Submitted by therealcocochanel t3_yef0t1 in Connecticut
[deleted] t1_itzimaa wrote
Reply to comment by Halifax199 in This is nuts. by therealcocochanel
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Halifax199 t1_itzz4jm wrote
Your reply is simplistic, but bear biology/life history is quite complex. Elder females not only regulate population, they teach their young the way of the bear. Kill the females and it's a bloody free for all with rogue animals having to fend for themselves and unregulated breeding. There are many instances of this in nature - bears, deer, coyote, elephants - where hunting causes increases in animal-human conflict and population size (the latter from compensatory reproduction). The only way hunting works is through eradication, and then you have removed all of the other functions of bear, deer, etc. from the forest - like plant/tree propagule dispersal, nutrient cycling, and more. As the animal control officer/LEO in the CT town with the biggest bear-human interaction problem told us, he doesn't have a bear problem, he has a people problem. NO REWARDS, NO BEARS. There's simple for you.
I've done 30+ years as a forest ecologist in CT and even longer as a student of the primary literature of behavioral and population ecology. I've seen this in play all across New England including on forestlands in Maine on properties of up to 10,000 acres.
DEEP is counting on you not knowing (or caring about) any of this. They are all about killing, logging, and destroying, the very antithesis of environmental protection.
[deleted] t1_iu04i1i wrote
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buried_lede t1_iu1u7xo wrote
What the heck has a bobcat ever done to you? I can’t think of a CT animal that messes with people less than a bobcat
SeanFromQueens t1_iu0x77r wrote
This is CT, being against biodiversity being on team Lyme Disease and other parasite born diseases. Kill off the bears, then down the food chain critters like mice breed without any problems.
[deleted] t1_iu0z6a5 wrote
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SeanFromQueens t1_iu10yxq wrote
But the next disease is what we're trying to avoid not the disease discovered from a surreptitiously decline of biodiversity that gave rise to disease carrying mice in South Eastern CT 40+ years ago. Let's learn from our past and do better.
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