On sharing space with grizzly bears…

“If the human race is to survive, then we must respect the rights of other species to survive. Sharing bedroom space with a grizzly bear is not practical but sharing wilderness space is. We must therefore, restrict human activity in spaces where threatened or endangered species live. We must stay out of their bedroom. Set aside some wild spaces while they yet exist. Closing the wild spaces after all of the wild things are gone will not work.”

~Bob McMeans, member, Virginia outdoors Writers Association.

2012 Lion Trap Injuries and Abnormalities

Remarks

Abnormalities

UNR Study Lion – Had been trapped subsequently, lost two front toes and then starved to death. TWO TOES MISSING ON RIGHT FRONT FOOT – LIKELY TRAP ACCIDENT
FEMALE HUNTED SUCCESSFULLY FOR SOME TIME WITH BROKEN RIGHT FRONT LEG. BROKEN RIGHT FRONT LEG HAD HEALED BUT RESULTED IN TWISTED/”CLUBISH” FOOT
CAUGHT IN COYOTE LEGHOLD TRAP – TOO FAR GONE TO RELEASE NONE
Incidental capture in bobcat snare NONE
COLLARED Female Lion UNR         Jesus Christ!! BAD FOOT
THREE-LEGGED CAT (LEFT FRONT MISSING BELOW KNEE) MISSING LEG
CAUGHT IN TRAP BY ACCIDENT – DEAD WHEN TRAPPED ARRIVED TRAP MARK ON LEFT FRONT FOOT, SCRAPES ON BOTH FRONT LEGS, RT CANINE BROKEN
CAUGHT IN TRAP BY ACCIDENT –  BIOLOGIST TRANQUILIZED LION. LION HAD TO BE EUTHANIZED DUE TO SEVERE INJURIES TO FRONT LEFT FOOT. FRESH TRAP INJURY
LEFT FRONT FOOT MISSING TOES – RECENT INJURY, TEETH HEAVILY WORN
NO SCARS, FOOT PREVIOUSLY IN TRAP
RM BIGHORN PROTECTION TOP RIGHT AND BOTTOM RIGHT CANINES BROKEN
“GOOD FAT ALONG THE HIDE”       ^5? OTHER – MISSING TWO TOES LEFT REAR; FORK IN RIGHT EAR
SCRATCHES ON BACK, MISSING 2 FRONT TOES ON RIGHT FOOT
TRAIL CAMERAS IN JUMPUP AND JUMBO, MANY PHOTOS MISSING TOES ON RIGHT FOOT
2 TOES MISSING ON RIGHT FRONT FOOT
SHOT AND KILLED WHILE DEER HUNTING MISSING 3 TOES ON RIGHT FRONT FOOT – OLD TRAPPING SCARS
FRONT RIGHT FOOT IN TRAP RECENTLY
MISSING LOWER RIGHT INCISOR, MISSING PREMOLAR ON LEFT SIDE
MISSING 3 TOES ON FRONT RIGHT FOOT – WAS IN TRAP ONLY WEEKS AGO
ONE CAININE TOOTH MISSING
BROKEN CLAW RIGHT FRONT
LEFT FRONT LEG, FOOT AND PAW INJURED, TOES MISSING AND LEG DEFORMED
MISSING TWO PADS ON FRONT RIGHT PAW
FULLY MUSCLED; RIBS NOT PROTRUDING; HIPS WELL MUSCLUED Missing toe -LEFT FRONT
TRAP ON REAR FOOT. DAMAGED FRONT JOINT OF RIGHT PAW
LION HAD FLEAS MISSING 2 TOES ON RIGHT FRONT FOOT – OLD INJURY
MISSING ABOUT 1″ OFF EACH EAR, MISSING 2 TOES OFF RIGHT FRONT FOOT (PERHAPS CAUGHT IN TRAP AND FROST BITTEN BEFORE GETTING AWAY?)
SMALL CUTS IN BOTH EARS, SMALL SCAR ON NOSE, RIGHT REAR PAW HAS ABNORMALITIES IN 2 TOES.
BROKEN CANINE
RIGHT FRONT FOOT INJURED – APPARENTLY OLD TRAP INJURY – TEETH CHIPPED
LION CAME IN WHILE CALLING COYOTES 2 TOES MISSING FROM LEFT REAR FOOT – FRESH, BUT WELL CLEANED AND BONE TIPS EXPOSED.
BLOODY LEFT FRONT (LEG?)
CAUGHT IN TRAP BY ACCIDENT – DEAD WHEN TRAPPED ARRIVED TRAP MARK ON LEFT FRONT FOOT, SCRAPES ON BOTH FRONT LEGS, RT CANINE BROKEN
REAR LEFT PAW MISSING TWO TOES
HALF TAIL, TRAP INJRUY – MISSING 2 TOES, FROSTBITTEN SHORT EARS
BROKEN TOP CANINE, FRONT RIGHT TORN PAD
DOGS NOT USED – LION WAS LAYING WITHIN 75 YARDS OF SHEEP BAND / NUMEROUS FLEES AROUND HEAD AND NECK BROKEN CANINE
MISSING 2 TOES ON LEFT FRONT PAW AND MOST OF HIS TEETH
MISSING TOE FRONT LEFT PAW
HUNTED LION WHILE DEER HUNTING AND SCOUTING RIGHT FRONT TOE INJURY, CANINES BROKEN, LIKELY TRAP INJURY
UPPER RIGHT CANINE BROKEN

Pets killed by cruel wire snares in the name of sport

Cruel snares set to protect profitable grouse moors are trapping innocent domestic pets – the hidden victims of the hunting industry.

The indiscriminate traps are used by gamekeepers to stop predators from eating prized pheasant, partridge and grouse before they are released for hunting parties to shoot.

But the wire snares tighten around any animal that happens upon them – including badgers, deer, dogs and cats, which can be left vulnerable and writhing in agony for hours at a time.

As gamekeepers gear up for the “Glorious Twelfth” start of the red grouse shooting season on Tuesday, campaigners are urgently renewing calls for a ban on the barbaric traps.

League Against Cruel Sports chief Joe Duckworth said: “The cruelty associated with grouse shooting doesn’t stop there; badgers, foxes, deer and even our much-loved pets are killed or injured through the use of snaring to protect game stocks.”

Up to 60 per cent of animals caught in snares are not “target species”, meaning the snares were not set to catch them. Snares need only be checked once a day by law, so trapped animals are left for up to 24 hours until they are released or put out of their misery by gamekeepers….. See entire article here.

The Pittman-Robertson & Dingell-Johnston Acts: from where does the money come?

Many state wildlife agencies including the Nevada Dept. of Wildlife get a majority of their funding from federal tax transfers and grants. Most of that money comes from two federal excise tax programs commonly known as the Pittman-Robertson Act (PRA) and the Dingell-Johnston Act (DJA). Sportsmen and wildlife agencies, including our very own NDoW, often claim that this money is principally hunter-generated. As it turns out, that’s demonstrably untrue.

In 2013 the PRA generated 59% of the combined excise tax revenue and the DJA 41%. Here’s the breakdown of revenue (as percentages) by category of activity, according to ATF and USDFW figures:

  • 28% from motorboat & small engine fuel
  • 22% from rifles & shotguns
  • 18% from pistols and revolvers
  • 18% from ammunition
  • 7% from import duties on boats & interest on trust fund deposits
  • 7% from fishing equipment, tackle, trolling motors & archery equipment

Trapping Myth No. 8: Man is a predator

Many trappers take pride in outfoxing the foxes, outwitting the coyotes, and will tell you predatory humans are just part of the natural order.   But there’s nothing natural about steel leg-hold traps or letting an animal suffer for days or weeks while the trapper watches TV in his heated home.  Most importantly, man is what he chooses to be. Man can choose to be humane.

Pet cat maimed in bear trap

Over the weekend came a horrific vision: Scruffy, a cat from Royal Oaks, California, was found valiantly hobbling along his owners’ driveway with a bear trap ensnared on his leg. The tabby has miraculously survived but might require a paw amputation.

After seeing Scruffy caught in the trap, his owners, Stephanie and Larry Waldrip, rushed him to the East Lake Animal Clinic in nearby Watsonville. The head vet David Carroll and a nurse spent more than an hour freeing Scruffy from the trap. It is estimated that if a human stepped onto the bear trap, she could have easily broken an ankle.

Scruffy’s owners are said to suspect a nearby resident of having laid down the bear trap but they have refrained from going on record about it. They first came across Scruffy a year ago when they noticed him lounging in their driveway and have since become the cat’s owners or at least feeding masters.

At the moment, the local SCPA is investigating the sickening matter and trying to ascertain who laid down the trap that has mauled the poor cat. You can watch more about Scruffy’s plight in the video below.

Click here for full story.

Wildlife Funding & Entitlements

Continuing with our educational snippets, two entities that in my eyes are good candidates for elimination as unnecessary in this day and age are the Nevada Board of Wildlife Commissioners and the County Advisory Boards to Manage Wildlife. They are a product of decades ago….an unfortunate historical “accident”…when lawmakers thought it would be a good idea to make wildllfe management a user-fee based system, thereby eliminating the need to provide general fund tax dollars to fish and game agencies. While that idea may have had merit, given the tenor and nature of the times, it is now, in my view, more trouble that it is worth. Sportsmen….and their hunting license purchases…are in the decline over past decades. Funding for fish and game agencies comes increasingly from other sources (at least here in Nevada). Sportsmen license and tag sales provide…maybe..30% or so of the annual budget of the Nevada Department of Wildlife. We’ll discuss other sources of funding later.

The problem this system has produced is a sense of “entitlement” among some sportsmen who overlook the fact that wildlife is a public asset (see NRS 501.100) and appear to favor the view that they “pay” for wildlife. Therefore they are “entitled” to be in charge…as they are with 5 of the 9 seats on the wildlife commission designated for them, 2 more for a rancher and farmer who are mostly indistinguishable from sportsmen at least as to their votes on issues of concern to us. That leaves 1 seat for a member of the General Public which, until a couple of years ago, had always been filled by a sportsman or sympathizer, and a “conservationist”. Not very “democratic” and in violation of one of the sacred “Sisters” of the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation which sportsmen like to tout.

2013 Lion Trap Injuries and Abnormalities

ID

Remarks

Abnormalities

11 White Ear Tag #41- Animal 1st seen as yearling on 9 November 2011 in Fox Range, 44 miles south (4473624n, 2274260e).  It  was accidentally trapped in bobcat set, tagged and released by Mike McCusker (1400).  Weighed 60 lbs & was w/ 1 ad f and 2 yearlings 2 middle toes missing on left front paw – old trap injury – small split in right ear.  Very fat despite injuries.
12 Caught by accident in coyote snare with sibling.
13 Caught by accident in coyote snare with sibling.
31 White Ear Tag #43- Animal 1st seen as 2 yr old on 7 Dec 2011 in Grass Valley (Unit 013) (44555400n, 288000e).  It  was accidentally trapped in bobcat set, tagged and released by Mike McCusker (1400)(Wgt 90 lbs & in good body condition). Killed 10 km SW. Just ear tag
1 Front right trap mark- McKusker released two lions from traps in the general vicinity 10 days prior.
7 Scar on left front paw
9 Animal killed chickens in back yard and was shot in a cage. Right top C1 cainine was broken and left back leg was broken (possibly from gun shot wound).
38 2 broken canines