Sunday 29 September 2013

Canadian folk singer killed by coyotes, park official says

Up-and-coming Canadian folk singer Taylor Mitchell was killed by coyotes, park officials say.
October 30, 2009

(CNN) -- A rising Canadian folk singer was killed by coyotes this week in a national park in Nova Scotia, a park spokesman said Thursday.
Taylor Mitchell, 19, was at the beginning of the Skyline Trail in Cape Breton Highlands National Park on Tuesday afternoon when she was attacked, according to Chip Bird, the Parks Canada field unit superintendent for Cape Breton.
Bird said hikers saw the coyotes attacking Mitchell and called 911. She was airlifted to a hospital in Halifax, where she died about 12 hours later, he said.
Mitchell was recently nominated for Young Performer of the Year honors by Canadian Folk Music Awards. She was touring the Maritime provinces and had a break between gigs to go hiking Tuesday, her manager, Lisa Weitz, said in an e-mail.
"She loved the woods and had a deep affinity for their beauty and serenity," she wrote.

Map: Cape Breton Highlands National Park

"Words can't begin to express the sadness and tragedy of losing such a sweet, compassionate, vibrant, and phenomenally talented young woman," Weitz said.
"Her warmth, loving nature, astounding artistry, and infectious enthusiasm will be so missed and forever remembered."
Read more about who Taylor Mitchell was
Mitchell, who was originally from the Georgian Bay area in Ontario, lived in Toronto, Weitz said.
Bird said the area where the attack occurred is popular and well traveled. It remained closed, and park authorities had shot one coyote believed to be involved. A pathologist will test the animal's body for diseases that might have triggered the attack, he said.
Searches for other aggressive animals in the park continue, he said.
"Public safety is our primary concern," he said.
He said no other coyote attacks had ever occurred in the park. "We've had coyotes approach people too closely," he said, and about six years ago one nipped a person.
That animal was killed because of "lack of fear," he said.
But Tuesday's attack is "unprecedented and a totally isolated incident," he said.
In a written statement, Emily Mitchell described her daughter as "a seasoned naturalist and well versed in wilderness camping. She loved the woods and had a deep affinity for their beauty and serenity. Tragically it was her time to be taken from us so soon.
"We take a calculated risk when spending time in nature's fold -- it's the wildlife's terrain," Emily Mitchell's statement continued. "When the decision had been made to kill the pack of coyotes, I clearly heard Taylor's voice say, 'please don't, this is their space.' She wouldn't have wanted their demise, especially as a result of her own. She was passionate about animals, was an environmentalist, and was also planning to volunteer at the Toronto Wildlife Centre in the coming months."
Michael Johnston, Mitchell's producer for her debut album, "For Your Consideration," said the singer was a "brilliant and beautiful light that people were naturally drawn to."
"She was so young and talented. Her big dreams were a perfect match with her big, kind heart."
He said he and his family would soon be organizing a celebration of her life.
Coyote attacks on humans are extremely rare, said Michael O'Brien, wildlife manager of furbearers and upland game for Nova Scotia.
It is "not expected or normal behavior," he said, although he said there had been aggressive incidents in Nova Scotia before, but no deaths.
Illness, injury and familiarity with humans can affect an animal's behavior, he said.

http://edition.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/Music/10/29/canada.singer.killed/

Friday 27 September 2013

Hog Wars: Trappers canvas East End Park to capture herds of hogs

Hog Wars: Trappers canvas East End Park to capture herds of hogs
Roped off with caution tape and several large white signs placed at
entrances into East End park, the Kingwood Service Association
closed the park after several residents expressed concern the
feral hogs were sleeping in the park during the day.


By JENNIFER SUMMER
Houston Community Newspapers
                                    
Residents hoping for a run or walk through East End Park were surprised to find the park closed Wednesday, Sept. 18 through Friday Sept. 20 as trappers canvassed the park in hopes of capturing some of the herds of feral hogs. Roped off with caution tape and several large white signs placed at entrances into the park, the Kingwood Service Association closed the park after several residents expressed concern the feral hogs were sleeping in the park during the day. Numerous Kings Point subdivision residents’ yards have been torn up by the hogs causing hundreds of dollars of damage and they have expressed their concerns to public safety especially for students walking to and from school on the green belts.
The Observers’ phone calls to Ethel McCormick with KSA were not returned concerning the closure of the park.
At the KSA Sept. 11 Public Safety meeting, McCormick stated that they have officially allowed a hog trapper, Geraldo Garcia, to trap the wild hogs with his dogs at no cost in East End Park where they believe some of the hogs are coming from.
Kings Point resident Joe Baehl has communicated back and forth with KSA about the feral hog problem especially after they have torn his yard and many other neighbors’ yards up during the nighttime hours.
“Time is of the essence, as feral hogs reproduce at a rapid rate, reportedly, their population doubles every 4 months; which exacerbates the problem as the damage they cause increases, along with the risk of their attacking someone in East End Park, on a greenbelt,” Baehl said in an email.
While many of the residents were able to express their concerns at the KSA Public Safety meeting, several others asked questions about what they can do to rid their community of this problem at the KSA Positive Interaction Program meeting Sept. 17.
According to the new Houston Police Department Kingwood Division Captain Mark May, it is illegal for any resident to discharge a deadly weapon within the City of Houston limits which includes all firearms and even bows like ones used for bow hunting.
“HPD cannot do anything in regards to the feral hog problem unless they are an immediate danger or attacking a person,” May said at the meeting.
Calls to both Garcia and another trapper used by several Kingwood residents by the name of Allstar Animal Removal did not return calls to the Observer.
The Observers will continue to follow up with any information about developments with the feral hog issue.

Strawberry flavouring key ingredient in dog cull plan



Feral dogs continue to be a problem in the Northern Rivers.
Feral dogs continue to be a problem in the Northern Rivers. Contributed
A MOUTHFUL of strawberry flavouring might seem harmless, but it could lead to the culling of feral dogs and foxes in coming years.
Along the Tweed Coast Canid Pest Ejectors, or M-44 devices, are being trialled to gauge their effectiveness on the pest animals.
The ejectors are spring-operated devices that propel the contents of a capsule into the mouth of a feral dog or fox after the animals are attracted by bait.
"When the animal pulls the bait, the spring ejector releases and propels the contents of a capsule into the animal's mouth," Tweed Council's pest management program leader Pamela Gray said.
Canid Pest Ejectors (or M-44 devices) ready to be assembled.
Canid Pest Ejectors (or M-44 devices) ready to be assembled. Contributed
  "Although it sounds dramatic, the process causes no pain to the animal and the essence or dye emitted from the device will not cause any harm.
"The devices will contain a strawberry essence in the initial phase, then a red dye will be used later on to determine if any animals have been marked by the devices."
Phase 1 of the trial using the essence will run until January 2014, while Phase 2, using a safe red dye, will begin January 2014 and run until December 2015.
"If the trial proves successful - that is, the device is only activated by feral dogs and foxes - the CPEs can then be rolled out using poisonous baits," Ms Gray said.
The test ejectors are only located where domestic dogs are prohibited and research shows animals other than feral dogs and foxes will not be harmed, due to the jaw strength required to pull upwards and set off the propellant.
Council asks Tweed residents to avoid the devices and to keep their dogs out of bushland, but to notify them on 02 6670 2400 if a pet does set off an ejector, so the device can be checked and re-activated.
The United States have been using ejectors since 1930s, mainly in locations on the fringe of urban areas where trapping, fencing, shooting and baiting are not viable.
Cameras will be used to record animals activating the ejectors.

Sunday 22 September 2013

REVIEW: Sodbuster won't let you down

The Sodbuster trapping tool available from F&T Fur Harvesters.
By Ned Makim
Hands-On Hunting

Finding good gear to help get your traps in the ground can be a hit and miss affair. Things bend, they break or they just don't work.
I am happy to experiment but I hate things that fail when you need them.
I am also happy to tell you all, the Sodbuster digging tool and hammer won't.
It won't bend, it won't break and it will definitely work.
A lot of my trapping is in trap rock country and the digging is ever easy. It's not that the ground is particularly hard but it is always full of rocks of all sizes.
I previously used an old rabbit trap setter which could be made to work among the rocks but it was a little light for the heavy work including driving my home made pegs deep enough and through enough rock to hold a fox, let alone an annoyed dog.
Of course, you can always carry another, heavier hammer but that just adds to the load and gives you something else to leave behind if you in a hurry and careless.
Enter the Sodbuster.
This thing I awesome. At 1.8kgs (or 4lbs) it is a heavy tool and might not suit everyone. It definitely suits me, however. I like things with a bit of heft about them and the Sodbuster fits that bill perfectly.
It marries a heavy hammer and a piece of thick plate steel with a bevelled leading edge to give you the balance and weight to either dig a decent set hole or drive in pegs properly.
If you trap in sandy or light country the Sodbuster might seem like a bit of overkill but on the rougher blocks it is the go-to tool to get the job one with the minimum of fuss or delay.
In my experience it will lever out rocks or crack them to give you access to a decent set hole, especially if you bang your pegs into the cone directly under your trap to minimise site disturbance.
The handle is padded to reduce transmitted shock when you hit those rocks by the way...
I found my Sodbuster on-line at F&T Fur Harvester's Trading Post. They are only $20 US which makes them less than $25 Aus plus shipping. Check out the site and add a few other bits and pieces and the average freight price per unit comes down.
While I'm at it, I'd like to add that F&T offer incredible service. I've dealt with them a few times and the service has been faultless. They are a trustworthy and well respected organisation and have been available to me for plenty of communication if I needed to know what was happening or when.
I am by no means a significant customer in volume terms but I've always felt like I might be their best customer, if you know what I mean.
Highly recommend the Sodbuster and F&T.
Link to the on-line store is below.

http://www.fntpost.com/?gclid=CJ-IwenI3rkCFUpZpQodBgcAYg

Saturday 21 September 2013

Hog Wars: Texans search for more answers to feral hog problem

In this photo sent by Kings Point resident Joe Baehl, it shows nine hogs that Geraldo Garcia, a contracted trapper through KSA, caught over a three-day period in late August.

By JENNIFER SUMMER
Houston Community Newspapers
September 17, 2013

More than 30 Kings Point subdivision residents held pictures of the damage to their yards made by wild hogs as they requested more help at the Kingwood Service Association’s Public Safety meeting. Residents first shared their concerns with the Observer in August about the feral hogs tearing up their yards and posing a possible threat to residents walking along the greenbelts or putting their trash out. After contacting about every Harris County and City of Houston entity about how they could rid their neighborhood of the wild hogs to no avail, they brought their issue to the Public Safety’s meeting Sept. 11 where they were able to get some answers.
“We haven’t been able to get an update all together but it is a very wide area that the pigs are traversing. We need to get rid of this problem before something bad happens,” concerned resident Edward Futterer said at the meeting.
Ethel McCormick of KSA stated that they have officially allowed a hog trapper, Geraldo Garcia, to trap the wild hogs with his dogs at no cost in East End Park where they believe some of the hogs are coming from.
But residents also encouraged them to all work together as a unified whole to send an official letter to the Friendswood Development urging them to get rid of the hogs they allege are coming from where they are developing the new neighborhood in between the Kings Point and Royal Shores subdivisions.
More than 30 Kings Point subdivision residents held pictures of the damage to their yards made by wild hogs as they requested more help at the Kingwood Service Association’s Public Safety meeting. Residents first shared their concerns with the Observer in August about the feral hogs tearing up their yards and posing as a possible threat to residents walking along the greenbelts or putting their trash out.
Royal Shores Community Association President Fred McCarty stepped up to work with the residents as a group to draft a letter to Friendswood to address this issue. The KSA Public Safety committee made a motion to draft the Friendswood Development Company in an effort to solve the problem.
All of the residents applauded this effort by adding that an entity or a group needs to step up, take responsibility for the issue and see it through to the completion which means complete removal of all hogs.
“We have talked to everyone that we can and no one can help us,” said Kings Point resident Nancy Schopman in an interview with the Observer in August. “They have been on my property numerous times and they tore up my whole yard. I have seen them mostly in the early morning hours which have me very concerned since kids will be back in school and walking the greenbelts to make it to the school.”
The residents first reached out to the Kings Point Community Association and were referred to their management company, Sterling Association Management who acknowledged they had received several calls but could not comment any further when the Observer called them for comment.
They also called the City of Houston to inquire about trapping the feral hogs or what they could do to get rid of the nuisance animals. In general, diseases from wild hogs do not pose a significant threat to humans; however, some diseases can be transmitted to livestock and wildlife.
“We understand there have been several cases recently of these animals being destructive in the Kingwood area,” said Lauren Doak with Houston City Council Member Dave Martin’s office when asked about the feral hogs. “Unfortunately, the city of Houston does not handle this sort of issue. This is a Texas Parks and Wildlife issue.”
According to information concerning feral hogs from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, feral hogs may appear basically the same as domestic hogs and will vary in color and coat pattern. A mature feral hog may reach a shoulder height of 36 inches and weigh from 100 to over 400 pounds.
Several of the residents have spent their own money to hire trappers where they have successfully trapped at least five of the feral hogs and one reportedly weighed in close to 200 pounds.
Resident Doug Henry is one of those residents who hired their own trapper through Allstar Animal Control where they captured an 172 pound male feral pig.
Fellow resident Futterer echoed everyone’s concerns by adding, “I didn’t expect to become an expert on pigs but I have studied and analyzed them to see where they come from and history about them. I suggest beyond simply trying to hunt the pigs, a trapping mechanism is necessary too.”
For more information about feral hogs, visit http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/huntwild/wild/nuisance/feral_hogs/.

http://www.yourhoustonnews.com/kingwood/news/hog-wars-residents-search-for-more-answers-to-feral-hog/article_34692032-33c0-5d24-82fa-0b94097e68f5.html?mode=story

Big cat search on again

Alicia Wood Political Reporter
The Daily Telegraph
September 20, 2013       
The mythical Penrith Panther / Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied
 THE black cat is back - the state government is again investigating sightings of the elusive Penrith panther. The Daily Telegraph can reveal the Department of Primary Industries is holding an independent inquiry into "large free-ranging cats", following representations by Hawkesbury MP Ray Williams, the parliamentary secretary for Western Sydney.
Mr Williams, who was cynical about the big cat's existence, confirmed he saw it one night while driving with his wife.                          .

Rex Gilroy looks for evidance of the panther in Lithgow /
Picture: Stephen Cooper Source: News Limited
There have been more than 600 sightings of the fanged beast over the past two decades.
Under Former Premier Nathan Rees in 2008, a comprehensive inquiry into panther sightings found: "It seems more likely than not on available evidence that such animals do exist in NSW."
Mr Williams said he has heard of big cat sightings around his local area for 30 years, including landowners who have seen sheep and deer ripped apart.
''There is no animal in this country that does this type of thing,'' Mr Williams said.
''We don't want people to go and hunt them down, what we want is some signage in remote areas to remind parents to keep an eye on their kids.''
A plaster cast of paw print collected in 1999 /
Picture: Stephen Cooper Source: News Limited
Mr Williams came face to face with the cat in 2009, when he and his wife Wendy were driving home from a Rural Fire Service ball at the Colo River.
''We turned a corner and there was a big black cat with a long tail that disappeared through a fence,'' he said.
Cryptozoologist Rex Gilroy said there was significant evidence of a "marsupial cat" population in NSW, and it is about time it was classified.
The Penrith Panther / Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied
"We need to identify the creature, and know its habits. There are populations of this marsupial species all over Australia. The government should pay for an investigation,'' Mr Gilroy said.
A Department of Primary Industries spokesman said the independent investigation would report back by the end of the year.
Panther expert Rex Gilroy looks for evidence /
Picture: Stephen Cooper Source: News Limited       
''An independent desktop evaluation of evidence is underway including identification of large cat species,'' the spokesman said.
``This involves looking at past evidence to assess the likelihood of the presence of large free-ranging cats.
''A departmental policy document released in March advised staff of what to do when the public reports "large feline sightings".
Staff are told to call the police "where the public are concerned for their safety," or to advise the appropriate land manager for further investigation.
Attacks on livestock are to be referred to the Livestock Health and Pest Authority for investigation.
The description of "large felines" in the policy document includes lions, tigers, leopards, pumas and cougars.
Staff are advised they could also be referred to as "alien big cats", "phantom cats" or the Blue Mountains, Emmaville, Lithgow or Richmond Panther. -

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/it8217s-official-the-phantom-big-black-cat-is-back/story-e6frg6n6-1226723149436

Friday 20 September 2013

ABC's Catalyst looks at conservation hunting



 
CONSERVATION HUNTING
Thursday, September 19th, 2013
Catalyst

Download segment http://mpegmedia.abc.net.au/tv/catalyst/catalyst_s14_ep21_conservationhunting.mp4

Transcript

NARRATION
Today, I'm going on a deer hunt. That's a sentence I never thought I'd hear myself say.

Colin Brumley
This is Anja. Steve.

Anya Taylor
Hello. How are you? Nice to meet you.

NARRATION
Killing animals is far from what I would consider a great way to pass the time. But as a regular meat-eater, I have to admit, I'm still a hunter of sorts. The difference is people like Colin take responsibility for the kill.

Steve
Scouty, wanna get a deer? Yeah.

Colin Brumley
It's a prey animals and I'm the predator. We don't just shoot them for fun. We want to eat them and we also respect them and we won't waste it. Alright, we're gonna drop off here, Steve.

Steve
Drop into there, you'll see a nice little wild cherry about there.

Colin Brumley
Yep.

Steve
Drop into there and then slowly pick your way down the gut there, then around to the right.

Colin Brumley
OK. Alright.

Steve
Good one.

Colin Brumley
Yep. Good hunt, mate. Cheers.

NARRATION
But many hunters also genuinely believe they provide an important service to the environment by controlling the numbers of feral animals.

Robert Brown
Evidence is there in terms of the numbers of animals that are being killed, the low cost to the taxpayer of those animals being killed. Conservation hunters are in there every day, every week, every month, every year, year after year.

NARRATION
Is this claim backed by science? Feral animals like foxes, cats and rats have been responsible for most of Australia's native mammal extinctions. Reducing their numbers is one of our greatest conservation challenges.

Dr Euan Ritchie
We've lost about 27 mammal species, which is by far the worst record in the past few hundred years anywhere in the world. We have a whole range of other species that are threatened with extinction as well.

NARRATION
More recently, hard-hooved animals started their assault on wildlife habitats. The most elusive and underestimated of these are deer. Their numbers have exploded in recent decades, and now they're getting a lot of bad press.

Roger Bilney
It's an animal that can browse up to six-foot high and it can also graze and it's taking everything.

NARRATION
It's sambar deer that are the largest and most destructive. The day before the hunt, Roger Bilney took me through East Gippsland Forest to point out why he believes they're one of our worst emerging feral pests. He published one of the first papers on their impacts in 2005.

Roger Bilney
This is Hazel Pomaderris. That foliage up there should be all the way through, but it's been heavily browsed. Even break down the main stems to get access to it.

Anya Taylor
So all this would have been a thicket.

Roger Bilney
Yes, an absolute thicket. See all these stalks. You shouldn't see the stalks. That should be all leaf.

NARRATION
Deer are selective, but not just for species that taste good. These yellowwood trees have been antler-rubbed to near death, apparently due to their lovely citrusy smell.

Roger Bilney
70 or 80% of these are in some state of mortality. They will soon die.

Anya Taylor
Does that mean you could actually lose this species from the rainforest?

Roger Bilney
Yes. There's only one threatening process of this plant, and that is the sambar deer.

NARRATION
Younger trees that normally grow to fill gaps in the canopy are overbrowsed and broken, leading to changes in moisture and light levels on the forest floor.

Roger Bilney
Well, the rainforest is a fire break. It's a natural fire break. And as it breaks up and we get other species and grasses moving into there, fire will travel through a lot more.

Anya Taylor
This is a classic example of what deer can do to a tree that they find tasty. This foliage would normally be all the way down to the ground, but the deer have browsed it up to here, which is as far as they can reach.

NARRATION
Studies on deer impacts from the US and New Zealand suggest forest understoreys can change dramatically and may never return to normal. Despite their impacts, in the south-eastern states where they're most common, deer are not listed as a pest species, but rather as a protected game species, and that's a major bone of contention.

Roger Bilney
To list them as a protected species is wrong.

Dr Andrew Cox
The hunting regimes that the government sponsor deliberately avoid the mechanisms that would be most effective, such as spotlighting and shooting at night and aerial culling of deer.

Colin Brumley
I believe aerial shooting for sambar deer won't work because of the nature of the deer. They're not a herd animal. They won't run, they tend to hide. Just check out this rub here. Um, this shows me that the deer has been here not so long ago.

NARRATION
Defence of deer as a game species is intense, and during my morning with Colin, I understand why - deer hunting is much more than a sport, it's a way of life.

Colin Brumley
Did you notice the change in the wind just now? It's coming from behind us now, which is really bad.

Anya Taylor
Oh.

Colin Brumley
If you hunt sambar in this country, you have to be observant. I think hunting is a very grounding experience. It's directly relating to nature and you getting back to basics and it's not some make-believe thing that happens on a computer screen.

NARRATION
The Shooters and Fishers Party say that by preserving and protecting the culture of hunting, conservation will also benefit.

Anya Taylor
Can you tell me the idea behind conservation hunting?

Robert Brown
You can call it conservation hunting in the context of Australia where you hunt feral animals almost as a contingent benefit of hunting animals that you want to hunt.

NARRATION
The term 'conservation hunting' was used by the recently abolished New South Wales Game Council to promote recreational hunting as a form of pest control.

Robert Brown
In those State forests since 2006, I think they've decked around an average of about 20,000 animals a year.

NARRATION
But the science on the reproduction rates of pest species suggests it's not as simple as a body count.

Dr Euan Ritchie
A lot of our invasive species can actually increase their populations very quickly, so a fox population, as an example, can increase by nearly 100% per year, and so to actually reduce that population to a point where you can actually remove it completely or at least reduce it to a large degree. You have to kill about 70% of that population every year, which is a huge effort.

Dr Andrew Cox
Probably the best study that's been done on this was a study in Victoria when the introduced a bounty system on foxes, and the best that they could do is 4% of the population, and that effort wasn't directed at the right places, so what point is that? It's like swatting flies and thinking you're making a difference.

Robert Brown
160,000 dead foxes is 160,000 dead foxes there for everybody to see.

NARRATION
Contrary to claims of reducing the populations of feral animals, there is evidence that in some cases, hunting helps them spread. At Murdoch University, Dr Peter Spencer has been studying the DNA profile of various feral pig populations, which are a favourite target for WA shooters. Wild pigs from different regions were found to have distinctly different genetics.

Dr Peter Spencer
The other thing that we found, which was an absolute surprise, was that there were genetic signatures of some pigs that we found in some populations that were very, very characteristic for pigs that we would expect to find in another very different population. But where we found this happening was between an area of about... there's about 400km of open country where pigs just simply don't exist, so they're not moving across that landscape, so that the only explanation was that they really must be actively being moved into these new populations.

NARRATION
A survey in 2000 found that more than half of all deer herds had been established due to illegal translocations. Deer were observed in no less than 30 new locations between 2002 and 2004.

Robert Brown
You know, there are criminals in every walk of life. It is illegal to transport feral animals. In fact, the fines are up to, I think, $55,000 per offence. The scientists that have given you that information, what's their answer? Let's have a look at species extinction in this country over the last 10 or 15 years. Let's have a look at the impact on agriculture of feral animals over the last 10 or 15 years. Have their methods been effective? No.

NARRATION
Although it sounds like they're at loggerheads, there is evidence that scientists and hunters working together can achieve feral animal control.

Dr Andrew Cox
I think we're not opposed to hunting per se. We're all about effective feral animal control. Volunteer shooting by skilled hunters in a targeted way through a coordinated program can be an effective component of a feral animal control program.

NARRATION
Goat culls in Victoria are just one example where a united effort has brought down a pest species dramatically and reduced impacts on the environment.

Colin Brumley
If there's deer that are a problem in an area, we would certainly be available to deal with that. We've got people who are trained and accredited that can hunt the deer safely and ethically and remove the deer from the area, or certainly reduce the numbers.

Dr Euan Ritchie
Yeah, I think most scientists and ecologists would agree that if there was a strategic plan to actually go and shoot a population and bring its numbers down, then certainly professional hunters potentially could be quite beneficial in that sense, but I think letting recreational shooters go into areas and using that as a form of pest control is going to be largely ineffective.

NARRATION
Without a careful strategy, the well-intentioned random shooting of feral animals can actually have harmful consequences.

Dr Euan Ritchie
As an example, if you kill foxes, cats will increase because foxes actually are very effective control method for cats, and so when you're managing species, you have to actually think of all the species in that system, and you actually have to manage them at the same time, and it's very difficult to do that as a hunter. It's very difficult to go in there and say, 'Let's shoot pigs, foxes, cats, all these species at the same time.'

NARRATION
Controversially, Dr Ritchie argues that in some areas, the best solution may be leaving animals like dingoes in the landscape.

Dr Euan Ritchie
If you actually have native predators in the landscape, they're actually essentially doing that service for you. They're doing it 24 hours a day, they're doing it seven days a week and they're doing it for free.

NARRATION
But where does that leave farmers who lose livestock to predators? One of the suggested solutions is guardian animals, which have been successfully used to protect both native populations and livestock.

Dr Euan Ritchie
Essentially they protect the flock, again, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, so the farmer can basically sleep at night knowing that their flock is protected. Maremma sheepdogs are very effective at protecting sheep against wild dogs. We've used alpacas as well against things like foxes, and they have a fantastic benefit in that they can actually protect the stock while also not having to go and shoot things like dingoes at the same time.

NARRATION
But dingoes and foxes don't prey on deer. How to control their growing populations is an argument that's likely to go on for some time.

Anya Taylor
Ooh. Somebody got something.

Colin Brumley
Yeah.

Steve
She was dead as soon as I pulled the trigger. She just rolled straight down.

Colin Brumley
A deer like this will last about two to three months of good eating. Our family will enjoy that. Man and hound, well done.

NARRATION
Among these men, there's no talk of any conservation service performed today. It's just hunting for its own sake.

http://www.abc.net.au/catalyst/stories/3852511.htm

Thursday 19 September 2013

Expert study maps wild boar's unexpected cross-border tour

ÄŒTK |
16 September 2013
Prague Daily Monitor      
       
 Prague, Sept 13 (CTK) - Czech scientists focusing on the wild boar population have mapped an unexpected cross-border trip one of the monitored boars made via Germany and Austria back to its home region in the Sumava mountains, south Bohemia, the Czech Agriculture University (CZU) has said.
Earlier this year, experts from the Prague-seated CZU equipped five wild boars with a plastic collar carrying a GPS navigation device that is expected to work for two to three years.
They want to map wild boars' behaviour and reaction to human activities, so that ways can be found to reduce the excessive wild boar population.
Wild boars usually do not stray from their home area of a few square kilometres. However, a male whom the researchers call Mirek, turned out to be a big traveller, the monitoring showed.
After receiving the GPS in March, Mirek stayed in his home Sumava region till July, but then he suddenly set out on a trip to Bavaria and further to Austria where he reached Neufelden, a town that is 58km away from Mirek's home as the crow flies.
"Mirek settled down near a local maize field and it seemed he will stay there forever, probably due to the big amount of feed that he never experienced in Sumava. However, after two weeks he set out on a journey again and, to our big surprise, he reappeared in his Sumava home area after four days," Milos Jezek, from the CZU team of experts, said.
He said the experts do not know what motivated Mirek's return.
The story of Mirek and his trip supervised by experts has even found its way to the Austrian media.
Unlike Mirek, the other wild boars with GPS did not abandon Sumava.
CZU experts similarly monitor the movement of other animal species, including stags, foxes and lynxes. People can see the reserach results on www.zver.agris.cz.

http://praguemonitor.com/2013/09/16/expert-study-maps-wild-boars-unexpected-cross-border-tour

Trapping tips 101...Part 4 Anchoring your traps


...with Ted Mitchell

An earth anchor attached to the trap chain and featuring
the extraction tool, a modified wrecking bar.
Now that we have our trap size sorted, and our trap and trap chains modified to our high standards, we must next look at ways of keeping that trap in the general area if it makes a successful catch on our intended target animal.
In general, the term ‘anchoring’ is where we’re at.
Anchoring the trap can be done in a few different ways. We can stake the trap to the spot, or we can use a ‘drag’ system, allowing the captured animal to move a certain distance, and even in a certain direction.
We can use steel reo bar stakes to anchor that trap to the ground, or we could use one of the ‘earth anchor’ systems available.
First we will look at the reo bar stakes. These are a simple piece of ½” or 12 mm reo bar cut to around 450-500mm in length.
One end is sharpened to a point to facilitate driving into the ground, and the other end has a large heavy duty washer or nut welded to it, leaving about a ½” of bar protruding above the nut/washer. This is to take the blows from your hammer when driving it into the ground. If the nut/washer is welded directly onto the end, then you are belting the welds, which in time will weaken and let go.
I would always recommend using two stakes for dingo/wild dog, and one for foxes. Dogs tend to jump and jack the stakes out of the ground if used singularly, where foxes tend to go round in circles.
They can be single staked in most soil types.
Next is the ‘earth anchor’. Google them. They can be a flattish piece of steel plate with a bit pressed out to accept the steel cable, or a cast bullet pointed anchor with a welded chain to be able to make the anchor retrievable.
They are a handy item, especially when trapping in sandy/soft soils, but are not indispensible.
They can be a pain to drive at times, particularly when you get half way in and hit rock. Better to use a ‘drag’ of some sort.

We will have a close look at drags next time.

Wednesday 18 September 2013

Dingoes persecuted by 1080, researcher says

Emma Field
September 18, 2013
The Weekly Times


RESEARCHER who claims dingoes are being persecuted by 1080 was part of a group awarded a prestigious science prize recently.
Five dingo researchers won the $10,000 Eureka prize for environmental research, sponsored by the NSW Government on September 3.

Their research found dingoes could improve biodiversity by controlling kangaroos and suppressing foxes and feral cats which protected threatened species and helped in the recovery of degraded lands.

The team led by University of Tasmania's Chris Johnson included University of New South Wales' Michael Letnic, Deakin University's Euan Ritchie, Arian Wallach of James Cook University and Adam O'Neill.

Dr Wallach is based at Evelyn Downs Station near Coober Pedy in South Australia and said dingos were not vermin but acted as a lynchpin in the environment.

"Dingoes are currently persecuted across Australia, mostly with the use of 1080 poison, with catastrophic consequences for biodiversity," Dr Wallach said.

"Dingoes now occupy the top predator role once filled by the Tasmanian tiger . . .   they have become a lynchpin of the ecosystem, important to the health of other animals and plants."

Dr Wallach also said the hybridisation of the dingo in areas like Victoria, was no reason to kill them off and she also disliked the use of the term 'wild dog'.

"Calling a dingo a wild dog is a euphemism, it makes it easier to kill them."
  
Two dingo advocate groups used the award to attack research body Invasive Animal CRC.

The National Dingo Preservation Recovery Program and the Dingo Care Network claimed Invasive Animal CRC shouldn't be involved in wild dog research as it's funded by "powerful pastoral industry stakeholders".

"No public money should be given over to the IACRC for dingo-related research," a joint statement from the two groups said.

The IACRC is jointly-funded by all three levels of government, universities and plus Australian Wool Innovation and Meat and Livestock Australia.

Invasive Animals CRC wild canid leader Peter Fleming said the agricultural groups had a right to fund the organisation because they were affected by feral pests. 

He praised the researchers for raising the profile of dingoes, but said it was correlative research rather than experiment-based so results could be less reliable.

"Correlation doesn't tell you what causes things," Dr Fleming said.

"So what they've done is good work to support the hypothesis, and from there they should test it with an experiment.

"The reason why I question some of the (Eureka-winning) research is in Armidale (NSW) they have been aerial baiting since 1965 . . . yet the dogs are still there.

"And they aren't doing a good job in supressing the cats and foxes."

And Dr Fleming questioned the narrow scope of the research, conducted mainly in outback rangeland areas.

"The one thing they haven't dealt with is the social (effect of dingoes) and economic impact, they have only looked at the ecological component and mainly for arid areas," Dr Fleming said.

He said IACRC had just started a holistic long-term wild dog research program dubbed the predators, prey, plants and people project at the University of New England in NSW. 

"We are going to look at it much more broadly (at the issue) to include community attitudes, and how they think about dingoes and wild dogs and its control, because this affects what people can do on the ground," he said.

http://www.weeklytimesnow.com.au/article/2013/09/18/583613_national-news.html

The Eagle Project: Film Clip 5

Every year a pair of Australian Wedgetail Eagles nest in the same tree on an Inverell district property. Hands-On Hunting has exclusive filming access to the nest site from a vantage point high on a ridge overlooking the nest and the eagles' hunting ground. Now Hands-On Hunting Magazine readers will share that exclusive access as each new piece of raw footage is uploaded...



 
Field notes
Sep 18 2013
The eaglet moves closer to independence as it's fledging improves. In this footage the young eagle gets up from a sleep and has a stretch, a preen and calls for its parents. Note the nest has been cleaned of all old bones and meat and refurbished with green leaves and branches.

Trapping tips 101...Part 3 Strengthening traps


...with Ted Mitchell

A cheap style of trap which has been mangled by a wild dog.
It has been dismantled for repair and modification.

Now getting back to the actual traps, I suppose we should spend some time talking trap strength. This can vary considerably, depending mostly on where they are manufactured.
Traps that are actually made in America are generally pretty good, with decent metal being used in their construction. Some traps are made in places like Korea, Taiwan and other Asian countries, and are made from inferior materials.
This of course compromises their strength. If the metal used in the manufacture of a trap is too soft, then there is a good chance that the trap will be destroyed by a hard fighting animal, resulting in failure of the trap and loss of the captured animal.
I have personally seen this happen. Bent base plates, bent and popped jaws, chewed and mangled pans and dogs.
Of course, these same traps can be successfully modified to add strength and make them much more user friendly. For the most part, however, I find that by the time you buy the extra bits and pieces, and spend the time to make those modifications, you may as well have just gone and spent the money on a decent trap in the first place.

Some of the modifications can be to weld the base plate at the crosspiece, weld the pan post, weld the pan and tower, bubble tip or fold up the jaw tips, file the till, tighten the dog eye, night latch the dog, add spring retainer,..the list goes on.

I have done all of these, and in fact find myself doing these types of mods quite often, as it is a relaxing way of spending an evening in the trap shed with a cigar and a Bundy rum. We all have our vices I suppose.

Wednesday 11 September 2013

Pennsylvania-Australia collaboration focuses on controlling wild hogs

Ted Alter with radio collar
Theodore Alter, professor of agricultural, environmental and regional economics,
 showed a radio collar that he suggests could be used to track feral hogs in
Pennsylvania to get a better handle on their population. Image: Penn State
Jeff Mulhollem
Penn State News
September 10, 2013

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -- According to the latest estimates, Australia has more wild hogs than human beings, perhaps more than 23 million. No one is certain how many wild hogs roam Pennsylvania -- mostly escapees from commercial hog-hunting preserves and their offspring.
But both commonwealths need to control and perhaps eliminate feral pigs, which are a highly destructive species, according to Theodore Alter, professor of agricultural, environmental and regional economics in Penn State's College of Agricultural Sciences.
Penn State is collaborating with Australia's University of New England and the Invasive Animals Cooperative Research Centre (IACRC) -- Australia's largest integrated invasive animal research program -- to face the problems presented by wild hogs and other invasive vertebrate species. The project is aimed at bringing new approaches and added support for rural communities wanting to better manage risks these creatures pose.
"In Australia, invasive animals are a high-priority issue that most rural residents are well-versed in and concerned about," Alter said. "They deal with a range of more than 50 species of invasive animals, such as feral cats, feral swine, wild dogs and rabbits, pest fish such as carp, and some birds."
In Pennsylvania, he noted, feral swine are an emerging threat, posing health risks to people and livestock. "But my sense is that this is not well known or well understood by the public."
Recently 13 Australians -- leaders in helping communities manage these and other natural resource issues -- participated in a three-week, intensive short course at Penn State. Their focus was on providing support to rural communities and local government officials who are struggling with invasive animals such as wild hogs.
In addition to Penn State experts, the group spoke with representatives from the Pennsylvania Game Commission, the state Department of Agriculture, the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau, the Pennsylvania Invasive Species Council, Cornell University and the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
"We wanted to compare hog control in Australia and the United States, particularly Pennsylvania and New York, and we wanted to get a sense of the institutional and public policy differences between the two," Alter said. "We were able to exchange ideas about how to work more effectively with landowners, citizens and the public in the context of these animal-control issues."
The course, part of a broader IACRC program titled "Facilitating Effective Community Action," also contrasted leadership and engagement strategies for dealing with invasive animals. It looked at using technology in the fight against wild hogs.
"For example, using radio-collar technology over time would help us get a sense of what control strategies might be most effective." Alter said. "In Australia, they are using that technology to better engage landowners and help them get a clearer sense of where these animals go and what impacts they have on landholders and native wildlife.
"Here in Pennsylvania, if we collared and tracked wild hogs in strategic locations, this might help communities to better understand the nature of the issues and the potential impact of these animals."
If that were done, Alter said, wildlife scientists in the College of Agricultural Sciences could work with the Game Commission and other state agencies to implement the technology and track wild hogs.
"And we certainly would be involved in the issues associated with engaging citizens, landowners and local officials to develop control strategies and manage hog populations," he said.
Wild hogs in Australia are the descendants of domestic pigs that explorers such as Captain Cook released as a living larder for future expeditions. Over the centuries since then, the animals have found the vast spaces Down Under to be hog heaven, with plentiful food, a balmy climate and no natural predators. Unlike in the United States, specific breeds, such as European wild boar, have not been introduced for hunting.
Now they are wreaking havoc on the Australian economy. In the tropical state of Queensland, wild hogs are causing millions of dollars of damage to crops and are threatening the survival of endangered rainforest animals. They also attack and eat some domestic livestock, such as young lambs.
Complicating their management, their meat cannot be eaten, due to worm infestation and disease. Controlling invasive animal populations in Australia is more of a community-based endeavor than in Pennsylvania, where the state takes major responsibility.
"The management of most invasive animals depends on the motivation, capacity and coordination of volunteer community groups, who are the backbone of rural sustainability," said professor Paul Martin, who is leading this community action research at the University of New England.
"But who will lead and support these groups? And what skills will these leaders need in an age of the Internet, an aging rural population and increasingly diverse rural land uses and communities? Those were the questions we attempted to answer during the short course at Penn State."
Roxane Blackley, who works with the nonprofit Queensland Murray Darling Basin Committee, said she found the short course to be "timely and invaluable -- a great opportunity to be immersed in critical thinking and new ideas with a great group of people from many backgrounds.
"We worked on strategies that will better enable communities to lead the fight against invasive animals like wild hogs," she said.
"That strategy includes equipping those involved in community leadership with advanced knowledge and skills to deal with the human dimensions of invasives control, developing new communications tools and tackling the situation where rules and administrative arrangements get in the way of communities taking effective action."

http://news.psu.edu/story/286911/2013/09/10/impact/pennsylvania-australia-collaboration-focuses-controlling-wild-hogs

NT hunters gearing up for waterfowl season

ABC Rural
By Matt Brann
Tuesday, Sep 10, 2013
Magpie Geese
The 2013 waterfowl hunting season starts next Wednesday
(NT Field and Game)
 
The waterfowl hunting season starts next week in the Northern Territory and hunters are expecting plenty of action.
The season will run from September 18 to January 5, although a couple of hunting reserves will close before the Christmas period (Lambells Lagoon Conservation Reserve and Howard Springs Hunting Reserve on December 23).
Bart Irwin, from NT Field and Game, says magpie geese and duck numbers remain extremely strong in the Top End.
"It looks like being another boom season for hunters," he said.
"The bird count (conducted by NT Parks and Wildlife) has geese numbers between 2.2 million and 2.9 million... so still plenty of birds out there and the hunting remains entirely sustainable."
The daily bag limits for this year's season will be the same as last year, which is 10 magpie geese and 10 ducks per hunter per day.
Mr Irwin says NT Field and Game is keen to talk to mango producers concerned about magpie geese attacking their crops.
"We can offer protection for those crops, by supplying credited, organised, responsible hunters who can provide sustained crop protection," he said.
"We shoot safely, we have $25 million public liability insurance and we can have a co-ordinated approach to crops or districts."
It's expected more than 2,000 Territorians will apply for a waterfowl hunting permit this season, double the numbers back in 2005.
The 2013 Northern Territory waterfowl hunting season will start at 6.15 a.m. next Wednesday (September 18).
The Parks and Wildlife Commission says it will conduct random checks of hunting reserves throughout the season to ensure hunters have permits and are doing the right thing by others and the environment.
Hunters will have a chance to get their hunting permits and other equipment next Monday (September 16) at the annual "Goose Fever Expo".
Recipe for Nick's "Magpie Goose" Nuggets
Remove the skinless breasts from the magpie goose.
Trim off the membrane that covers the skin side of the fillet. This is the tough bit.
Dice breasts into cubes or strips.
Shake nuggets in the Curry and Crumb mix (see below). No need to apply beaten egg.
Shallow fry for a couple of minutes in really hot vegetable oil and serve with rice or salad.
Season mix:
1 tblsp Curry Powder
2 tblsp Bread Crumbs

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-09-10/2013-nt-waterfowl-hunting-season/4948028

Tuesday 10 September 2013

The Eagle Project: Film Clip 4

Every year a pair of Australian Wedgetail Eagles nest in the same tree on an Inverell district property. Hands-On Hunting has exclusive filming access to the nest site from a vantage point high on a ridge overlooking the nest and the eagles' hunting ground. Now Hands-On Hunting Magazine readers will share that exclusive access as each new piece of raw footage is uploaded...




Field notes
Sep 9 2013
The eaglet's adult feathers are coming through very obviously now. In this clip it moves from one bit of shade to the other in the nest. First lamb of the season seen in the nest as well.

Thursday 5 September 2013

The Eagle Project: Film Clip 3

Every year a pair of Australian Wedgetail Eagles nest in the same tree on an Inverell district property. Hands-On Hunting has exclusive filming access to the nest site from a vantage point high on a ridge overlooking the nest and the eagles' hunting ground. Now Hands-On Hunting Magazine readers will share that exclusive access as each new piece of raw footage is uploaded...
 


Field notes
Sep 4 2013
A bit more activity from the eaglet today. It has a wander around, a crap over the side, a pick at a roo carcase and a preen... Two carcases in the nest today, a wallaroo and an eastern grey kangaroo. The eaglet is also showing more dark patches on its wings and darker circles around its eyes a I loses more of its down, o be replaced by proper feathers.

The Eagle Project: Film Clip 2

Every year a pair of Australian Wedgetail Eagles nest in the same tree on an Inverell district property. Hands-On Hunting has exclusive filming access to the nest site from a vantage point high on a ridge overlooking the nest and the eagles' hunting ground. Now Hands-On Hunting Magazine readers will share that exclusive access as each new piece of raw footage is uploaded...
 

 
Field notes
Aug 30 2013
The eaglet has grown dramatically in the past seven days but was lying low on a sunny, warm day close to the remains of a wallaroo delivered by the parents. The eaglets wings are also developing the dark feather tips that indicate the loss of its down. It will take about another seven weeks until the young bird is ready to leave the nest.

The Eagle Project: Film Clip 1

Every year a pair of Australian Wedgetail Eagles nest in the same tree on an Inverell district property. Hands-On Hunting has exclusive filming access to the nest site from a vantage point high on a ridge overlooking the nest and the eagles' hunting ground. Now Hands-On Hunting Magazine readers will share that exclusive access as each new piece of raw footage is uploaded...
 

 
Field notes
Aug 23 2013
The first decent footage from this year's breeding. The eagles laid two eggs almost a month earlier than this year (very warm winter) but as usual the strongest eaglet disposed of its weaker sibling. The eaglet is camped on a rabbit and the remains of two more and a wallaroo adorn the nest.

Improving Feral Hog Box Trapping Efforts - Texas A&M AgriLife Extension ...

A few ideas on modifying a standard box trap for pigs...
 

Wednesday 4 September 2013

Opinion: African Lions Should Not Be Listed as Endangered

Responsible hunters bring in money for conservation efforts.

Lion in Kenya.
A lioness ignores her prey at sunset on the plains of Kenya. Can lion
 hunting support conservation? Photograph by Darran Rees/Corbis
                
Melissa Simpson
Published September 2, 2013
Editor's note: Melissa Simpson is the director of science-based wildlife conservation for the Safari Club International Foundation.
 
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is considering a petition from several animal rights groups to place the African lion on the list of endangered species. By law, species are to be placed on that list only when the Fish and Wildlife Service determines that they are currently "in danger of extinction." In an attempt to garner support for the petition, a proponent claimed recently that the lion is "in danger of disappearing in our lifetimes."
Is the condition of the lion really that dire? Fortunately, the most recent scientific data say no. A comprehensive study published last December concluded that there are between 32,000 and 35,000 lions living in the wild in Africa. The lion population is spread across 27 countries, with nine countries having populations of at least 1,000 lions. (See "The Serengeti Lion.")
Of greatest significance is the fact that 24,000 of the lions, which is at least 68 percent of the total population, live in what the study terms "strongholds." Strongholds are areas that meet "the necessary requirements for [the] long-term viability" of their lion populations.
To qualify as a stronghold, an area must meet these three criteria:
1) a population of at least 500 lions;
2) be legally protected as lion habitat, or be an area where hunting is managed; and
3) contain a population of lions whose numbers are either stable or increasing.
There are ten such areas in Africa. According to the study, the lion populations living in these areas are "large, stable, and well protected," and the populations are therefore "likely to persist into the foreseeable future."
Even the petition itself acknowledges that "one-third of all the lions on the continent could be considered secure under present conservation measures."
Lions: Here to Stay
This is simply not the portrait of a species that is "in danger of disappearing in our lifetimes." The best scientific data do not support the notion that the lion is currently in danger of extinction.
Indeed, at a recent lion workshop convened by the Fish and Wildlife Service, the three lion experts invited to address the assembly—Paula White, director of the Zambia Lion Project; Jason Riggio, principal author of the study cited above; and Craig Packer of the University of Minnesota—were unanimous in their opinion that the lion is not currently in danger of extinction.
If the Fish and Wildlife Service were to take regulatory action and put the African lion on the Endangered Species list, it would be in spite of the overwhelming scientific evidence to the contrary. Such an overreaching decision would deprive the countries that grapple with lion management the resources they need the most. And the most essential resource is money.
According to Dennis Ikanda, director of the Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute's Kingupira Research Centre, his country generated $75 million in lion hunting alone from 2008 to 2011.
Tanzania also has 15 photo-safari areas, which have been lauded as a non-consumptive alternative to traditional hunting tourism. Unfortunately, only 4 of the 15 photo-safari areas are financially viable. The remaining 11 are subsidized by hunter-generated funds. So without the financial resources provided by hunters to protect habitat and stop poachers, there would be no infrastructure for wildlife management.
Fighting Poachers
The Safari Club International Foundation recognizes that saying that the lion is not currently in danger of extinction is not the same as saying that the lion does not face challenges. The many people and governments, both in Africa and worldwide, who care about the lion must continue to work diligently to address those challenges.
We welcome the recent announcement by U.S. President Barack Obama that he will establish a Presidential Task Force on Wildlife Trafficking to develop a strategy for supporting global anti-poaching efforts. Poaching of lions, by definition illegal, is a problem for the sustainability of the population. With this announcement, the President has taken a step to elevate the response to the threat that illegal poaching poses for all wildlife.
Recent polling confirms that preventing illegal wildlife trade is the top priority among Americans when asked to rate the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's missions.
President Obama's initiative recognizes that it is illegal poachers, not regulated hunters, who pose a threat to wildlife. As with the regulated hunters in the United States, the regulated hunters in Africa make a vital contribution to conservation efforts, primarily through the revenues their hunting expeditions generate for local communities and wildlife resource agencies.
The financial role international hunters play has a direct correlation to local communities tolerating wildlife nearby. According to a 2004 study in Tanzania, hunting tourism employed approximately 3,700 people annually. In turn, those workers supported 88,240 families. Hunters are part of the solution.
My group also welcomes President Obama's pledge to provide $10 million in aid to African countries to assist them in their efforts to address the problem of illegal poaching. President Obama wisely recognizes that the fight to preserve the many magnificent wildlife species in Africa, not just from illegal poaching, but from a variety of challenges, must be led and ultimately won by the people on the ground in Africa—the people who live in and around the prime wildlife habitats and the people who lead African governments.
The people and governments of lion-range states continue to make progress in their efforts to develop and implement conservation strategies for the African lion. Benin, Botswana, Ethiopia, Guinea, Kenya, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe are all conducting lion monitoring and research projects.
And most of these countries have adopted regional and national lion management plans; unfortunately, not all of these countries have the financial resources to fully implement them.
Convening a Forum and Raising Money
For the last 12 years, my group has sponsored the annual African Wildlife Consultative Forum (AWCF). The forum brings together representatives of most of the sub-Saharan governments for a week-long discussion on wildlife management and shared conservation success stories. The coalition provides these countries the opportunity to learn from each other's successes and problems, and to work together to develop strategies for wisely managing their wildlife resources.
Forum participants include wildlife professionals, regulatory officials, and representatives of the hunting industry. Our group is proud to be the prime catalyst and support base for this invaluable discussion forum, which works to promote the development and implementation of policies that will ensure the survival of Africa's remarkable wildlife species for generations to come.
But to implement these strategies, these nations are in dire need of the resources that only managed hunting brings into their economies. In that light, the greatest threat to the lion's future is not from hunting, but from the potential Endangered Species Act listing.
 

Call for camel cull to continue post election

ABC Rural
Caddie Brain
 
The Country Liberals candidate for the Northern Territory seat of Lingiari is advocating using a collar monitoring system to manage feral camels in central Australia, if elected on Saturday.
As many as 750,000 camels roam Australia's outback.
But with limited water sources in the desert, many landholders say they do a lot of damage to communities, pastoral infrastructure and to important sites for Aboriginal people.
Federal funding of $19 million has seen nearly 150,000 camels removed from Central Australia over the last four years, through aerial and ground culling and mustering for commercial use.
The money, however, runs out at the end of this year and many landholders, like Lyndee Severin from Curtin Springs Station, south-west of Alice Springs, fear it won't be long before the population bounces back.
"I think there's a lot of positives that have come out of it, but it's not going to take very long for numbers to get back to exactly where they were," she said.
"Is the best answer just to throw more cold hard cash at it? That could be an option.
"But we need to make sure that the money that has been spent in Aboriginal communities, on training and skills and infrastructure, is going to be used into the future in the way that's been intended.
"But saying all of that, sometimes the issues are bigger. Sometimes they're things that we can't deal with on our own."
Ninti One Limited has run the Australian Feral Camel Management project for the Federal Government, and the company agrees there is more work to be done.
It says it can get the population density down to one animal for every ten square kilometres within ten years, a total of about 300,000, provided landholders and governments agree on the best mix of removal methods and are adequately resourced.
A satellite collar on feral camel
A team places a satellite collar on a feral camel as part of the Australia
Feral Camel Management Project. (Matthew Paterson)
       
The Country Liberals candidate Tina MacFarlane says the Coalition has a targeted approach to culling camels using 'Judas' collars to track the animals for commercial harvesting.
"I'm not going to get down to specific dollars," she said.
"The Coalition, they want to be more efficient and they have a targeted approach to culling with the Judas collars."
The technique involves collaring a small number of animals, using them to locate and monitor larger groups.
"There's a commitment for the collars and then you know you can obviously monitor it and bringing in the commercial aspect of it and that will run in also to the training," she said.
Federal Minister Warren Snowdon, and Labor member for Lingiari, says he supports further funding for the current camel management program.
"We're already putting in enormous resources working with Ninti One, I think we should continue with that, continue working with those people and acting on the right advice," he said.
"I'm sure that there'll be a proposal put to government to make sure funding it ongoing and I'm sure it will be approved.
"I had discussion with people in the Middle East about the possibility of exporting Australian camels five or six years ago.
"There's a great deal of interest in how we can get a viable camel industry operating.
"If the industry can be developed it will be developed, but the first thing we've got to do is to control there numbers."

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-09-03/feral-camel-management-election/4930956