Texas legalizes shooting invasive sheep from a helicopter for sport

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Texas legalizes shooting invasive sheep from a helicopter for sport​


Aoudad sheep are joining the short list of animals Texas lawmakers allow to be shot from a helicopter for sport, along with coyotes and feral hogs.


By Jess Huff

June 9, 2025

Barbary sheep, also known as Aoudad sheep, were introduced to Texas from their native habitat in North Africa mid-20th century. Popular among hunters, considered an invasive species by farmers and ranchers, the Texas Legislature has added them to the list of animals that can be hunted helicopters, along with feral pigs and coyotes.
Barbary sheep are massive beasts with large crescent horns and a mane that drapes from the bottom of their neck to their stomachs.


Also known as aoudads, the animals are native to the mountains of northern Africa. In the 1950s, they were brought to West Texas. Seventy years later, farmers and ranchers say the sheep is an invasive species, munching up all the vegetation and competing for resources with native Texas grazers, like bighorn sheep or mule deer.


Texas lawmakers this year added aoudads to the very short list of animals hunters are allowed to shoot from helicopters for sport. Prior to this legislation, only two animals were on that list: hogs and coyotes.


“Everything has to be kept in checks and balances,” said West Texas rancher Warren Cude. “And right now, the aoudad are very similar to the feral hogs.”

The large sheep’s population has spread from Fort Stockton to the mountains of El Paso and over the plains, Cude said. Their growing numbers have made it difficult for ranchers to manage their properties effectively.


The sheep are also not known to be “fence jumpers.” In actuality, they trample fences, which can cause thousands of dollars of damage.


“It's just devastating to your management practices,” Cude said.


When the aoudad move in, they graze the area until it's deprived of all the vegetation other animals need. Nicolas Havlik, a regional resource coordinator for the state’s parks and wildlife department, said he has seen grazing lands, which have already been hit by drought for years, overgrazed by the aoudad, leaving the native wildlife to compete for resources.

Jason Sabo is a part-time resident of Fort Davis, in Jeff Davis County, which has been hit the hardest by the aoudad. He typically spends the legislative session petitioning lawmakers on the behalf of child care providers, but this year saw the need to let them know about aoudad.


He has visited Fort Davis for years, and recalls the moment when he realized the aoudad were an issue.


“I'm looking at this hillside that's covered in aoudad, and they're majestic. They're really cool creatures,” Sabo said. “But off to the side are two mule deer who are native. And the aoudad are physically displacing them.”


His property is in Olympia Crossing, which is surrounded by conservation easements that people, for decades, have spent millions of dollars to protect.

The aoudad are also able to spread diseases to other animals, and to cross breed with the bighorn sheep. Without a change, all of that conservation work is at risk.


“There aren’t really any known predators to them in West Texas,” Cude said. “A coyote is not going to take one down. The lion could take one down, but it’s going to be a fight. So they're breeding faster than you can manage them with a straight hunt.”


A U.S. Department of Agriculture study found that when done correctly, hunting hogs from helicopters has been successful at reducing populations at least by 31%. This study clarifies that hunting in this manner by professionals is key, however.


Hunting aoudad by helicopter has always been legal. However,this change will turn it into a niche hunt few can afford, said Michael McKinny, owner of the West Texas Hunt Organization, a professional hunting outfitter in the West Texas and Big Bend regions.

The cost of hunting aoudad has risen significantly since McKinny began outfitting those hunts 17 years ago, he said. Where he used to offer those hunts for $1,800, hunters are now looking at several thousand dollars, especially when the cost to provide those hunts has risen so dramatically.


“By the time you pay for a pilot, fuel, and gas for the helicopter service to go up, you’re not going to shoot babies, young rams or ewes,” McKinny said. “You’re up there for the trophy.”


Hunters will now be able to recover the aoudad’s bodies, McKinny said. They weren’t allowed to before, he said. McKinny said he doesn’t believe that it’s possible to eradicate all the aoudad, as the population is so large and spans into Mexico and New Mexico as well. But if it were to happen, hunting operations like his would lose 50-60% of their business.


Havlik believes that permitting hunting by helicopter for sport can help, but truly reducing the impact of aoudad will take a lot more than just public hunting access, he said.

Cude is optimistic about the impact of hunting aoudad by helicopter, at least for his fellow ranchers. It costs about $1,000 per hour to hire a company to hunt the aoudad by helicopter.


“If they can get some help by eliminating some of the aoudad, and not have it come out of their pockets, then that's a win-win,” Cude said.


The law goes into effect Sept. 1.
 
I wonder if this would make rifle hunts in same areas cheaper/ affordable?
Now that there are only 1-2 LO DBHS tags...NO. You can sale 10- 7K aoudad hunts pretty easy, and dont need near as much acerage.


with that said TX went from 1500 DBHS to about 500 due to Movi spread by Aoudad. Aoudads are like hogs, immune to everything and reproduce at an exponential number
 
This is honestly a whole load of crap. It just gives ranchers and "outfitters" an excuse to raise the prices even more by being allowed to take the horns.

Landowners don't want to get rid of invasive species, they just want as much money as possible with the least amount of access given.

They'd rather have one guy pay $20k to cull 50 sheep from a helicopter than let 250 peasants pay $80 to hunt their land on foot and kill 1,000.

The TPWD is just as bad though or worse. They're so anti-hunting they'd rather pay landowners to cull a tiny number of animals than let hunters pay to hunt the gov land around Davis county or the Franklins and get rid of all of them.

If they actually wanted to get rid of Aoudad they could do it in a week.
 
We have seen a definite increase in Aoudad and a decline in Mule Deer numbers where we hunt. Correlation or causation, I don't know.

With the droughts up in the Panhandle the last few years, the extra mouths to feed probably didn't help. It would be nice if they would open up some more hunts for them on public land.
 
Let me get this straight. The Barbary Sheep in Texas are so destructive to the landscape and wildlife that aerial gunning for them has been legalized. But it costs thousands of dollars to hunt them there (average price approx $4500?). If you glance at the New Mexico draw odds it's clear that there is no shortage of people eager to hunt Aoudad. If you are a Texas landowner bitching about the Barbs eating all your cattle forage or outcompeting native wildlife I don't feel bad for you. Count me in as someone that will happily make the drive to West Texas and help with this problem for anyone willing to let me on their land. I promise to be low maintenance and respectful.
 
This is honestly a whole load of crap. It just gives ranchers and "outfitters" an excuse to raise the prices even more by being allowed to take the horns.

Landowners don't want to get rid of invasive species, they just want as much money as possible with the least amount of access given.

They'd rather have one guy pay $20k to cull 50 sheep from a helicopter than let 250 peasants pay $80 to hunt their land on foot and kill 1,000.

The TPWD is just as bad though or worse. They're so anti-hunting they'd rather pay landowners to cull a tiny number of animals than let hunters pay to hunt the gov land around Davis county or the Franklins and get rid of all of them.

If they actually wanted to get rid of Aoudad they could do it in a week.
Sure just like we’ve eradicated hogs with no bag limits, no regulations, and legal weapon and pretty much any kind of method. Trapping, dogging, help hunting, and we’ve only made a 30% dent in them according to that article.
 
Sure just like we’ve eradicated hogs with no bag limits, no regulations, and legal weapon and pretty much any kind of method. Trapping, dogging, help hunting, and we’ve only made a 30% dent in them according to that article.
Again, the problem is ranchers charging $400+ to shoot one animal.

They have incentive to sustain the population for profit, so that’s what they do.
 
Again, the problem is ranchers charging $400+ to shoot one animal.

They have incentive to sustain the population for profit, so that’s what they do.
I don’t blame them for charging. Some people are assholes and do no respect their property and do all kinds of damage. And then there’s the ones looking for an easy excuse to sue for whatever reason.
And even if all properties were fair game, there’s simply not enough hunters to eradicate millions of them.

Animals aren’t stupid. As soon as the pressure gets on, they move and/or go nocturnal. And not everyone has the means too purchase night vision, thermals, etc to effectively hunt them at night.
 
I don’t blame them for charging. Some people are assholes and do no respect their property and do all kinds of damage. And then there’s the ones looking for an easy excuse to sue for whatever reason.
And even if all properties were fair game, there’s simply not enough hunters to eradicate millions of them.

Animals aren’t stupid. As soon as the pressure gets on, they move and/or go nocturnal. And not everyone has the means too purchase night vision, thermals, etc to effectively hunt them at night.
Charging to cover cost and liability is one thing. Breeding, feeding, ear tagging, and then selling $20,000 helicopter hunts as a business model while begging for less regulation so you can charge even more is something totally different.

There are less than 50k Aoudad in Texas and half of them live on public, we could knock them out in a weekend but as long as it's legal to sell exotic hunts for profit, landowners will never let them all die.

Also, just on principle, anyone who complains about how expensive it is to fly their helicopter can suck a whole egg.
 
Y'all are looking at it the wrong way, ranchers aren't bitching about Aoudad they're just happy they can now have fun blasting them from choppers and taking the horns from the big ones. Not my cup of tea but Texas has a lot of freedoms for blasting things and doing as we please and this is just another notch on the "why not" belt. Some dudes love to shoot hogs from choppers and pay good money, again not my cup of tea but if they wanna pay to do that I lump it under why not and say knock yourself out. I would like to have an excuse to own a helo.
 
Charging to cover cost and liability is one thing. Breeding, feeding, ear tagging, and then selling $20,000 helicopter hunts as a business model while begging for less regulation so you can charge even more is something totally different.

There are less than 50k Aoudad in Texas and half of them live on public, we could knock them out in a weekend but as long as it's legal to sell exotic hunts for profit, landowners will never let them all die.

Also, just on principle, anyone who complains about how expensive it is to fly their helicopter can suck a whole egg.
I’ve been around Texas a fair bit…. I’d love to know where this public land is, that supports half the Aoudad population?

I think you’re misleading people, or you actually have no idea what you’re talking about.
 
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