sierrahunter
FNG
- Joined
- Oct 10, 2016
- Messages
- 2
The State of California has produced a Draft Black Bear Conservation Plan, which will fundamentally change how it manages black bears (see link below).
I can see at least one potentially vulnerability with the plan. The Humane Society has managed to eliminate bobcat hunting in California because they argued that there was insufficient data to know anything about their populations. This bear conservation plan sets a fairly high bar for monitoring that I'm not sure the State will be able to accomplish given fluctuating budgets. If the State cannot monitor according to the plan, will they cease bear hunting or be vulnerable to litigation to that end?
This plan will receive very little comment from hunters and a great deal of comment from the humane society and other "antis". Please consider sending a comment from a hunter's perspective at the below link (the plan is there, too). Such comments let the Commission know that hunters are watching this process.
- The plan will change how California determines if bear populations are healthy. Instead of using bear tooth aging to establish population size and status (which is very outdated), the plan would use integrated population modeling, which is much more accurate. Using this methodology, California estimates there are 65,000 black bears in the State, which is much higher than previous estimates.
- The plan divides the State of CA into 5 "Bear Conservation Regions" within which bear populations will be monitored and managed (including harvest limits). This would open the opportunity for regionally specific tags, but I have not read that this is the intent.
- The plan itself does not indicate management decisions, and instead leaves that to subsequent F&G Commission deliberations.
I can see at least one potentially vulnerability with the plan. The Humane Society has managed to eliminate bobcat hunting in California because they argued that there was insufficient data to know anything about their populations. This bear conservation plan sets a fairly high bar for monitoring that I'm not sure the State will be able to accomplish given fluctuating budgets. If the State cannot monitor according to the plan, will they cease bear hunting or be vulnerable to litigation to that end?
This plan will receive very little comment from hunters and a great deal of comment from the humane society and other "antis". Please consider sending a comment from a hunter's perspective at the below link (the plan is there, too). Such comments let the Commission know that hunters are watching this process.