Do we need to hunt mountain lions in Nebraska?
January 27th, 2014
Omaha, NE — The big predator cats, also called cougars or pumas, used to roam throughout the country until settlers nearly wiped them out. Seven years ago, camera traps captured the first solid evidence mountain lions were once again breeding in Nebraska.
“We have an established population that we’ve learned more about through research in Pine Ridge area in the northwest corner of state. In that area we believe we have between 15-22 mountain lions,” said Sam Wilson, furbearer and carnivore program manager for the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.
Wilson said there’s also evidence of even smaller populations near Valentine and Scottsbluff. Mountain lions generally prefer forested, hilly areas to corn fields. After a 2012 law allowed mountain lion hunting in Nebraska, Game and Parks opened two of four hunting areas in the state to hunting this year: the Pine Ridge, where most of the lions live and hunting is very limited, and the Prairie Unit, most of the rest of the state, where mountain lions are rare and hunting tags are unlimited.
“Management of the species is to benefit the species,” said Scott Smathers, executive director of the Nebraska Sportsman’s Foundation. He said his group supports mountain lion hunting partly to protect the animals.
“If you travel to rural Nebraska, there’s a large number of folks that believe in the shoot, shovel and shut up procedure with mountain lions. We wanted to take that away, put it in the hands of folks who are educated, skilled and dedicated to the management of wildlife, and that’s Game and Parks,” Smathers said.
Smathers said mountain lions benefit from Game and Parks management because there’s more public awareness and money for research. At auction, one man paid more than $13,000 for one tag—much of which went to Game and Parks. The only other first season permit went to a 16-year old boy chosen by lottery. With the help of hunting dogs, each killed a male cat in early January.
“First of all, I don’t call it hunting, I call it butchery. I feel very strongly about it, and when I saw the picture of that animal in a tree, and this boy shooting him, it infuriated me. I was more outraged and enraged than I had been about anything than I can remember,” State Sen. Ernie Chambers said.
Chambers has introduced a bill to repeal the mountain lion hunt, and vowed to fight any Game and Parks legislation until they do so. Chambers quoted the poet William Blake, and said he doesn’t like to see living things killed: “’A robin redbreast in a cage; puts all heaven in a rage.’ These animals have a place in this universe. I think when you kill these animals for sport or fun or to get trophies, that indicates something very wrong in a society,” Chambers said.
Game and Parks Deputy Director Tim McCoy acknowledged there are very diverse opinions regarding hunting predators or other species. That’s part of what complicates their work.
“Those are all valid opinions and philosophies people hold,” McCoy said. “We try to stay in that management standpoint, somewhere in the middle of that balance as an agency.”
Chambers also believes there’s an important ecological role of the big cats: “It’s more than poetry or sentimentality to say that nature has set up a very delicate, intricate balance, and if you take one piece out of that puzzle, the rest of it collapses. And that’s what’s happening in places like Nebraska,” Chambers said.
“Mountain lions certainly play an important ecological role,” Wilson of Game and Parks said. Mountain lions have positive impacts by preying on Nebraska’s abundant deer population, Wilson said. Research has shown big predators have numerous cascading impacts in an ecosystem, affecting crop damage, disease dynamics and even stream beds. Without big predators, deer and elk can over-consume riverbank vegetation and change the stream flow. But mountain lions have been gone from the state for more than a century.
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