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I disagree with Bill that hunters alone cannot control a prey
population. Here in Black Hawk County we have had urban archery hunts
for deer for the last 15 yrs or so. Deer densities are down nearly 90%
if I remember the numbers I saw. Iowa City uses sharpshooters and
greatly reduced deer numbers. Information on the Iowa DNR website shows
Iowa with a peak deer population of 400,000 in 2005-06. They project in
two years the Iowa deer herd will stabilize at their goal of 175,000
deer. Sorry Bill, that decline has not been brought about by animal
predation. I sat for 2 days during shotgun season in a blind in
Winnesheik County and saw two does in the distance. That is a far cry
from the dozens of deer I saw a few years ago. For the last several
years the DNR has made 3,500 extra doe tags available each year for that
county, and I can guarantee that the deer population is way down.
Colorado is relatively (elk) predator free and they successfully control
their elk populations with hunting. If hunting can't control animal
populations, why do the anti-hunters always claim that hunters are
threatening animal populations.
Just to be clear of my previous point, as an ecologist I talk to my
classes about a carrying capacity for a population. This is a largely
conceptual or even imaginary point of a stable population that persists
at a level for a long time--examples in nature are nearly impossible to
find. Game managers all over the world have to deal with a practical,
socio-economic carrying capacity. How many critters can us humans
stand? Wisconsin has higher tolerances for deer densities than do
Iowans, Willy Suchy tells me. When it comes to the socio-economic
carrying capacity for wolves and mountain lions, any number you name
will be too high for most folks. The cost to the conservation movement
and the Sierra Club is simply too high to promote a large predator in
Iowa. Lanny Schwartz
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