Florida Called Off Its Big Black-Bear Hunt After It Became a Black-Bear Massacre

88m3

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Florida Called Off Its Big Black-Bear Hunt After It Became a Black-Bear Massacre
By Nathan PembertonFollow @nathanpemberton
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48interacting with humans, who have increasingly been encroaching on their traditional settlement areas, with sometimesunfortunate results.

The state took the measured response of initiating a weeklong statewide bear hunt for the trash-hungry omnivores. It doled out more hunting permits (3,779) than the last known count of the bear population (3,300). The first weekend of bear bloodbath was such a success that officials had to call off the hunt after only 48 hours. The bear body count by that point had already reached 295.

The wildlife commission had set a cap of 320 bears, nearly 10 percent of the state's bear population.

Biologists with Florida's wildlife commission say the high numbers point to a robust and fully recovered bear population.

Just three years ago, the black bear was on the state's endangered-species list. The population was bouncing back from a low of around 300 in 1970, down from 11,000 at its mid-century peak. Hunting was suspended in 1994.

One reason for the "success" of the hunt, besides the zealousness of men in camouflage (approved weapons: shotguns, bows, pistols, revolvers, and crossbows; Ted Nugent also joined in), is, as one official put it, the sheer naïveté of Florida's wild black-bear population. Having not been hunted in two decades has left the population a bit soft in the stomach. "The bears haven't been hunted in 21 years, so they're relatively naive," said one wildlife official to the Tampa Bay Times. In fact, humans are largely to blame for bears being so "meh" about humans, as another official told National Geographic: "If an animal receives food enough so that it loses its fear of people, becomes used to people [...] Bears did not become this way without people's help."

Activists throughout the state were inflamed by the Fish and Wildlife Commission's decision to authorize the hunt. The commission was flooded with 40,000 public comments and letters during the public comment phase. Nearly 75 percent of respondents pleaded with the commissioners to vote no on the culling. But many sportsmen decried the activism as effete urbanism. As one prominent land developer told the Orlando Sentinel, "They [protesters] can't rule what everybody else wants. The protesters, in my opinion, are the vast minority of people. They're not hunters. They live in the city. They probably wouldn't even want to go out in the woods, you know?"

Groups opposed to the hunt offered simple alternatives to the hunt like trash management and reducing the odors of human food, along with bear-proof receptacles to curb bears from roaming near houses and developments. But that would be no fun for the hunters, said one Central Florida hunter to CBS News, "They do a lot of damage on the property," he said. "It's nice being able to take this one out."

The apparently eager desire to kill bothers conservationists the most. “Florida’s strategy to allegedly reduce human-bear conflicts [through hunting] is predicated upon attracting trophy hunters and it’s akin to a crime control strategy that involves shooting generally into a crowd,” the president of the Humane Society of the United States recently told National Geographic.


http://nymag.com/daily/intelligence....html?utm_source=slate&utm_medium=syndication

such a ridiculous state
 

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swildhack4 hours ago






Anyone calling this hunt a success is drinking the Jim Jones-recipe of Kool Aid handed out by the Florida Wildlife Commission's newly hired public relations firm. Seriously, the amount of spinning on this story since Sunday has been making me dizzy.


Commenter Jim Schmidt called this hunt a success. Really? We don't even know how many bears we have in Florida. Seriously, the state was in the middle of a bear "census" count when they launched this hunt. The census data was supposed to be ready in 2016. The last statewide bear census was in 2002. During the unsuccessful hearing to halt the hunt, Speak Up Wekiva's attorneys asked bear biologist Thomas Eason what was wrong with waiting until 2016 to hunt bear, when the numbers are in. Eason said, "nothing's wrong with it." "Why's the hunt going on now, then?" asked the attorney. "The commission wanted it," Eason said.


Success my ass, Mr. Schmidt. This hunt was successful only in three things: (1) it was successfully unscientific in that it makes all that census work inaccurate; (2) it was successfully grossly inhumane--I saw those bear bodies, and there were lactating females supporting cubs that were killed, against the FWC's own rules; and (3) it was successfully a huge waste of taxpayer dollars, in that it made the census information inaccurate and it cost who knows how many millions of dollars in overtime for wildlife officers, who were on duty in multitudes this last weekend.


In the meantime, at least 300 bears were killed in the hunt (Speak Up Wekiva's bear monitors reported higher numbers). That's in addition to the 83 bears killed this year through October 1 as nuisance animals. By the way, a nuisance bear is one that comes in your neighborhood and eats your unsecured trash. Death to them! And we don't have reported figures on how many black bears were killed on the highways in 2015, but in 2014 that was about 200.


So guessing (because, again, we don't have a census so no one really knows), that we had 3000 bears in Florida on Friday before the hunt began, subtract 300 killed in the hunt, 82 killed for being "nuisances," and 200 killed on the highways: 582 bears dead this year. That leaves 2418 black bears in Florida--a unique subspecies of black bear, Ursus americanus floridanus, that lives only in Florida and on the southern fringes of adjacent states. As recently as 1994, there were only 500 of these animals left in the world. Is that the management goal of this wildlife commission?




yikes
 

kj614

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swildhack4 hours ago






Anyone calling this hunt a success is drinking the Jim Jones-recipe of Kool Aid handed out by the Florida Wildlife Commission's newly hired public relations firm. Seriously, the amount of spinning on this story since Sunday has been making me dizzy.


Commenter Jim Schmidt called this hunt a success. Really? We don't even know how many bears we have in Florida. Seriously, the state was in the middle of a bear "census" count when they launched this hunt. The census data was supposed to be ready in 2016. The last statewide bear census was in 2002. During the unsuccessful hearing to halt the hunt, Speak Up Wekiva's attorneys asked bear biologist Thomas Eason what was wrong with waiting until 2016 to hunt bear, when the numbers are in. Eason said, "nothing's wrong with it." "Why's the hunt going on now, then?" asked the attorney. "The commission wanted it," Eason said.


Success my ass, Mr. Schmidt. This hunt was successful only in three things: (1) it was successfully unscientific in that it makes all that census work inaccurate; (2) it was successfully grossly inhumane--I saw those bear bodies, and there were lactating females supporting cubs that were killed, against the FWC's own rules; and (3) it was successfully a huge waste of taxpayer dollars, in that it made the census information inaccurate and it cost who knows how many millions of dollars in overtime for wildlife officers, who were on duty in multitudes this last weekend.


In the meantime, at least 300 bears were killed in the hunt (Speak Up Wekiva's bear monitors reported higher numbers). That's in addition to the 83 bears killed this year through October 1 as nuisance animals. By the way, a nuisance bear is one that comes in your neighborhood and eats your unsecured trash. Death to them! And we don't have reported figures on how many black bears were killed on the highways in 2015, but in 2014 that was about 200.


So guessing (because, again, we don't have a census so no one really knows), that we had 3000 bears in Florida on Friday before the hunt began, subtract 300 killed in the hunt, 82 killed for being "nuisances," and 200 killed on the highways: 582 bears dead this year. That leaves 2418 black bears in Florida--a unique subspecies of black bear, Ursus americanus floridanus, that lives only in Florida and on the southern fringes of adjacent states. As recently as 1994, there were only 500 of these animals left in the world. Is that the management goal of this wildlife commission?




yikes
:merchant: Killings the sows with cubs. what did they expect tho. I won't say all but the majority of Floridians that would kill a bear for "population reasons" would probably kill a human if it were legal.
 

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:merchant: Killings the sows with cubs. what did they expect tho. I won't say all but the majority of Floridians that would kill a bear for "population reasons" would probably kill a human if it were legal.

Just awful. Unfortunately you're more than likely spot on.
 

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Pretty sad that killing off mother nature is normal. :mjcry:
 

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The problem with this whole thing is they are hunting bears that are in the woods.

They need to kill these damn bears in the neighborhoods. They are gonna kill a kid sooner or later it's bound to happen . They already have killed a few dogs .

They have became pretty common where I live and some areas a nuisance around here.
 
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