north-north-west wrote:sambar358 wrote: A real sambar hunter fires few shots at sambar deer in a year.....often only 2 or 3....sometimes none at all. The attraction for us isn't in the shooting....but the hunting of an elusive and intelligent animal....and doing it in a challenging and ruggedly attractive envoironment like the ANP.
Well, there goes the feral animal mitigation claim. Which, as any rational well-informed person already knew, had as much reality as the fire mitigation claim for cattle grazing in the ANP.
sambar358 wrote:... harvest numbers for 2010 and as a result of that survey it was estimated that in 2010 there were between 28,000 and 34,000 sambar shot in Victoria !
Greenie wrote:...If say for example the Sambar were eradicated in Victoria, would there be another species for the 25000 hunters? Maybe game parks could be setup for them?
sambar358 wrote:...Having said all that though I feel that they have had little real impact on the bush environment....they are generally found singly or in small groups of 2 or 3 so they don't herd like NZ's destructive red deer....they are a timid and secretive deer for such a large animal and unless you are looking for them or their sign you wouldn't know that they were there...
...Under the Wildlife Act, sambar can be stalked by licensed game hunters, but culled only if they pose a threat to agriculture, conservation or safety.
As a result, they have become an international tourist attraction, drawing game hunters to the Victorian bush as one of the last areas where the animals can be tracked in the wild.
Those campaigning to return sambar to full protected game status are the state's main hunting groups: the Australian Deer Association, Sporting Shooters' Association of Australia and Field and Game Victoria.
The Australian Deer Association wants the "threatening process" listing dropped and numbers managed by recreational shooting and selected culling by Parks Victoria...
Deer in Australia are currently not managed and this means too many deer in some areas and not enough deer in others. Having too many deer increases the risk of deer being listed as vermin. This can have long-term implications such as, if deer are no longer classified as game, losing an important reason to own a centre-fire rifle.
Hunters have the choice of assisting in maintaining the good health of a deer herd and increasing trophy potential by taking more female deer than males. This is Quality Deer Management (QDM). Property Based Game Management (PBGM) is the best way to control and manage deer populations on private land...
sambar358 wrote:... I do not deny that some people see sambar as a potential threat to the environment and the Victorian Government listed sambar as a "Threatening Process" several years ago...a process as you've pointed out that was also disputed by various hunting organizations (on the grounds of a lack of actual scientific evidence and numerous flaws in the process). However the mere listing of sambar does not make them go away....and nor will removing their "Game" status and declaring them feral.
sambar358 wrote: You seem keen to blame recreational hunters for the presence of deer in the bush....
sambar358 wrote: ...Moriarty and his study but it is not a valid argument for sambar in Victoria. As I said earlier they are all the result of government sanctioned Acclimatisation Society releases going back as far as 1860 !
sambar358 wrote:Thanks for your comments Andrew....hopefully people who read them and mine can get a better idea of the bigger picture and make up their own mind on the subject
sambar358 wrote:Maybe we'll meet some day on a trail somewhere in the mountains....I'll be the big bloke in camo with the blaze orange hat and the rifle
sambar358 wrote: traditional sambar deer hunting country and it had been for so many years.
sambar358 wrote:Deer hunting organizations put a good sensible case the the Land Conservation Council to retain deer hunting
nakedape wrote:sambar358 wrote: traditional sambar deer hunting country and it had been for so many years.
Traditional? Traditional hunting of an introduced pest? Ha!
sambar358 wrote:Nakedape.....critics of the sambar deer in our National Parks are long on rhetoric but very short on realsitic solutions. Call them introduced pest, ferals, environmental disasters ....put any emotive tag on them that you like but the fact remains that this makes absolutely NO difference to their numbers. If you want them "gone" then things need to be physically DONE to make them go away. Like it or not seasonal deer hunting in portions of the ANP has provided a method of control on the sambar deer numbers for 25 years or so....the ONLY means of control actually. Do you really think that by removing deer hunting from the ANP that the sambar will just go away....if you want them gone then there is just one thing that needs to be done....they need to be killed ! How do you propose that DSE & PV address the perception of building numbers of sambar deer ? Do you have a viable, effective and economically viable long-term solution to what you obviously see as the scourge of the ANP.....the sambar deer and deer hunters ? Cheers
sambar358
maddog wrote: I was not aware that the decision to allow hunting in NSW National Parks had anything to do with the control of feral animals. I thought it was a decision based on the trading of a vote by a minority party in the Upper House for the sale of $3 billion of State assets. Is there any credible evidence to suggest that recreational hunting in national parks would have any environmental benefit? Over what time frame are we likely to see the benefits?
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