* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Introduction to Wildlife Management
Mission blue butterfly habitat conservation wikipedia , lookup
Ecological fitting wikipedia , lookup
Conservation movement wikipedia , lookup
Wildlife crossing wikipedia , lookup
Molecular ecology wikipedia , lookup
Island restoration wikipedia , lookup
Biodiversity action plan wikipedia , lookup
Overexploitation wikipedia , lookup
Reconciliation ecology wikipedia , lookup
Marie Bolt  Wildlife: free-ranging birds, mammals, amphibians, and reptiles • Not all wild animals and plants • Not fish • Not just “game” species • Not just “nongame” species  Wildlife management is the application of ecological knowledge to populations of vertebrate animals and their plant and animal associates in a manner that strikes a balance between the needs of those populations and the needs of people.  Preservation • Nature takes its course without human intervention  Direct manipulation • Animal populations are trapped, shot, poisoned, and stocked  Indirect manipulation • Vegetation, water, or other key components of wildlife habitat are altered  Wildlife management is not purely basic nor applied science, but uses both to apply an integrated approach to solve a given problem  Not a “cookbook” approach  Requires application of skill, knowledge and imagination  Ecology/Natural History  Law  Habitat Management  Team Work  Land Navigation/GIS/GPS  Communications  People Management  Early US/Colonial: game laws  1800s: Increased regulation of game  1900s: Gifford Pinchot “Resource Conservation Ethic”  1930s: Aldo Leopold, father of wildlife management, “Game Management”  1937: Pittman-Robertson Act, 10% tax on hunting arms and ammo for research and management by states  The qualities found in nature could be considered “natural resources”. The goal of proper use of natural resources is the greatest good of the greatest number (of people) for the longest time. (G. Pinchot) • Resources should be fairly distributed among present as well as future users • Resources should be used with efficiency—that is, put to the best possible use and not wasted (i.e., non-use is waste)  The most important goal of land management is to maintain the health of ecosystems and ecological processes. Maintaining these ecological processes will ultimately give greater long-term value to humans than managing natural areas only for particular resources (A. Leopold) • Humans are part of the ecological community rather than standing apart from nature and exploiting it (move away from over-exploitation of “conservation ethic”)  1960s and 1970s: greater expectations • Changes from “maximum” to “optimal” yield for game species  1970s: Environmental movement and Environmental Laws (NEPA, ESA, CWA, CAA, FIFRA, RCRA, CERCLA, etc.)  1980s: National Forest Management Planning Act  Late 1980s: Conservation Biology  Address complex issues with both research and management skills by • Reviewing the scientific literature • Finding answers with field &/or lab work • Implementing and evaluating remedies  Political, social & economic factors influence methods and how successfully they can deal with stewardship of wildlife populations and habitats  Desired Goal  Appropriate  Best Management Option(s) Management Action  Where do we want to go?  Can we get there?  Will we know we have arrived?  How do we get there?  What are the costs?  What are the benefits?  Will benefits exceed costs?  Increase Population • Endangered Species  Decrease Population • Nuisance species  Harvest • Game species  Monitor • Nongame species  You can not increase the numbers of all species on every piece of land….when you manage for certain species, you manage against other species  Exploitation  Bison  Passenger Pigeon  Other Extinctions  Some Near Extinctions  Problems of Excess  Predator Control  Exotic Wildlife  God’s instructions to Adam and Eve were to “be fruitful, multiply, and replenish the Earth, and subdue it, and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth on upon the Earth.” Genesis 1:28  Eliminate predators and competitors  Repopulate with domestic animals  Move “familiar” animals across the world  Privileged classes and sport hunting  Market hunting  Waterfowl  Bison  Songbirds  Plumage  Beaver hats  To 1850, large population in American West, coexisted with humans  Provided food, shelter, bowstrings, fuel  Grass-bison-human food chain for years  6 million in 1860 to 160 in 1889  Small herds existed & replenished population  Railroads made access easy  Repeating rifles & scopes  Army condoned it  Food for railroad workers  Hides/tongue prized  Most rotted, unused     Most abundant animal on the planet Migration darked the sky 1871, 136 million in central WI alone Market hunting, nesting habitat destruction, single egg, no laws, lead to extinction in 1914  Steller’s sea cow  Carolina parakeet  Labrador duck  Heath hen  Great auk          Wood Duck Wild Turkey California Condor Beaver Canada Goose Mountain Lion Grey Wolf Double-crested cormorant Bald eagle  White-tailed deer  Raccoon  Canada goose  Beaver  Double-crested cormorant  Two charts • Reindeer • Mule deer  Beaver herd Basin deer  Bounties • Not effective, no population changes • Fraud  Poison controls • Non-target animals  Overall, not effective  Man has moved animals from place to place across the world, either intentionally or unintentionally  Exotic wildlife may increase or fail to prosper  If they increase, many times they become nuisance species  Many examples on trying to control, “new immigrants” who alter the ecology of the habitats they are released into by fulfilling/displacing native species niches  Spotted owl  Sea turtles  California condor  Grey wolf  Background  Bison  Lead Poisoning  Wood Ducks  Wild Turkeys  Mammals  Marine Mammals  Birds  Elusive Measures  1639, 1st closed season for white-tailed deer in Rhode Island colony (May-Nov)  Many laws to protect species including heath hens and passenger pigeons  No ecological considerations, no habitat protection  No preservation of food, cover, water  Not until 1900s did management occur      American Bison Association, NY Zoo Bison preserves Yellowstone NP Canada: 2 NPs, one for Wood Buffalo European bison restocked in Bialowieza Forest, Poland/Russia 2 Problems with Bison reintroduction • Lack of natural predators, leads to overpopulation • Overpopulation and outstripping resources, and control measures not accepted by populus  Primary issues: • Use of lead in shotgun shells • Use of lead in rifle bullets • Use of lead in fishing gear  Lead shot  Lead Poisoning • Banned in 1976/78 • Primary Routes • Decrease in raptor  Shot  Grit for gizzard deaths • Decrease in waterfowl losses • No increase in waterfowl crippling deaths  Grinding plus acid in stomach, organo- lead, neurotoxin • Secondary Route  Incidental ingestion of lead in prey Mean No. Lost/100 Retrieved 30 25 20 Ducks Geese Coots All 15 10 5 0 Before (71-75) During (76-78) After (79-84)  Rifle bullets • Issues for California Condor • Issues for Steller’s sea eagle in Japan  Migratory Bird Treaty Act, 1918  Protected wood ducks  Population rebounded without help at first • • • • • 1938, biologists in Illinois erected wood duck houses Noticed insufficient nesting sites Quickly spread Some areas have more produced in boxes than natural habitat Now, 2nd/3rd most abundant waterfowl species  Extirpated in most of North America by 1930s  Reintroductions were tried, many failed  Finally appropriate genetic types were used for each site populations were protected  When appropriate, hunting was allowed  Now 40 states have turkeys Turkey Harvest in Michigan 35000 30000 25000 20000 15000 10000 5000 0 19 70 19 80 19 90 20 00  New Harvest • White-tailed deer – 0.5 million, 1900 – 12 million, 1980 • Elk – 0.04 million, 1900 – 1 million, 2000 • Pronghorn antelope – 13,000--1920 – 400,000--1980 • Beaver – Nearly extirpated 1800s – Nuisance species, now  Marine Mammal Protection Act (1972)  Endangered Species Act (1973) • Pinnepeds (seal) • Sirenians (manatee) • Cetaceans (dolphins & whales)  Sea Otter • Reintroductions, natural increases • Protection from trapping, fishermen • Orcas new threat in Aleutian Islands  Gray whales • Predictable migratory route • Stay close to shore • Now problems with carrying capacity • Salt plant in calving grounds           Trumpeter swans Roseate spoonbills Upland sandpipers Sage grouse Sharp-tailed grouse Snowy egrets Whooping cranes Wood ducks California condors Heath hen  “Candidates for oblivion” listed in Our vanishing wild life, by William Hornaday 1913  Only the Heath hen is extinct today  Bald eagles  Peregrine falcons  Kirtland’s warbler  Atlantic puffin  Many other species  Need to have neither extinction nor excess populations  How do we measure success, is 40 million ducks from 400 million a success or a failure?  Need to include the social dimension in answering these types of questions  Technical • Current status of population  Size  Rate of population change  Reproductive capacity  Seasonal requirements  Social • Public education • Public support
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            