Thursday, March 30, 2017

We Don't Need to Hunt Grizzlies (Nor Should We)

Photo from a hunting-guide service called the "Grizzinator."
"Nothing good will ever come from killing a grizzly bear. Much good can come from respecting its right to continue to roam the land.” – Phil Timpany

Many hunters and wildlife professionals say we need to hunt grizzlies to “manage” them, and that grizzly hunting-tag revenue is needed to pay for the management. I don’t buy it. 

We should manage bears like bears, not deer and elk. Deer and elk evolved as prey; they produce high numbers of fawns and calves because they feed a lot of animals above them on the food chain, including many of us humans who hunt. Grizzlies evolved as predators; they don’t produce a lot of cubs. Their populations are tenuously self-regulating (something we should learn from them). We should manage them accordingly.

We should manage grizzlies in a manner best for the bears; we should manage them based on science, ethics and social desires; we should manage them to allow for the space they need and deserve; we should manage them by improving people's knowledge of grizzlies and how to best prevent conflicts; we should manage them by allowing them the benefit of the doubt and erring on the side of caution; we should manage them by giving "troubled" bears every chance we can, and we should manage them by occasionally (as a last resort), killing certain individual bears if they become a socially unacceptable danger.

Who will pay for this? The American people should, all of us, because a huge majority of Americans want, support and appreciate that we still have wild grizzlies and the wild places to sustain them. Most Americans are fascinated with grizzlies, a fascination that has existed since humans drew pictures of them on rocks. Grizzlies are different. Myth, fear, awe, reality, science . . . all of it and more always has and always will influence the powerful mystique and perception of grizzlies.

For a long time we killed them. We killed them to near extinction. (Some subspecies are extinct, existing now only in our imaginations or places like the California flag.) I assume most Americans agreed with such a policy, until leaders like Theodore Roosevelt came along. We’ve winnowed them down to a tiny fraction of the once-immense territory they historically roamed. I suspect all people with empathy and compassion in their hearts are saddened by this. They should be. I am.

Most Americans respect grizzlies. Most Americans will not accept or tolerate the killing of grizzlies for trophies, amusement and ego. Most Americans feel disgusted to see hunters proudly standing over dead bodies of a once-powerful living presence they killed for no legitimate, no acceptable justification. I’m one of those Americans, and I’m a hunter. 

When I kill an elk or deer, I feel grateful, humbled and saddened but happy to be part of the wilds -- to kill my own meat in a respectful, ethical, sustainable way. Nonhunters I know understand and support that. They accept hunters killing deer and elk to fill freezers; they don’t accept hunters killing grizzlies to fill egos.

We should not manage grizzlies to boost numbers of prey species so we have more to kill. (I’ve heard fellow hunters say that we need to kill elk and deer to keep populations in check, but we need to kill predators to boost the number of animals we need to kill to keep their numbers down.) We should not kill grizzlies to raise money to protect them.

That is not wildlife management based on good, sound science or social acceptability.

Predators are rarely managed based on sound science or for the benefit of predators and healthy, functioning ecosystems. They’re rarely managed in accordance of what a majority of Americans accept. Hunters and anglers pay the bills through licenses and excise taxes on hunting and fishing gear and (along with governor-appointed commissioners) have lopsided power and influence over how wildlife is managed. As a result, wildlife management often leans more towards animal husbandry – producing more to catch and shoot sometimes to the detriment of other wildlife. Predators usually get a bad deal.

We’re stuck in a wildlife-management paradigm that attempts to justify indefensible death; it’s time for change.

All Americans should help pay for and influence how wildlife is managed. We don’t need to sell grizzly-tags to fund the management of grizzlies. Let’s get an excise tax on all outdoor gear – not just hunting and fishing equipment. Let’s create a license for nonhunters who want to buy one. Let’s create a grizzly stamp to sell and raise money much like we do with duck stamps. Let’s try something different. Let’s take some power and influence from those who wrongly insist we need to hunt grizzlies. 

Grizzlies face enough uncertainty with impacts from human encroachment, habitat loss and degradation, and climate change. Warmer temperatures, less snow, earlier snowmelt and more drought has already caused a decline in white-bark pine nuts, berries and other bear food. To err on the side of caution we should not even be considering delisting grizzlies from federal endangered species status and turning management over states eager to kill them. Not yet. But if we do, we don’t need to hunt them.

There is no biologically or social justification to hunt grizzlies. We should manage them with the respect and reverence they deserve. 

4 comments:

  1. Predators such as grizzlies, black bears, wolves, cougars, coyotes, etc., are killed to keep ungulate hunters' preferred game species artificially high. They're competition, and therefore unwanted. The majority of the general non-hunting public has no idea that "trophy" hunting is sanctioned by their state wildlife agencies, and as this commentary demonstrates, many hunters don't seem to grasp this concept either.

    If you hunt deer and elk for "sustenance" you are giving a HUGE thumbs up to predator hunting. Time to make the connection.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Predators such as grizzlies, black bears, wolves, cougars, coyotes, etc., are killed to keep ungulate hunters' preferred game species artificially high. They're competition, and therefore unwanted. The majority of the general non-hunting public has no idea that "trophy" hunting is sanctioned by their state wildlife agencies, and as this commentary demonstrates, many hunters don't seem to grasp this concept either.

    If you hunt deer and elk for "sustenance" you are giving a HUGE thumbs up to predator hunting. Time to make the connection.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thank you. Yes, let's try something different! Let's call our governors in the Western states.

    ReplyDelete
  4. As a non-consumptive user I'm not opposed to an excise tax on binoculars, kayaks, tents or birdseed to support conservation (although I've heard many initiatives in this vein have failed around the country), but since only 1 in 5 gun owners hunts today, the majority of P-R funding is already coming from non-hunters (often those pesky city-slickers that hunters hate because they "can't appreciate nature unless they're killing something"). Yet non-hunters will never be given a seat at that "table" because they are dismissed and marginalized as bunny-huggers who can't possibly know anything about the mathematical formulas wildlife managers call science which specify X% of a population can be killed for profit without damaging that population's ability to rebound (and usually increase) for next year's kill-fest.

    The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that wildlife legally belongs to all of us, not just the 4% that hunt. We're long past the need to re-evaluate a system that ignores the majority's preference, ignores ethics (we wouldn't need to manage prey animals if we stopped managing predator species), and ignores the moral compass that guides us all via the Golden Rule: If we wouldn't want it done to us, we shouldn't be doing it to others. We don't need to kill animals for our survival--period--and it is morally reprehensible to kill them simply because we like the way they taste, think they're ugly, have an unfounded fear of them, or perceive them as nuisances.

    I'm pleased to see that the Compassionate Conservation Model is gaining momentum among the scientific community as well as wildlife biologists and the general public. Hopefully it will take a firm hold before we lose too many more species and put an end to the "cull-decimate-recover at taxpayer expense-cull" business plan that is currently employed by the North American Model.

    A win for wildlife is a win for us.

    ReplyDelete