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Predators, Predation, & Predator Control

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Predators, Predation, & Predator Control Bruce D. Leopold, Mississippi State University Historical Perspective Harmony with the land is like harmony with a friend ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Predators, Predation, & Predator Control


1
Predators, Predation, Predator Control
Bruce D. Leopold, Mississippi State University
2
Historical Perspective
  • Harmony with the land is like harmony with a
    friend, you cannot cherish his right hand and
    chop off his left. That is to say, you cant
    love game and hate predators, the land is one
    organism.

3
Historical Perspective
4
Predator Control Under Scrutiny
  • Leopold Report (A. Starker)- 1964
  • Cain Report - 1972
  • Nixon (by Executive Order) stopped use of all
    poisons on federal lands or use by federal
    agencies to control predators

5
Trends Regarding Furbearing Predators
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Possible Effects????
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Before History Repeats Itself
?
12
Predators- Their Value
  • A natural component of the ecosystem, often
    aiding in maintaining stability
  • Often remove sick and injured individuals from
    the population
  • Serve to keep animals wild and wary
  • Often regulate prey populations, many of these
    prey populations are equally harmful to game
    animals
  • Are valuable as sport animals

13
Predators- Societal ValuesSurvey of 1500
households
  • have a right to exist
  • should be reintroduced to former ranges
  • do need to be managed, but with conditions
  • should not be hunted or trapped unconditionally
  • are not the cause of game population declines
  • play an important role to maintain balanced
    natural systems
  • gt They do support predator management!!!

14
Before Biologists Jump into Predator Control,
They Need to Consider Many Factors
15
Prey
Predator
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Animal Welfare Issues
  • Animal Welfare Act Amendments
  • Recently to include birds and rodents
  • University IACUCs
  • Federal Funds and State Agencies (PR DJ)
  • Initiatives to stop trapping and hunting

20
Must Be Careful of the Message
  • Kill predators so that we have more game to
    harvest
  • NWTF- Resolution- Not to Use Predator Control to
    enhance single species
  • SE Section TWS- Resolution- Not to Use Predator
    Control to enhance single species

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Management activities conducive to predators
  • Logging roads/Access roads Travel Corridors
  • Food plots Concentrating prey Predictability
  • Maintain early successional stages Food base
  • Small management units Increased efficiency

24
Identifying the True Culprit
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Decimating versus Limiting FactorsNest Losses
  • Massachusetts- 22
  • Alabama 85
  • Kentucky 1975- 55
  • 1978- 80
  • Texas 1972- 61
  • 1980- 56
  • 1987- 100

27
Prey Adaptations- CoevolutionThe Wild Turkey
  • Large body size
  • Long-lived
  • Roost in trees
  • Form flocks
  • Large clutch sizes
  • Prefer open habitats
  • Hen moves great distances when disturbed

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Density-dependent ResponsesStudy in Texas and
Coyote
  • With intensive control litter size- 6.56
  • With no control litter size- 3.65
  • Well nourished coyote- from 10-12 pups

30
Interactions
  • Coyote in Texas- w/ control, less rodent richness
    and diversity
  • In SE US, coyote versus red fox
  • Prairie- wolf versus meso-carnivores (raccoons,
    fox, skunk)

31
Predator ControlWhen is it warranted?The
Wildlife Society
  • When introducing a species to former habitat
  • Endangered/threatened species
  • Man-induced disruption

32
Problems identified with Predator Control
  • Coyote- requires 75 reduction in population to
    observe a change in population status
  • Must be intensive first 3-4 years
  • Can not stop
  • Can not be haphazard
  • Not cost-effective

33
Past Research ResultsPredator control will
enhance game populations
  • White-tailed deer
  • Wild turkey
  • Pheasant
  • Waterfowl
  • Northern bobwhite

Problem is in every study, cost of the extra
animals was excessive
34
Possible solutionsHabitat manipulations
  • Pronghorn and Coyote- Utah
  • White-tailed deer and Coyote- Texas

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Protocol for Predator Control
  • What are the management goals and thus management
    objectives for the prey (game animal)? Are they
    reasonable and biologically sound?
  • Has predation been identified as the ultimate
    mortality factor rather than a proximate factor?
  • Has the predator species been identified
    correctly? Has appropriate Aevidence_at_ been
    collected and reliably identified (tracks,
    photos, sign on carcasses or eggs, etc.)
  • Have extrinsic, contributing factors been
    examined throughly (habitat conditions, weather
    effects, land management activities) that may
    have, on the short-time, caused an imbalance in
    predator and/or prey species abundance(s)?
  • Has the target predator species role within the
    system been evaluated thoroughly to ensure that
    the control operation may not further disrupt
    existing balances?

37
Protocol for Predator Control
  • Have alternatives to active predator removal been
    examined based on evaluation conducted
    previously?
  • can habitat manipulation achieve desired goals?
  • can subtle changes in current land management be
    implemented?
  • can more desirable predator species be enhanced
    to counter more detrimental species? Note
    enhanced can simply mean to cease trapping that
    predator species (e.g., coyote versus red fox)
  • Clearly define the objectives of the predator
    management program
  • What is the desired population response (e.g.,
    density) of the prey (game animal)?
  • What is the desired percentage reduction in the
    target predator population?
  • What monitoring program(s) will be implemented to
    monitor response of prey species and target
    predator species?

38
Protocol for Predator Control
  • Ensure that Best Management Practices (BMPs) for
    trapping (based on draft BMPs under development)
    are adhered to. These include
  • appropriate traps that minimize injury to animal,
  • appropriate frequency of trap-line checking,
  • maintaining a trap-line size consistent with
    available resources,
  • capture of non-target species is monitored and
    minimized. If excessive, trapping procedures
    should be reevaluated and modified, and
  • appropriate euthanasia procedure(s) for animals
    are implemented.
  • Have societal beliefs (especially local and
    regional) been examined and considered?
  • if potential problems are identified, develop a
    concise response that provides empirically-based
    data, program objectives, and target species.
  • all staff should provide a consistent response
    when inquiries are made about the predator
    management program, or inquires should be
    redirected to one individual

39
Protocol for Predator Control
  • Inappropriate behavior by staff should not be
    tolerated. Deviation from selected harvesting
    protocols and objectives should be stopped
    immediately.
  • Carcasses should be disposed of discretely or
    used appropriately (food, museum displays, etc.).

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