Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Hunters in Decline?

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Hunters as endangered species?

 

Good.

 

Jo

 

, " zurumato@e... " <zurumato@e...>

wrote:

> from the September 27, 2005 edition

http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0927/p01s02-ussc.html

>

>

> FAMILY TRADITIONS: Jessica Worley, 12, hunts ducks with the help of

her father, Tim Worley, during the California Department of Game and

Fish-sponsored Junior Hunt Day this past February.

> MAX WHITTAKER/AP

>

>

> Hunters as endangered species? A bid to rebuild ranks.

>

> Youth hunt days in several states attempt to attract young people

to a fading sport.

>

> By Mark Clayton | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

>

> Along Indiana's highways, 50-foot billboards pitch: " Take a Kid

Hunting Day. " They depict father and son ambling down a country road -

two dead ducks drooping from one of the boy's hands, a shotgun in

the other.

> Trying to appeal to youths' instincts for fun and family, Indiana

state officials and national hunting advocates are banking on a

phalanx of sophisticated promotions to lure a new generation of would-

be hunters into the fields, or woods.

>

> Readers Vote

> (Having trouble? Click here)

>

> Disclaimer

>

>

Write a letter to the Editor

>

>

Indiana's first statewide youth hunt is one of many state and

private initiatives emerging this fall that aim to ensure that

hunters don't become an endangered species.

> With the urbanization of America, there's simply less nearby land

available for hunting. Moreover, competition for kids' time - from

cellphones, television, and other modern diversions - has diminished

ranks of young hunters. The result: Few kids learn to hunt and go on

to hunt as adults.

> To reverse the trend, state and private efforts range from trying

to repeal laws that limit youth hunting to psychology-based campaigns

aimed at getting young people familiar with gun use.

> Such moves are setting off alarm bells with hunting watchdog

groups. Long-established safeguards governing the sport are being

undercut, they say, and state agencies are aligning with the hunting

industry as never before.

> Anxious to reverse the decline in the sport - and the resulting

drop in state revenues from hunting licenses - hunting and gun groups

and state wildlife and conservation departments are pursuing several

initiatives.

> • The National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF), a trade

association representing the firearms industry, is funding new

hunting programs in 25 states, part of its Hunting Heritage

Partnership with state wildlife agencies. Fruits of that program,

which began in 2003, are being seen this fall in Indiana's first

statewide youth hunt and other efforts.

> • The National Rifle Association is developing a campaign to begin

early next year to open more public land in all 50 states to hunting.

It will use model legislation from South Dakota, NRA president Wayne

LaPierre says. Easing access is generally aimed at increasing

retention rates by keeping hunters more active.

> • The National Wild Turkey Federation's new Families Afield program

is targeting 33 states that currently make it illegal for youths to

go deer hunting before age 12. It also is deploying new youth

programs like Xtreme Jakes, which combines elements like rock

climbing and mountainbiking with target shooting in triathlon-style

events.

> " We're just starting a new generation of programs based on solid

research - not just things that feel good, " says Mark Damian Duda,

executive director of Responsive Management, a Harrisonburg, Va.,

opinion research firm serving wildlife agencies and hunting groups.

> These programs - built on the research of psychologists like Jean

Piaget, who pioneered the study of children's intellectual

development, focus on the psychological requirements to build an

inclination toward hunting starting at an early age.

> To set the hook

> Hunting groups have gotten the message. " We decided to use those

[extreme sports] as a hook to get them interested first, then

involved in the outdoors - and then tell them about hunting, " says

Mandy Harling, Xtreme Jakes program manager for the Wild Turkey

Federation.

> Hunting and gun groups are active for a reason. Between the mid-

1990s and 2001, the number of hunters dropped 7 percent to about 13

million, according to the US Fish and Wildlife Service. By 2025, that

number is projected to drop 24 percent to about 9.9 million,

according to a recent study conducted for pro-hunting organizations.

> Without serious changes, " the future for hunting is bleak, " says

the study conducted for the NSSF and the Wild Turkey Federation.

> Besides their youth-marketing initiatives, the firearms industry

and hunting organizations are also assisting many recruitment efforts

run by state wildlife agencies worried by declining revenue from

hunting license sales.

> " It has been a red flag, " says Michael Ellis, spokesman for

Indiana's Division of Fish and Wildlife. " Youth hunting has been

declining, and if they don't hunt, neither will their sons and

daughters. "

> Although cooperation between state wildlife agencies and pro-

hunting groups has long been the rule, growing urgency over declining

numbers of hunters is fueling closer alliances and more intense

efforts to protect a $20 billion industry, observers say.

> " We're seeing a lot of things that indicate to us an erosion of the

public interest, " says Heidi Prescott, a spokeswoman for the Humane

Society of the United States in Washington. " It's an increased

effort, like a final gasp of desperation. "

> Anti-hunters' requests

> Public agencies should serve a wider constituency, including far

more wildlife watchers, some 66 million participants who spent $38

billion in 2001, and quit catering to the hunting industry,

antihunting advocates say.

> " What we find so objectionable is that these public-service

agencies are involving themselves in recruiting hunters and now, in

some cases, have even made it part of their strategic plans, " says

Ms. Prescott.

> Industry and state officials, however, are unapologetic.

> " We have an interest in building commerce for the future for our

members, " says Steve Wagner, a spokesman for the NSSF, based in

Newtown, Conn. " As commerce and participation builds, so do the ties

to conservation funding. "

> Indiana's Fish and Wildlife Division, for instance, received an

$18,110 grant from the NSSF to create and promote an " annual small-

game hunting day. " Those funds paid for billboards and posters.

Indiana officials say there was no undue influence involved.

> " The efforts done with those dollars are for nothing other than to

promote hunting and shooting - there's no advertising or manufacturer

involvement, " says Kyle Hupfer, a hunter himself and director of the

Indiana Department of Natural Resources, which oversees the division.

> The state's youth hunt, in which kids accompanied by adults were

permitted to shoot a " bag limit " of five squirrels and 15 mourning

doves in a day, is the first step with programs like next year's

youth deer hunt.

> Animal preservation groups say more than 100 million animals are

needlessly killed for sport annually nationwide. But agencies and

hunting groups say that hunting license sales fund vital efforts to

maintain habitat programs, including those that aided the resurgence

of the bald eagle and wild turkey.

> Big money at stake

> Indeed, state efforts to recruit new hunters has less to do with

managing surging wildlife populations, such as deer, though it is a

factor, and much more to do with maintaining budgets, state officials

say.

> " We need the revenue from hunting licenses to ensure that our

conservation efforts succeed, " says Susan Langlois, administrator of

the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife's Hunter

Education Program. " A lot of people try to be supportive, " she

adds. " But hunters are truly the ones that support us in trying to

manage for biodiversity. "

> The situation is especially dire in Massachusetts. Hunting-license

purchases have dropped by more than half over two decades. So the

state is now recruiting young hunters and, with a $19,000 NSSF grant,

officials hope to double their youth hunting programs this fall. In

Alabama, some $26,000 in NSSF funding saved the state's " youth dove

hunts, " threatened by state budget cuts.

> " If we're not growing we're losing ground, " Gary Moody, chief of

wildlife at Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources,

wrote in a statement citing the NSSF program as a boon. " Our job is

to improve and strengthen hunter numbers. "

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...