Fayle
Loc: Seward, Alaska and Rionegro, Colombia
Fayle wrote:
Using aircraft, the State of Alaska has recently m... (
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About equal with Alaska (Governor) shooting Wolves. Horrible policies. People and ranchers are the encroachers.
That's terrible! They also killed Black bears, and I thought they are not carnivorous. If they shot them from helicoptors did they just leave the carcass to go to waste? Why couldn't they just give out permits to hunters to take out the bears?
nimbushopper wrote:
That's terrible! They also killed Black bears, and I thought they are not carnivorous. If they shot them from helicoptors did they just leave the carcass to go to waste? Why couldn't they just give out permits to hunters to take out the bears?
Black Bears are omnivorous...but they will eat you...on occasion.
I forget the ratios on their diets...
But it's something like...
Black bear...30% meat.
Grizzly...50%.
Polar...95%.
Fayle wrote:
Using aircraft, the State of Alaska has recently m... (
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You do understand that if the caribou are gone many of the brown bears will die as well don't you? How do you suggest they protect the caribou, tell the brown bears to go hunt something else?
It is all in the pursuit of wildlife management. Caribou are a source of food for the indigenous people, and if left unchecked, the bears could decimate, even eliminate the herds. It’s a relatively small, isolated location. Animals are taken like that only after studies determine that there is an overpopulation of them. It’s the same for wolves, as well. An overpopulation can destroy the moose concentration of an area and so it is deemed, on occasion, necessary to reduce the number of wolves in an area. Like it or not, humans are here to stay, and so a balance between man and animal must be maintain, to the extent that it can be attained. Wolves are a favorite, popular animal and people get upset when they have to be taken, but wolves are not an endangered species. Neither are bears. So this operation may, at its face, seem outrageous, but it’s really not.
Fayle wrote:
Using aircraft, the State of Alaska has recently m... (
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No argument from me. People can always an "excuse" for destroying and killing.
Fayle wrote:
https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/wolves-yellowstone/
What exactly does that have to do with the relationship between caribou herds in Alaska and bear predation?
And how did all these wild animals populations stay in balance before humans started messing everything up.
They were in balance for around 10,000 years with humans.
Different attitudes yield different results.
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