- Thread Starter
- #41
wildwilderness
WKR
So how can this be changed? Federal level only? Talk to senators? Lawsuit?Exactly.
So how can this be changed? Federal level only? Talk to senators? Lawsuit?Exactly.
So how can this be changed? Federal level only? Talk to senators? Lawsuit?
This IMO is the best post in this whole thread. The idea for a required stamp that earmarks funds specifically for sheep could sure do more good than harm. Heck, every state that has wild sheep could benefit from doing that in their state.As someone who has worked in a state wildlife lab for several years and been involved with a few sheep transports, I can tell you with nearly 100% certainty that they will not be moving pen-raised (domestic) sheep into the wild. There isn't a wildlife vet in the nation that would get onboard with that. The wood bison thing was a whole different thing. Those animals were extirpated from the landscape and it was a reintroduction. There was no chance of them contacting established herds.
I used to be on the fee for resident HT wagon, but what does that do? Put more money in the general F&G fund to be used on spruce grouse studies? Basically. People in the know from the WSF have said that money donated from banquets rarely goes to sheep. I believe there is Alaska law that prevents allocating funds beyond the fish and wildlife fund. And once it's in there, where it goes is sorted out at an admin level. Not saying that banquet money does nothing, but it's not doing what's advertised. I believe they can pick up line items for the department such as purchasing m.ovi test kits and donating them to the department or buying them dumb plugs they're so obsessed with.
If we want to study and/or help sheep, we need sheep-specific money. From my understanding based on the research my tiny non-lawyer brain has done, something along the lines of a conservation stamp could do it. We already have this for king salmon in the state to earmark king salmon studies. Several states require habitat stamps in order to purchase upland license. Implement a sheep stamp in AK. Required to enter any sheep draws and/or to hold a harvest ticket. $100 NR and $50 for resident. I'd buy one for everyone in my family. Instead of spending $500 at the WSF banquet only to see most it go towards the banquet and other national and state organizations such as the APHA that continue to fight against resident preference, just buy $500 worth of stamps. Sheep hunters are a special breed where they're almost lined up and chomping at the bit to pile back into the resource. I don't think there would be much pushback, if any.
I really like this idea. I would argue that it should be a flat $300(or maybe $500)for residents and nonresidents. Nonresidents are already paying for a tag so why charge them extra? Residents get the HT for free, so why not make the conservation fee substantial enough to make a difference?If we want to study and/or help sheep, we need sheep-specific money. From my understanding based on the research my tiny non-lawyer brain has done, something along the lines of a conservation stamp could do it. We already have this for king salmon in the state to earmark king salmon studies. Several states require habitat stamps in order to purchase upland license. Implement a sheep stamp in AK. Required to enter any sheep draws and/or to hold a harvest ticket. $100 NR and $50 for resident. I'd buy one for everyone in my family. Instead of spending $500 at the WSF banquet only to see most it go towards the banquet and other national and state organizations such as the APHA that continue to fight against resident preference, just buy $500 worth of stamps. Sheep hunters are a special breed where they're almost lined up and chomping at the bit to pile back into the resource. I don't think there would be much pushback, if any.
Ya, the fees were just an I'd example, I'd just like to see it implemented and then hopefully someone can figure which fees make the most sense. I think going from $0 for a HT to charging $300 would be too much and cause backlash to the point where something like this wouldn't get established. Additionally, at the end of the day you probably have the same numbers. At $50 the current amount of people hunting and applying likely changes very little. How many people fall off as you raise that? Sure I'd like to weed people out and improve my draw odds and see less people in general zones, but we have to be careful. Need to be careful with NR too. They already pay $30 to apply plus have to buy a NR license every other year to apply and then the HT once the tag is drawn. How many we weed out of the draw if it's $300-$500.I really like this idea. I would argue that it should be a flat $300(or maybe $500)for residents and nonresidents. Nonresidents are already paying for a tag so why charge them extra? Residents get the HT for free, so why not make the conservation fee substantial enough to make a difference?
Ya, the fees were just an I'd example, I'd just like to see it implemented and then hopefully someone can figure which fees make the most sense.
Do you care about our low sheep population or do you care about sheep hunting?
You said its sustainable, but then question that its sustainable?Thing is, the current Full Curl Harvest Strategy is sustainable. So, since it's a sustainable management strategy, changes to it won't garner support from the Division, nor the Department (as a whole).
Therefore, the Department will remain neutral on any changes to the current harvest strategy, because it's a sociological issue and not a biological one.
Question is, though, even though the current Dall Sheep harvest strategy is a sustainable one, is it the best strategy?
You said its sustainable, but then question that its sustainable?
What makes it sustainable? Sustainable as in we can just shoot every FC ram until there are none left knowing that we'll have a fresh crop to blast away on the next year? Is it purely coincidence that the decline started the same time as FC implementation?I said that it is sustainable (Full Curl Harvest Strategy) and from a biological perspective, it is sustainable.
What I questioned, is whether or not the Full Curl Harvest Strategy is the proper management strategy right now.
I do not (at all) question the sustainability of the Full Curl Harvest Strategy.
I have no knowledge of what's happening in Denali Park, but yes, the Wrangell hard park is experiencing much of the same problems that we see elsewhere.One thing I’d be interested in seeing is a comparison between the population numbers inside the parks vs outside. Is wrangell and Denali seeing the same declines? I’ve looked but can’t find anything.
It’s ok they are just surplus rams!What makes it sustainable? Sustainable as in we can just shoot every FC ram until there are none left knowing that we'll have a fresh crop to blast away on the next year? Is it purely coincidence that the decline started the same time as FC implementation?
No one can say for certain that its sustainable, or that its not effecting the overall harvest. ITs nearly impossible thing to study. Why do some areas of the state have such low pregnancy rates? Is it due to the majority of older FC rams missing? Is it something else?
Suppose that we close down hunting and leave those 8+ year old rams on the mountain, can you explain how those rams are going to help "flatten the curve"?You want to flatten the curve at the cliff, close it down.