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Grizzly bears, black bears, wolves, coyotes, cougars/ mountain lions,bobcats, wolverines, lynx, foxes, fishers and martens are the suite of carnivores that originally inhabited North America after the Pleistocene extinctions. This site invites research, commentary, point/counterpoint on that suite of native animals (predator and prey) that inhabited The Americas circa 1500-at the initial point of European exploration and subsequent colonization. Landscape ecology, journal accounts of explorers and frontiersmen, genetic evaluations of museum animals, peer reviewed 20th and 21st century research on various aspects of our "Wild America" as well as subjective commentary from expert and layman alike. All of the above being revealed and discussed with the underlying goal of one day seeing our Continent rewilded.....Where big enough swaths of open space exist with connective corridors to other large forest, meadow, mountain, valley, prairie, desert and chaparral wildlands.....Thereby enabling all of our historic fauna, including man, to live in a sustainable and healthy environment. - Blogger Rick

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Monday, November 26, 2018

"Many of you are aware that market hunting by both Indians and European settlers for skins along with land clearing for farms cut the USA deer population in half over the 300 year period of AD1500-1800",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"In fact, some 30 million deer roaming across what was to become the continental USA was cut in half during that 300 year period"............."In the 30 years between 1860 and 1890, market hunters killed around 14 million deer, which is even more astounding if you consider that for five of those years most able-bodied men were busy trying to kill each other during the Civil War"................"By 1890 there were only about 300,000 deer left, which at the rate they were being killed was an eight-month supply"................."What happened next was a remarkable and oft-celebrated story of recovery, and today we’re back to around 30 million deer."................... "Hunting has gone from kill-as-many-as-you-can to a highly regulated endeavor"............"It’s a tradition that is practiced with religious zeal in most rural areas of the country"..............But what if the preservation regimne had not been put into practice and deer all but blinked out?,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,Read the full article below from Northern Woodlands Magazine Senior Editor Dave Mance, to get one mans perspective on what our woodlands would look like today if in fact the preservation and re-stocking paradigm of the last 125 years had not been put into practice by our State Game Agencies

https://northernwoodlands.org/knots_and_bolts/world-without-whitetails


World Without Whitetails
white-tail doe-Photo by Petar Jovanovic
Editor’s Note: What follows is the first in a series of pieces that imagines what the Northern Forest would be like if history had unfolded in a different way.
Experts estimate that there were around 30 million whitetail deer in the US in the year 1500. Over the next 300 years they were killed relentlessly by settler farmers and Native American hunters, who traded the hides to colonial merchants for provisions and promises. By 1800, that 30 million number had been cut in half.
When the natives were pushed westward, colonists learned to hunt with ruthless efficiency, motivated by urban meat markets and aided by repeating rifles and railroads that shrank the country. In the 30 years between 1860 and 1890, market hunters killed around 14 million deer, which is even more astounding if you consider that for five of those years most able-bodied men were busy trying to kill each other. By 1890 there were only about 300,000 deer left, which at the rate they were being killed was an eight-month supply.
What happened next was a remarkable and oft-celebrated story of recovery, and today we’re back to around 30 million deer. Hunting has gone from kill-as-many-as-you-can to highly regulated; it’s a tradition that is practiced with religious zeal in most rural areas of the country. While the market for wild deer meat is gone, there’s still plenty of money involved – hunting alone is a $35 billion industry nationwide. Add the money behind the deer fence industry, the deer paraphernalia industry (paintings, decorative plates, air-brushed T-shirts), the body shop business linked to collisions, and you’re soon talking crazy money. And what’s the intangible value of watching does and fawns under the apple tree in the yard? The original word for deer, dheu, meant breath. Life. They are as entwined with our lives as any wild animal I can think of.
But what if we hadn’t stopped killing them in time? What if we’d used that last bit up and, like bison, deer had become functionally extinct?
World Without Whitetails Image
Imagine it’s 2018, and America hasn’t had a wild whitetail deer herd of any significance for a hundred years. There was talk in the 1890s of a so-called North American Wildlife Model, which would have placed game animals in the public trust. State game departments were proposed to regulate and enforce bag limits and hunting seasons. Market hunting would have been outlawed. But deer advocates lost this political battle, and a formal management structure was delayed for decades – inertia is as powerful a force in politics as it is in physics.
Without government support, the coalition advocating for deer protection went about their endeavors privately. Large chunks of the northern forest were purchased and set aside as game reserves with no public access. At first these reserves were Dr. Moreauvian hodgepodges of life – anyone with a big enough pocketbook could create their own Eden. Strangely enough, kangaroos, imported from Australia, found the region to their liking and spread like rabbits, filling the mid-size herbivore niche the deer left. They’re now a solid part of both our ecological culture and our pop culture. Fathers affectionately refer to their young sons as their little kangaroos, this from a lyric in a popular country song.

White-tail Deer buck














When the preserves were created it was mostly too late for the deer – the point of no-return had been reached – but the last survivors were put behind fences in the Adirondacks. They languished there – the whitetail is not an animal that takes well to domestication. They also inbred with the exotic deer on the preserves, and today the few remaining whitetails contain a percentage of foreign deer genes. New York State actively promotes its herd as a tourist attraction, and visitors still flock to the Adirondacks to see the last of the deer, but mammologists insist that the animal isn't a true whitetail anymore. Certainly pictures bear this out. The tall, narrow antlers on mature bucks are nothing like the wide-racked antecedents you see in earlier pictures of the species.
Without deer, the sport of hunting cleaved along class lines. The rich shot farm-raised game birds with fancy guns, but among regular people it remained a sustenance endeavor. When commercial agriculture developed to the point of making small game meat unnecessary for all but the poorest poor, hunting declined and became a niche pursuit. This set the stage, later in the twentieth century, for an anti-hunting political agenda to take root in urban and suburban areas.

Mule Deer Buck












Since the general public was never included in managing game, the conservation ethic never got much traction outside of academia. There were no hook and bullet magazines that espoused concepts of fair use, fair chase, reverence. No formal hunter-ed. And so today, it’s mostly done in a put-and-take manner, the hunting preserve sort of like a stocked bass pond. The hunting of wild animals is often done in a blunt, callous way. It’s not uncommon to hear guns on summer nights in rural areas as people pot-shoot songbirds.
Moose found pockets of refuge from market hunters in northern Canada, and over time came back to the Northeast in a big way. With no whitetails there was no brain worm to contend with, so they quickly spread throughout the region. That means that on private forestland they are aggressively culled; companies of snipers keep populations negligible. The better-run timber companies sell cans of moose meat on the open market as a non-timber forest product. But on public lands, and large private ecological reserves, and even in suburban central New England, moose flourished in the mid-twentieth century. In some areas they enjoyed cult status – sort of like cows in India. Traffic still backs up on the Mass Pike as motorists swerve around moose who stand in the middle of the road and lap salt. It's illegal in that state to even look at them funny if they’re on public land.
Unfortunately, moose have been declining in the region since the 1970s due to climate change, which progressed more rapidly in our world without deer. Protecting deer a century earlier would have given people a model for how sensible government regulation can be a force for good; without that model, significant environmental legislation never came to pass. Dirty air continues to plague the Northeast; there hasn't been a brook trout in a mountain pond in half a century. Europe considers us to be hippy-dippy in our notions of animal rights, but at the same time we have a tolerance for industrial environmental abuse that makes the Chinese wonder how we can live like that. Without deer in the suburbs to remind people of real nature, a bond was broken.

Black-tail deer buck 













Much of the Northeast is literally abuzz with its thriving timber industry, and our choice hardwood is the envy of the world. Without deer pressure, maple, oak, and cherry flourish in their respective niches. Every spring the forest floor is carpeted in wild flowers of every shape and color – you’d think you were in an alpine meadow. There’s a substantial wild ginseng industry – the Northeast surpassed Appalachia in that regard as the climate warmed.
You might think there’s no Lyme disease, but the ticks just started using the kangaroos like they use deer, so that’s still balls.
The urge to hunt is entwined in human DNA, so lacking big game, people turned to mushrooms. Pull into a rural gas station and you’ll see toadstool decals on the back window of every pickup truck. A variety of hunting techniques are employed everywhere, but you can make some regional generalizations. In the big north woods people tend to hunt solo and cover lots of miles – you can learn more about this by reading the book: Big Boletes the Benoit Way, the Benoits being a semi-famous family of foragers who made literary hay in the 1990s with their hunting stories and pictures of sagging porcini poles. In southern areas mushroom drives are big, and whole families beat the brush in skirmish lines. Some guys hound, but it’s looked down on by purists as cheating. In some states baiting is legal, and you’ll often find shroom stands overlooking big piles of sawdust.
Since there was no deer camp in the middle 20th century, there were no deer camp widows to populate the malls when their husbands disappeared for a month each fall. Thus the commercialization of Christmas never happened. The holiday is practiced today by Christians, but gift giving is modest.
There’s a lot of concern among sociologists about skyrocketing divorce rates in rural areas, and a lot of theories about the driver. Some fascinating research compared divorce rates in the rural US, where there is no deer camp culture, with regions of rural Canada where hunting camp culture does exist and divorce is rarely practiced. The researchers speculate that all that time away from your domestic partner actually helps a marriage – absence making the heart grow fonder. The findings did not make it into the popular press.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

that is without a doubt a kangaroo not a whitetail deer in the first photo......... Look at it and reread the article.

Coyotes, Wolves and Cougars forever said...

The author of the article supposedly was showing a Whitetail..............If in fact a "kangaroo", he erred terribly