Report says too many grizzly bears killed in unsustainable B.C. trophy hunt

VANCOUVER, B.C. – British Columbia’s controversial annual grizzly bear hunt leaves more of the animals dead than even the province’s own wildlife guidelines allow, claims a new report by the David Suzuki Foundation that once again calls on the government to curb the trophy hunt.

The report was released Thursday – on the first day of this year’s grizzly hunt when hundreds of the bears will be killed by trophy hunters around the province, something critics have maintained is unsustainable and must stop.

“This is new science that really questions the sustainability of the hunt,” Faisal Moola of the foundation said in an interview.

“This is a disaster in the waiting. If we do not act to protect the species given what we know about its vulnerabilities, we may no longer have bears.”

The report uses provincial government records to examine the number of grizzly bears that were killed by humans between 2004 and 2008 and compares them with the province’s own limits for what it calls the allowable human-caused mortality rate.

B.C.’s grizzly bears are divided into 57 different population areas.

The report says in 20 of those areas, hunting alone accounted for more grizzly deaths than the province’s allowable mortality rates at least once during the five-year period of the study.

When combined with other human-caused grizzly deaths – including legal kills by wildlife management officials and illegal poaching – the mortality rates were exceeded at least once in 36 areas, or 63 per cent.

That higher number, said Moola, is the most important, because it shows that too many bears are killed even when the hunt doesn’t push the grizzly deaths over the limits.

“You can’t look at trophy hunting in isolation – you have to look at trophy hunting in addition to the other sources of human-caused mortality,” said Moola.

“What the study shows is that if you removed trophy hunting from the picture, you would actually drop the mortality rate below what the government thinks is sustainable.”

The report is accompanied by a letter to Premier Gordon Campbell, signed by eight grizzly bear experts from Canada and the United States, urging the provincial government to establish a provincewide network of no-hunting zones.

British Columbia is estimated to be home to half of all grizzlies in Canada, and a quarter of the North American grizzly population.

B.C.’s grizzlies are considered a species of “special concern” by both the federal and provincial governments because of their slow reproductive rates and susceptibility to human activities.

Grizzly hunting is restricted in parts of the province, but every year a trophy hunt opens up throughout much of British Columbia during the spring and fall. The David Suzuki Foundation report estimates that, since 2001, an average of 253 bears a year have been killed by hunters in B.C.

There have been perennial calls for the hunt to be scrapped, but the Liberal government has consistently rejected those calls, arguing the hunt is sustainable and properly managed.

In 2001, the NDP government of the day implemented a moratorium on grizzly hunting, but that was overturned a few months later after the Liberals took power.

Environment Minister Barry Penner issued a written statement defending the province’s grizzly management policies, insisting hunting wouldn’t be allowed if it jeopardized the bear population.

Penner, who acknowledged he hadn’t read the report and has told his ministry staff to review it, said the mortality rates set by the province are stricter than the standards recommended by peer-reviewed scientific studies of the region’s grizzly population.

“Our record on grizzly bear population management is strong,” he said.

“The independent Grizzly Bear Scientific Panel, comprised of independent bear experts appointed on the recommendation of the International Association for Bear Research and Management, confirmed that B.C.’s grizzly bear management approach is effective and that our population estimates are sound. ”

He also noted the province has closed almost two million hectares of land to grizzly hunting along the North and Central Coasts, and there are other strict no-kill zones elsewhere in the province.

Hunting and outfitting groups sent out their own news releases responding to the report, challenging the study’s conclusions and defending the hunt as sustainable and important to the province’s economy.

Mel Arnold of the B.C. Wildlife Federation, which represents hunters and anglers, said harvest rates are set over five-year periods, so it’s wrong to point to figures from a single year as evidence that too many bears were killed.

“They (the five-year averages) may fall above it in some areas, and if that is the case, we would support adjustments being made,” Arnold said in an interview.

“Hunting and trapping is part of the heritage that built this country, and it’s part of our culture.”

There are differing opinions on the health of bear populations in British Columbia, and conservation groups such as the David Suzuki Foundation suggest the government’s current methods to estimate how bears are actually roaming the wilderness are flawed.

Alberta placed a moratorium on grizzly bear hunting in 2006, and is currently examining whether to keep the ban or revisit the issue.

Last year, the Manitoba government added grizzly bears to a list of species protected under the provincial wildlife act.

Grizzly bears have been extinct from Manitoba for a century, but migrant bears from Nunavut have been spotted, raising hopes the species is making a return.

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Wild pigs migrate north, possibly into Montana

Pigs aren’t usually animals people think they have to worry about. But wild pigs could change that if they make it into Montana.

This animal, also known as wild hog, wild boar or feral pig, has been stirring up a ruckus in almost every U.S. state and Canadian province. Wildlife biologists fear that Montana, one of only five states without feral pigs, could be the next state these swine sweep into.

Alhough feral pigs are considered a game animal in some states, they are considered a pest in others.

After working as the chief of wildlife management for Manitoba, Brian Knudsen made feral pigs his main concern. Knudsen was working with a group of researchers from Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Kansas who gathered feral pig population statistics, and he became so interested with the problem that he made it part of his life’s work.

Knudsen now runs Knudsen Wildlife Management Systems in Manitoba, where he offers consulting for wildlife management problems. While this pays the bills, Knudsen focuses his personal research on the spread of feral pigs with the Northern Feral Pig Project.

Pigs came with the Spanish when they took control of the southeast United States in the 1500s. Some pigs were fenced in while others were released as game animals. Then about 20 to 30 years ago, Knudsen said, people began to notice the wild pig population was expanding.

In the mid-1990s, Knudsen mapped the spread of feral pigs. His study found that pigs had reached Kansas and Missouri, a significant shift north. Knudsen said the pigs spread because hunters trapped and loaded groups into livestock trucks, then drove them to other states and released them.

A recent survey conducted by Knudsen showed that the pigs had spread into Manitoba, Alberta, British Columbia, Michigan and Wisconsin.

North Dakota veterinary officials had to eradicate a herd of pigs in 2008. The officials used traps and had to shoot pigs from helicopters in what Knudsen said was an “almost military-like” extermination. He said the important message was that those were the measures they had to take to get rid of the animals.

Knudsen commended North Dakota for being organized and realizing how serious the problem was so they could take control of it so quickly.

“This is what needs to be done,” Knudsen said. “It’s a model that states like Montana can follow with profit.”

It is unknown when or how the pigs will enter Montana. Knudsen said it could be next year or 20 years from now. But the most important thing, he said, is having a plan for when the time comes. He compared it to having a fire department: “It’s there in case you need it.”

“You can hold them off,” Knudsen said. “Southern states will never get rid of them. Montana and North Dakota, if they are ready, they can hold them off.”

Several varieties of pigs are actually the same species. Eurasian boars and domestic pigs look different but interbreed successfully, Knudsen said.

One of the reasons they are such successful pests is that sows can have one to two litters a year with about nine to 15 piglets per litter.  Knudsen said that sows are good mothers and keep the pig survival rate high.

Pigs are also very intelligent, he said. If pigs survive a trap encounter, they will not return to another trap like it.

An evenly distributed layer of body fat helps keep them alive in the United States colder northern regions where people didn’t think the animals could survive because they lack a heavy fur coat.

Feral pigs root around, digging up food in the soil. If they do this around streams, their feces can get into the watershed. Weeds can thrive in the upturned dirt. They also destroy the nests of ground-nesting birds, which could threaten native bird species.

“There is no co-existing,” Knudsen said.

It was Knudsen who sounded the alarm to Missoula bear specialist and biologist Chuck Jonkel. Jonkel said many people in Missoula hadn’t heard of the feral pig problem.

“People keep asking me why I am calling bears ‘pigs,’” Jonkel said.

Jonkel and Knudsen are old friends, and in a meeting several years ago, Knudsen shared his concern for Montana’s wildlife safety. Jonkel said he took it upon himself to raise the alarm that feral pigs are a looming threat to Montana’s habitat, and as far as he knows, the state hasn’t done anything about it.

“The state ought to be proactive and have a wild pig project ready so they are ready to roll,” Jonkel said.

Known for his work with grizzly bears, Jonkel said the pigs would affect other state-protected wildlife, including bears. He said pigs would compete directly with bears for food, and because the pigs reproduce fast and bears reproduce relatively slow, the pigs could easily outnumber the bears within a short amount of time.

Jonkel said trophy hunters want bigger boars, so hunters will run the show if they have a population of pigs to lobby for. He said he thinks that Montana should categorize the pigs as a pest before the hunting community can get behind them. He said states that make the pigs a game animal end up with thousands of pigs, and by that point, it’s too late to get rid of them.

“Once they get established, they are formidable,” Jonkel said.

Jonkel said a study he read listed only six states without feral pigs, including Wyoming and Montana, but he has heard there are populations in Wyoming, which would make it just five states.

Jonkel said a few years ago, a group of domestic pigs escaped and got out of control in the Grant Creek area. A friend of Jonkel’s who worked with the state then had to go into the area and shoot all the pigs before they established themselves further.

“He just blew them all away, and that’s what the state has to be ready to do,” Jonkel said. “Kill them right away with state employees.”

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Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Part

Take opening morning of the early special Canada goose season last week, down on the upper Maumee River. Vaughn Hoblet and Tom Rumpf, both of rural Perrysburg, had situated themselves exactly in the right blinds hard by the riverbank. They had their limits of geese before 9 a.m. The rest of us – Ron Stieben, the property owner and host, Ron Gniewkowski, of Genoa, Jeff Palicki, of Toledo, and me – chose to take up posts slightly inland nearer a soybean field that the geese have been grazing to death. We took one bird – that is, Palicki did – by 10 a.m. Growing heat put an end to flying flocks and put an early end to a hunt in which 100 yards made all the difference. On balance, the lemon-colored dawn, dew-coated spiderwebs backlit in the rising rays and the ringside seat to the show – scores of geese and ducks trading upriver and down – made it worth getting up early. The goose-getting efforts of a rural Sandusky County neighbor evenings last week followed a similar pattern. One evening all he could do was watch as the flocks passed a mile south of his wheat stubble. The Sunday evening just before sunset, the birds dumped into his decoys and he was ready. His shotgun said so, three times.Scott Butterworth, wildlife management supervisor for Ohio Wildlife District 2, said action for geese and doves during the first week was spotty, especially for geese. “It was so darn hot,” he noted, applying the remarks to both hunters and the birds.

With doves, Butterworth said, usually such places as the state’s managed fields at various wildlife areas produce very well on opening day. Results this year were very uneven. Don Schooner, of Weston, who annually grooms two parcels for doves, estimates hunting success for his crew – led by Bruno Hankins, of Pemberville – is down so far this season by 30 to 40 percent. He said plenty of doves were about last week, but they seemed to be much more scattered than prior years, possibly because of the presence of more wheatfields. Many of those fields were tilled post-harvest much earlier than usual and the early tillage, Schooner added, could keep birds less concentrated. From here on out, the usual march of cold fronts are likely to move out local doves, but the same fronts may bring down more northern birds, Schooner said. Saturday’s early special teal season opener was somewhat slow at the state’s Magee Marsh in Ottawa County and Killdeer Plains in Wyandot County, Butterworth said. But the state’s Pickerel Creek area and adjacent Sandusky Bay seemed to have a lot of teal around, the supervisor added. The early goose season ends Monday, but teal season continues until Sept. 21. Dove season continues until Oct. 22, with a late split from Dec. 9 through 26. The other main season in play is squirrel and Butterworth said lots of them are to be found but not so with squirrel hunters. So the odds on bushytails are good. • Discounted antlerless deer licenses of just $3 for residents and $30 for nonresidents are being offered by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources for Kent County in hopes of encouraging an increased bag there during the statewide Sept. 18-22 private land antlerless season. Kent County is the site of the first known case of chronic wasting disease among deer in Michigan, CWD having been confirmed recently in a game farm doe. The MDNR has quarantined game farms statewide as a result, among other measures, and has instituted a CWD surveillance zone in nine northern Kent County townships. Hunters in the townships will be required to have their deer sampled at a check station for CWD testing. For any deer that may test positive, the hunter will be given a replacement permit and the MDNR will keep the carcass. For other details on the early hunt visit online at michigan.gov/dnr. • The inaugural “Cars for Critters” benefit car show is set for 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sept. 21 at Ottawa National Wildlife Refuge, 14000 West State Rt. 2, Oak Harbor. Friday is the deadline for advance registration. Proceeds from the show will benefit Back to the Wild, a nonprofit private wildlife rehabilitation center at Castalia. Mona Rutger, head of the center, will have live eagles, hawks, owls and other native wildlife on display, and some of the car classes in the show will be set up for cars with animal names. For example, a 1969 Ford Mustang may compete against a 1962 Chevrolet Impala in the “best mammal” class. Classes for all types of cars are planned, with trophy plaques awarded accordingly. For details and registration, call Eddy Pausch, assistant refuge manager, at cb transparent l Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partus Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partarrow Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Part419-89…cb transparent r Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Part, extension 31. • The deadlines for ordering fish fingerlings of several species for stocking ponds is coming up within the week in Ottawa and Lucas counties. The Ottawa Soil and Water District deadline is Friday for bluegill, channel catfish, largemouth bass, redear sunfish and white amur, or grass carp. Call the district office for order details, cb transparent l Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partus Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partarrow Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Part419-89…cb transparent r Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Part. The fish will be delivered Sept. 18 at the district office on Lake Street in Oak Harbor.

The Lucas Soil and Water Conservation District sale’s order deadline is Monday. The district offers the same species as Ottawa, plus yellow perch and fathead minnows. Pickup will be Sept. 21 at the district office at 130-A West Dudley St., Maumee. Call the office for order details cb transparent l Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partus Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partarrow Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Partspace Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Part419-893-1966cb transparent r Fishing or Hunting: Luck Always Plays a Part or visit online at co.lucas.oh.us/LSWCD.

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