Lawnboi
WKR
Current state of a lot of wolves in the lower 48 is nothing more than the government playing Jurassic park.
It’s not about anything but destroying hunting.
It’s not about anything but destroying hunting.
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Additionally, just because you want other predators to exist, doesn’t mean they need to exist. Man is the apex predator on this planet. Other animals exist only because we choose to let them.
This^^^Current state of a lot of wolves in the lower 48 is nothing more than the government playing Jurassic park.
It’s not about anything but destroying hunting.
Its really hard to say what's "necessary" and not. I hate to bring up another hot button issue, but would CWD be as bad as it is if we had had more wolves/lions/grizz for the past century? Who's to say?
The idea that predator control isn't effective because predator populations re-grow is like saying that mowing the lawn isn’t effective because the grass comes back.
Predators eat prey, despite however many studies and wildlife modeling systems are tweaked to suggest otherwise. There are many research papers and studies that prove this, but are often overshadowed by the minority few studies that have found a way to at least suggest otherwise.
I live just outside yellowstone. I have all the major predators in my backyard and where I hunt, which is fine with me.
Just don't tell me I can't cut the grass.
Wolves are a scapegoat, certainly, but they are also an apex predator that does a lot of killing. Maybe wolves alone wouldn’t have such an impact but the ungualate populations of my area are not only being hunted by wolves, but also two species of bears, lions, coyotes, bobcats, eagles etc. Add on hunting seasons, and it is a tremendous amount of pressure.
I used to think apex predators were very special and gave them higher status than other species. These days I would rather not find as many fawns killed in the woods and have more ungulates, leading to higher hunter success on deer and elk than just feeding wolves and bears.
I more or less agree with this viewpoint. I'm fine with apex predators on the landscape, but I like to see them managed the same way as game species, for a number of reasons. I hate the political tool that grizzlies and wolves have become.The idea that predator control isn't effective because predator populations re-grow is like saying that mowing the lawn isn’t effective because the grass comes back.
Predators eat prey, despite however many studies and wildlife modeling systems are tweaked to suggest otherwise. There are many research papers and studies that prove this, but are often overshadowed by the minority few studies that have found a way to at least suggest otherwise.
I live just outside yellowstone. I have all the major predators in my backyard and where I hunt, which is fine with me.
Just don't tell me I can't cut the grass.
Wolves are a scapegoat, certainly, but they are also an apex predator that does a lot of killing. Maybe wolves alone wouldn’t have such an impact but the ungualate populations of my area are not only being hunted by wolves, but also two species of bears, lions, coyotes, bobcats, eagles etc. Add on hunting seasons, and it is a tremendous amount of pressure.
I used to think apex predators were very special and gave them higher status than other species. These days I would rather not find as many fawns killed in the woods and have more ungulates, leading to higher hunter success on deer and elk than just feeding wolves and bears.