Pathetic.  Not shooting a mountain lion, *per se.*  I have no problem with
hunters stalking and shooting mountain lions where they are reasonably
plentiful and where there are laws and regulations governing the hunters.

Pathetic is some doofus discovering a mountain lion snoozing on a branch 50
feet (I seriously doubt the 50 yards claim) away, calling around on his cell
phone until he finds out there's no law stopping him, and then blazing
away.  Wahoo!  Lookit me, I'm gonna be famous!  Just like the guy who shot
the moose a few years ago: "It charged me!  I shot in self defense."  He
shot it in self-defense alright--in the side, as it stood grazing 50 yards
away in a harvested cornfield.

Pathetic is the political cowardice of the Conservation Commission and the
DNR staff--for their attitude of total denial that mountain lions are living
and hunting in Iowa; for their unwillingness to set any kinds of recognition
or protections for the big cats, for bears, moose, wolves and any other rare
wild animals that wander across our borders.

Pathetic is the way we've spent some millions of dollars to restore river
otters to Iowa, only to see the DNR "experts" and Commissioners, for pure
political expediency, set trapping limits that let so many animals be taken
that in just two years, the populations have plummeted alarmingly...  And
yet, I've not heard of any moves to close the season or revisit the
regulations.  Otters:  another exotic crop that failed?

What's really pathetic is the persistent, short-sighted commodity-crop
attitude that rules how we as a State think about our natural lands, the
plant communities and the animals, birds, and fish that live on and in
them.  (And just forget about amphibians, reptiles and invertebrates.)
 Ecological complexity, interdependence, stability, integrity,
sustainability--plenitude--mean nothing if they don't generate dollars.

Likewise, it's pathetic how any voicing of science and long-term wisdom is
quickly shushed.  Or shouted down.  Who at DNR could dare say publicly,
"Yup, we've got mountain lions in Iowa.  That's because we've got more
forest cover for them to hide in, and because we've got a half-million deer
for them to feast on.  And we're gonna have more of them.  They eat deer,
not cattle, not housecats, so everybody calm down."

Nobody, at least as far as I've heard, can even speak up and try to educate
against the ignorant prejudice that river otters rob fishermen of the best
fish in the rivers.  I have heard trappers say that they like to catch and
kill young otters, never reporting it, because they don't want them growing
up and competing for the good fish.

Pathetic.








On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 1:08 PM, joe <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

>
> http://gazetteonline.com/breaking-news/2009/12/15/cedar-rapids-man-shoots-mountain-lion-in-iowa-county
>
>
>
>
> _____________________________________________________
> Iowa Native Plants Mailing List
> [log in to unmask]
> http://atmos.cgrer.uiowa.edu/herbarium/MailingList.htm
>
> The Iowa Native Plants Mailing List provides a forum for those interested
> in Iowa's natural
> vegetation and in general conservation issues.  Another objective is to
> promote the Iowa
> Native Plant Society.  This list is owned and managed by Diana Horton, and
> sponsored by
> the University of Iowa Department of Biology.
>
> For assistance, contact Diana Horton, [log in to unmask]
>

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
To unsubscribe from the IOWA-TOPICS list, send any message to:
[log in to unmask]

Check out our Listserv Lists support site for more information:
http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/faq.asp