Sage Grouse Myths
Excerpts from Range Magazine
Summer, 2008
Environmental activists and many agency biologists are working relentlessly to make the sage grouse the spotted owl of the Intermountain West. If they succeed in getting sage grouse listed under the Endangered Species Act (ESA), they will likely effect sweeping change over traditional land use in the West. That is their goal. Ironically, this “sage grouse conservation effort” is based on the fraudulent claim that many millions of these birds inhabited the sagebrush country of the West prior to European contact but this claim is without factual basis.
The Whole Truth And Nothing But The Truth
A rebuttal to Dave Rice’s article which appeared in the Reno Gazette Journal, January 25, 2008
I read with interest your article in the Reno Gazette Journal, January 25, 2008, concerning
I do not know whom the NDOW expert, Biologist Mike Cox is, but he is a long way from knowing or telling the "real story" of what went on during the big deer years in
I ran the operational Predatory Animal Control program throughout the State of
In 1972, a big change occurred in the Animal Damage Control business throughout the west. President Richard Nixon banned the use of toxicants in the government control program by executive order. (He was soliciting the environmental vote that was just starting to emerge.) With the loss of toxicants and nothing to replace it with but a few trappers, coyote numbers began to rise dramatically. Throughout the state of
The federal government began to appropriate large sums of money in order to prove that coyote numbers could be controlled by what they liked to call "non-toxic methods.” This program increased use of aircraft, both fixed -wing and rotor-wing, to shoot coyotes from the air and additional trappers on the ground to replace the controversial use of toxicants. (This was meant to look good to the environmentalist.)
At that time, there was a large, domestic range-sheep industry, operating throughout the state of
In the early1980s, wild-animal longhair fur prices went sky high and private trappers were out in force. There were large numbers of coyotes and bobcats harvested by private trappers since fur prices were at an all time high. Gas was around $1.25 a gallon. Coyote varmint callers were out in force. All of the private trapping and shooting plus the concentrated government effort to control predator numbers began to pay off. By the year 1988, the mule deer population responded to these concentrated predator-control efforts and mule deer numbers statewide were quoted by NDOW at 240,000. NDOW was busy patting themselves on the back for what a masterful deer management program they had in place throughout the state of
Now then we move forward in time, the range sheep industry began to disappear due to labor problems, government regulations, land use changes by public land administrators, imports, etc. Therefore, control efforts in and around range sheep herds decreased. Cattle numbers began to decline. Longhair fur prices fell, gas prices went up, vehicle prices went up, predator hunting declined, and soon predator population numbers began to come back. Today the
So what do you think has happened to our deer population? It has steadily gone down-hill with the decrease in predator control efforts and will continue to do so unless there is a dramatic decrease in predatory animal population numbers. NDOW has blamed the mule deer decline on overgrazing by livestock, poor habitat, too many fires, too cold, too wet, too dry, not enough snow, too much snow, etc. They are in denial when it comes to the overall effect that predators have on our mule deer and upland game bird population numbers in the State of
In 2007, NDOW reported, there were 114,000 mule deer in the State of
I would solicit your printing this in your column
Thank you,
James "Mike" Laughlin
Supervisory Wildlife Biologist (Retired)
Bachelor of
Ed. Note: Of course, the
Presented to the Wildlife Commission, May 13, 2006
Saturday, May 13, 2006
By Bud Sonnentag
Greetings! I come before this commission for two purposes. First, to put the State of Nevada, NDOW, the Board of Commissioners and the Attorney General’s Office on notice. To wit, the wildlife statutes of this state are being grossly violated today as they were 41 years ago. Second, I am here to apprise everyone in this room of this past and present misfeasance and malfeasance by establishing a public record at this meeting.
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