting. An increasing share of Americans believes humans should coexist with carnivores and opposes lethal control for human benefit. Studies also suggest that ballot measures like Initiative 91 may become more common as public attitudes evolve and more diverse groups seek to influence wildlife management.
It will be challenging for wildlife managers to adapt to these changing values. Agencies may have to consider more participatory methods that engage diverse stakeholders in decision-making, develop new funding mechanisms that are less reliant on hunting and fishing license fees, and reexamine how and for whom they manage wild animals.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article here: https://theconversation.com/as-attitudes-toward-wild-predators-shift-colorado-voters-weigh-a-ban-on-hunting-mountain-lions-238265.

Watching This Disabled Hunter Get His First Deer Is The Most Heartwarming Thing You’ll See All Week

Mary Claire Crabtree·

HUNTINGRIFF OUTDOORS

·September 23, 2024

Disabled hunter shoots his first deer with modified trigger

@soggybottomlodge

A moment this young man will never forget.

Last hunting season, this video left the internet in an absolute puddle when they saw a disabled man shooting his first deer.

Meet Will Freeman, an outdoors enthusiast with special needs that most hunters do not face. However, instead of just wishing he could hit the deer stand, Soggy Bottom Lodge in Marengo County, Alabama (a five-star hunting resort) invited Will and his family out to make his dreams come true… taking him out to the field and making sure that Will got a buck.

While most people think that he might have just been in the stand while the deer was shot, think again. With the aid of a special gadget, Will was instructed when it was time to shoot his deer from inside a truck, and he pulled the trigger…or a modified version of one. A contraption attached to the riffle allowed Will to shoot his own gun via an air trigger straw. When Will was ready to pull, he sucked the air from the straw, signaling the weapon to fire.

The result? The takedown of a MASSIVE buck.

While you are watching the video, you can feel the emotion of excitement through the phone screen as Will not only hears all the cheering from outside the truck after the gun was fired but also the excitement from his family knowing that they were able to make their son’s dream come true.

Will has a huge smile on his face, and the video is so emotional. I’m not going to lie… it made me tear up.

Soggy Bottom noted on the video’s caption:

“Best thing ever! Will’s daddy promised him when he was little that somehow, some way, one day, he would get him a deer! Today was that day! What an experience! Kidz outdoors had a contraption when Will sucked the straw; it shot the gun. Will got his first deer today! I wouldn’t take anything for the happiness I saw today.”

Will’s dad flung open the car door, cheering on his son as the whole group was filled with so much excitement and thrill over Will’s buck. I lost it when Will’s dad kissed him and said:

“You got it, buddy. You got it.” 

That is one proud dad.

https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/7304175949048728875?lang=en-US&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.whiskeyriff.com%2F2024%2F09%2F23%2Fwatching-this-disabled-hunter-get-his-first-deer-is-the-most-heartwarming-thing-youll-see-all-week%2F

The videos were swarmed with comments noting viewers’ excitement for Will.

“‘Gone make an old man cry,’ me too, sir. Me too.”

“Not a huge fan of hunting, but I am a huge fan of love. Good stuff.”

“I was doing great until Dad opened the door. That’s one proud daddy.”

“This is AMAZING! Everyone in that truck got to experience buck fever all at once, and that’s a cool thing!”

“Didn’t expect to have tears with my coffee.. ‘best part of waking up is watching will kill that buck.’”

“As a hunter and outdoorsman, this is the coolest thing I’ve ever seen.”

Later on, Will’s mother shared a compilation of the pictures captured from the hunt… including the prized buck that Will got.

19-year-old hunter shoots wolf to defend himself and fellow hunters amid pack encounter near St. Germain

https://trinitymedia.ai/player/trinity-player.php?pageURL=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.wjfw.com%2Fnews%2F19-year-old-hunter-shoots-wolf-to-defend-himself-and-fellow-hunters-amid-pack-encounter%2Farticle_83671a54-7acc-11ef-8f4b-d35a97259d14.html&partner=Flex&FAB=1&textSelector=I2FydGljbGUtYm9keQ%3D%3D&unitId=2900003117&userId=d87d6c70-698d-425c-a490-50e59507f6c4&isLegacyBrowser=false&isPartitioningSupport=1&version=20240925_1816a3f5dfad16eae13ac3cdc77597a010b7bd6f&useBunnyCDN=0&themeId=140&unitType=tts-player

Saturday morning at approximately 6:15 AM near St. Germain, a young 19-year-old hunter from Sugar Camp had to make an instinctual decision to shoot and kill a wolf to protect himself and two younger hunters from a pack of brazen wolves.

“We pulled up to the spot at like 3:45 in the morning to get our spot because it was opening morning. We got to the spot we built our blind. A little bit before shooting light, we threw our decoy outs we had some goose silhouettes some mallards and some teal,” said Chase Melton the 19-year-old hunter.

But come daybreak, that normal opening morning quickly became a nightmare.

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“The one kid next to me he was 14 years old said ‘hey you have a deer coming down on your left side,’ so I stood up and looked over at it was a wolf,” said Melton.

Melton said it was hard to identify at first whether it was a wolf or coyote.

“I tried making some noise, I was clapping, stomping, breaking some sticks, whatever. This wolf turned at me and we locked eyes, and it started to come at us not like a walk but like a jog almost and it was at about 40-50 yards. So, I started to panic a little bit they started panicking because they’re younger kids and they’re like oh my god we’ve got wolves around us,” said Melton.

“So, I grabbed my gun just in case something would happen,” said Melton. “Then, the 13-year-old who was two people down from me said ‘Chase right behind you!’ I looked, and we had a wolf at about five yards – I probably could have touched it with my hand, that was extremely scary. So now, we’re really panicking were like alright were surrounded we have a wolf charging us right now.” Said Melton.

A witness that was hunting 300 feet away reported seeing at least five wolves surrounding the young hunters’ blind and another four in the general area. The witness also reported hearing barks, growls and howls coming from the wolves surrounding the young hunters’ blind.

“This wolf got within 15 yards and I’m like he’s still coming, he’s still coming, he got withing 8-10 yards and it’s not what I wanted to do but to protect us and to protect them we felt harmed, so I pulled the trigger,” said Melton.

Melton fired one shot, close range at the wolf’s face using a 12-gauge loaded with non-toxic waterfowl load.

“This wolf that was five yards behind us went off into the woods, came down, and then grabbed this wolf that I shot by the neck and started dragging it off. I’ve never witnessed something like that.”

Melton said he’s witnessed wolves in this spot once before but never an encounter like this.

“So after this wolf grabbed the one that I shot by the neck, they were yipping super loud, beyond scary,” said Melton

Melton said he contacted the DNR immediately after the encounter occurred after the wolves retreated into woods. A DNR official confirmed the incident.

“They reported that incident to DNR right away that morning. A DNR conservation warden and biologist were able to follow up that morning to investigate and confirmed that it was a wolf. At this time the investigation remains open so unfortunately, I’m unable to share any more details at this time,” said Randy Johnson, Large Carnivore Specialist for the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.

As for Melton – an avid outdoorsman – it’s a day he won’t forget.

“Even just being out in the woods in the future it might have an impact on me its just hard to say,” said Melton.