wearthefoxhat wrote:
The theory of "doomed Surplus" has absolutely no relevance to our topic of conversation.
wayno wrote:hunters kill masses of animals in nz. doesnt make a great difference. unless it's a particularly small park, its just a black hole. you just dont dent enough of the population to make much of a difference. you might hammer an area and the animals just move in from another area...
wayno wrote:not a lot would happen if rec hunting stopped today they kill a small percentage of the total no's, animals like deer, thar, chamois proliferate massively, let alone rabbits
this is a rabbit hunt, impact on the population? zero. rabbits will replace those lost no's in weeks...
http://www.odt.co.nz/your-town/alexandr ... bunny-hunt
"I would suggest you do a bit more reading."
Tony what have I missed?
Most if not all these answers are available on the Game council website.. http://www.gamecouncil.nsw.gov.au/porta ... wsArchives
This is early days for Game council hunting and some see it as unsuccessful while others see the opposite.
I hope one day we will be as successful as the example I gave earlier on the removal of deer in Alpine park Vic.
National parks Victoria disagree that rec hunters don't have a positive impact towards feral control in fact they go as far as to say they couldn't achieve the same result if left up to themselves to do the job.
I believe this will also be the case in NSW going by that example but it will take time. There is a huge feral problem out there and its not going to be fixed over night. National Parks have failed terribly so far its time to employ new strategies!
wearthefoxhat wrote:Only if you stop hunting though. This is where pro hunting may have its flaws as they only do small areas at a time.
My point was though what happens if you stop hunting ferals. My guess is we would be over run in a few years.
maddog wrote:wearthefoxhat wrote:Only if you stop hunting though. This is where pro hunting may have its flaws as they only do small areas at a time.
My point was though what happens if you stop hunting ferals. My guess is we would be over run in a few years.
The number of rabbits required to be culled annually to stop population growth has been estimated as 87%. For foxes the estimate is 65% (across all regions of Australia).*
Only baiting, which the shooters oppose, can achieve these numbers. While a well co-ordinated follow-up shooting program aimed at a residual population may be of benefit if bait-shyness becomes an issue, this is not what is proposed. The Game Council's ad-hoc recreational hunting proposal is not a conservation initiative, it is a pointless and expensive sideshow.
Cheers
*Hone, J., On rates of increase (r): patterns of variation in Australian mammals and the implications for wildlife management. Journal of Applied Ecology; Oct99, Vol 36 Issue 5, p709-718.
How is a recreational hunter shooting rabbits or foxes an expensive sideshow?..the only cost is too the hunter
Tony wrote:Here is a transcript of an interview with JOHN MUMFORD, CHAIRMAN, GAME COUNCIL OF NSW, JIM PIRIE, CUDGEGONG VALLEY HUNTING CLUB and CATE FAEHRMANN, NSW GREENS Are bushwalkers in danger from National Park hunting system? a must read just to realise what some Game Council employes and some hunters get up to.
Tony
Tony wrote:How is a recreational hunter shooting rabbits or foxes an expensive sideshow?..the only cost is too the hunter
The Game council receives around $2.5 million state funding each year, and for that we get only 18,485 feral animals removed from Sate Forests, it was supposed to be self funding.
Tony
Tony wrote:How is a recreational hunter shooting rabbits or foxes an expensive sideshow?..the only cost is too the hunter
The Game council receives around $2.5 million state funding each year, and for that we get only 18,485 feral animals removed from Sate Forests, it was supposed to be self funding.
Tony
wearthefoxhat wrote: Unlike all these uni grads who sit behind a computer with their PHDs who seem to know it all and spend half their time trying to figure out how too weasle another research paper pay check out of some government agency.
wearthefoxhat wrote:How is a recreational hunter shooting rabbits or foxes an expensive sideshow?..the only cost is too the hunter
wearthefoxhat wrote:Is it any wonder the game council is reluctant to talk to the media..?Tony wrote:Here is a transcript of an interview with JOHN MUMFORD, CHAIRMAN, GAME COUNCIL OF NSW, JIM PIRIE, CUDGEGONG VALLEY HUNTING CLUB and CATE FAEHRMANN, NSW GREENS Are bushwalkers in danger from National Park hunting system? a must read just to realise what some Game Council employes and some hunters get up to.
Tony
maddog wrote:Hunting plan to cost taxpayers at least $19m
http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/hunting-plan- ... 2eplj.html
photohiker wrote:Tony wrote:How is a recreational hunter shooting rabbits or foxes an expensive sideshow?..the only cost is too the hunter
The Game council receives around $2.5 million state funding each year, and for that we get only 18,485 feral animals removed from Sate Forests, it was supposed to be self funding.
Tony
Wow. I make that $135 per feral. (no, I don't mean the members, I mean the animals shot)
wearthefoxhat wrote: I do believe the Game Council should be able to at least match or better the cost per feral removed by National parks service which from memory was close to $50 per animal (I may stand corrected on this figure). The Game council is aware of the gap and is endeavouring to close it.... This may happen with more hunters and more areas to hunt as quantity of scale kicks in.
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