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Why We Hunt- The Role & Value Of Hunting --------------- |
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What They Say About Us --------------- |
The Role and Value of Hunting
You’ve heard me speak of the role and value of hunting - that it is a
force for conservation. Now, here it is from H. Sterling Burnett, Ph.D, of
the National Center for Policy Analysis, which was kind enough to let us do
this reprint. Please note that many of the figures Dr. Burnett cites have
long been exceeded and are quite conservative. – John J. Jackson, III.
Hunters: Founders and Leaders of Wildlife Conservation
By H. Sterling Burnett
The state of wildlife on the African continent today resembles that of
wildlife in the United States in the late 19th century. African wildlife
populations are declining as habitat is converted to farming, wildlife is
competing with or preying on domestic livestock and wildlife pursuit is
increasingly commercialized. But first in the US and now in Africa, hunters
have led the charge to conserve wildlife. Although some may find the fact
surprising, outdoor sportsmen proposed and carried out virtually all of the
initiatives that saved important US game species from extinction. Indeed,
most funding for the research into wildlife needs and habitat preservation
still is provided by hunters. If Africa’s diverse wildlife is to survive, it
too likely will owe that survival to hunters.
President Theodore Roosevelt, a noted big game hunter, is often credited as
the initial force behind American wildlife conservation. While Roosevelt did
draw vital public attention to wildlife conservation, hunters began public
and private efforts decades before Roosevelt established the first wildlife
reservation in 1903.
In 1846, prominent sportsmen prodded Rhode Island legislators into passing
the first seasonal hunting regulation for waterfowl.
In 1871, a sportsmen’s association established the nation’s first
incorporated game preserve, the 12,000-acre Blooming Grove Park in Pike
County, Pennsylvania, for the purpose of preserving, importing, breeding and
propagating game animals, birds and fish, and of furnishing facilities to
the members for hunting, shooting and fishing. In 1877, prominent New York
sportsmen formed the Bisby Club in the Adirondack Mountains, and by the
early 1890s the original group merged with the Adirondack League Club to
protect a 179,000-acre game reserve. In 1878, sportsmen in Iowa pushed
legislation to initiate the first limits on the number of animals taken
daily.
The late 19th century saw lobbying and grassroots organizing by hunting
organizations such as the Boone and Crockett Club (formed in 1887), whose
members included Theodore Roosevelt and Gifford Pinchot, founder of the US
Forest Service, and the National Rifle Association (1871); later came the
Izaak Walton League (1922). Bolstered by editorials and articles in outdoor
journals such as Forest and Stream (1873), Field and Stream (1874) and
American Sportsmen (1871), the organizations pressed Congress to pass the
first substantial national wildlife management bills:
The Lacey Act (1900), the first federal law protecting game, prohibited the
interstate shipment of illegally taken wildlife and importation of species.
The Migratory Bird Treaty Act (1918) regulated the hunting of migratory
birds. The Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp Act (1934), known as the Duck Stamp
Act, required hunters of migratory birds to buy a federal duck stamp, with
the generated revenue dedicated to wetlands conservation projects.
The Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act (1937), also known as the
Pittman-Robertson Act, created a 10 percent excise tax, increased later to
11 percent, on sporting arms and ammunition. Revenue is deposited in a
special trust fund under the management of the US Fish and Wildlife Service
to be used for state wildlife restoration projects. In 1908, New York became
the first state to require a hunting license. By 1928, every state had
instituted a hunting license requirement, with the funds dedicated to
wildlife management.
Dollars Save Wildlife
The various licenses, fees and taxes on hunting and hunting equipment
fund more than 90 percent of the budgets of state fish and wildlife
agencies. Since 1923, sales of state hunting licenses, tags and permits have
provided more than $10.2 billion for wildlife management, habitat
acquisition and enhancement and conservation law enforcement. The Federal
Duck Stamp Program has generated more than $500 million for the purchase and
protection of wetlands, with duck stamp revenue reaching $22.9 million
annually by 1996. The Pittman-Robertson Act has distributed more than $3.8
billion to state fish and wildlife agencies since 1937. In addition, the
more than 15 million licensed hunters in the US direct money, time and
effort to conserve wildlife and habitat as individuals and through local
clubs, state conservation groups, state hunting organizations and many
national associations.
The 1996 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting and Wildlife Associated
Recreation reports that hunting expenditures totaled $20.6 billion, with
$11.3 billion going for hunting equipment, $5.2 billion for trip-related
expenses and $4.1 billion for other expenses such as land leases, membership
dues and licenses. Combined with fishing and trapping licenses and taxes,
the total sportsmen’s wildlife conservation contribution for 2000 was over
$3.7 billion.
Hunters’ dollars and efforts have paid off for wildlife. In the 1920s,
many wildlife populations were at historic lows, but now they are
booming. Whitetail
deer populations had declined to approximately 300,000, wild turkey to fewer
than 30,000, pronghorn antelope to only 25,000 and North American elk to
50,000; the wood duck was nearly extinct and there were fewer than 500
bison. Today, there are more than 20 million whitetail deer, more than 4
million turkeys (with populations in every state but Alaska) and more than 1
million antelope and elk.
Wood ducks, numbering over 3 million, are the most common breeding waterfowl
in the US, and bison number 350,000. By conserving habitat for game animals,
hunters benefit non-game wildlife as well. For instance, hundreds of
threatened and endangered non-game animals live on the 9 million-plus acres
restored by Ducks Unlimited, a private conservation organization founded by
duck hunters.
Hunters Benefit African Wildlife
Individually and through organizations such as Safari Club International
big-game hunters from the United States and around the world also have
worked with governments in Africa to save threatened and endangered African
wildlife. Hunters, private landowners and even tribes and villages have
worked together to establish wildlife conservancies in several countries.
Hunting is the main source of income for the conservancies and for many
ranchers, and it provides native peoples and private landowners alike with
incentives to preserve wildlife in Zimbabwe and in other poverty-stricken
nations.
In Africa, the motto is: If it pays, it stays. The conservancies work to
develop relationships with and improve the local economy of nearby
communities. Conservancies involve locals who work as trackers for hunting
parties and as guards to ward off poachers. One conservancy also has set up
a trust on behalf of the local communities. To establish an annual income,
the trust purchases wildlife to be released in the conservancy, and the
conservancy later pays the trust for any increases in population over the
original number of animals. Among the animals that have come to be seen by
Africans as desirable as opposed to pests are elephants, lions, leopards and
numerous antelope species.
Conclusion
Among some environmental groups, hunting has a bad name due to the early
excesses of market hunting in the United States and poaching in Africa. Yet,
regulated sporthunting has not caused or threatened the extinction of a
single species. On the contrary, in America and Africa, the money hunters
spend and contribute pays the cost of wildlife protection.
(Postscript: H. Sterling Burnett, Ph.D., is a Senior Fellow with the
National Center for Policy Analysis. The Dallas Headquarters can be reached
at: 12655 N. Central Expy., Suite 720, Dallas, TX 75243-1739. Tel.
972-386-6272. Fax 972-386-0924. The Washington Office can be reached at: 655
15th St. N.W., Suite 375, Washington, DC 20005. Tel. 202-628-6671. Fax
202-628-6474. For more information, contact: Sean Tuffnell in Dallas at
972-386-6272; or Joan Kirby in Washington at 202-628-6671.)