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Coyotes-Wolves-Cougars.blogspot.com

Grizzly bears, black bears, wolves, coyotes, cougars/ mountain lions,bobcats, wolverines, lynx, foxes, fishers and martens are the suite of carnivores that originally inhabited North America after the Pleistocene extinctions. This site invites research, commentary, point/counterpoint on that suite of native animals (predator and prey) that inhabited The Americas circa 1500-at the initial point of European exploration and subsequent colonization. Landscape ecology, journal accounts of explorers and frontiersmen, genetic evaluations of museum animals, peer reviewed 20th and 21st century research on various aspects of our "Wild America" as well as subjective commentary from expert and layman alike. All of the above being revealed and discussed with the underlying goal of one day seeing our Continent rewilded.....Where big enough swaths of open space exist with connective corridors to other large forest, meadow, mountain, valley, prairie, desert and chaparral wildlands.....Thereby enabling all of our historic fauna, including man, to live in a sustainable and healthy environment. - Blogger Rick

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Friday, November 26, 2010

IS A NEVADA BLACK BEAR POPULATION 0F 200 BEARS SIZEABLE ENOUGH TO WARRANT A HUNT?.....



By Matthew Renda
North Lake Tahoe Bonanza

Proposed Nevada bear hunt polarizes Tahoe communities as hearing looms


This big black mother bear was hanging out at the home of Dan Gaube and Kara Fox off Highway 267 in Kings Beach a couple weeks ago, while her two cubs sniffed around their porch. After Gaube scared them off, Fox said they ended playing in Griff Creek, where this photo was taken. A proposal stands before the Nevada Department of Wildlife to allow bear hunts in Nevada. The practice already is legal in California.
This big black mother bear was hanging out at the home of Dan Gaube and Kara Fox off Highway 267 in Kings Beach a couple weeks ago, while her two cubs sniffed around their porch. After Gaube scared them off, Fox said they ended playing in Griff Creek, where this photo was taken. A proposal stands before the Nevada Department of Wildlife to allow bear hunts in Nevada. The practice already is legal in California.
This big black mother bear was hanging out at the home of Dan Gaube and Kara Fox off Highway 267 in Kings Beach a couple weeks ago, while her two cubs sniffed around their porch. After Gaube scared them off, Fox said they ended playing in Griff Creek, where this photo was taken. A proposal stands before the Nevada Department of Wildlife to allow bear hunts in Nevada. The practice already is legal in California.
 


Where: Nevada Department of Wildlife, 1100 Valley Road, Reno
 The hearing on the proposed black bear hunt is scheduled for Saturday, Dec. 4
INCLINE VILLAGE, Nev. — As a hearing nears regarding a proposal to legalize the hunting of black bears for the first time in Nevada's nearly 150-year history, some regional wildlife advocates are gathering petitions and urging state officials to reject the idea.

The Nevada Wildlife Commission — composed of representatives throughout the state that governs the Nevada Department of Wildlife — meets next weekend in Reno. The black bear hearing is scheduled for Saturday, Dec. 4.
Nevada is home to an estimated 200 to 300 bears along the eastern Sierra, according to NDOW, with most in the Carson Range on Lake Tahoe's East Shore. There also are an unknown number of bears in the Wassuk and Sweetwater ranges to the south.The particulars of the hunt, including a tag quota and length of season, will not be decided during the December meeting should the hunt be approved, according to the commission, but would be settled in the spring of 2011.

Carl Lackey, a biologist with the Nevada Department of Wildlife who has worked for years with the state's black bear population, specifically at Lake Tahoe, said the initial recommendation for a tag quota was 20 bears per season."The bear population in Nevada could easily withstand a limited hunt," he said. Lackey pointed out, however, that bears do not recognize borders, and overall, the Sierra Nevada supports a population of 10,000-15,000 bears."There's no large fence separating California from Nevada, and bears are accustomed to moving back and forth," he said.

Lackey said the black bear is the most successful species of bear in the world, with an estimation of more than 900,000 in North America alone.

"It is an extremely healthy population," he said.

While Lackey said he was not responsible for recommending the hunt be approved — it was initiated by the wildlife commission — his viewpoint as a biologist states the bear population will continue to be stable and even grow if a limited hunt is permitted by the state."All the other Western states allow black bear hunting, including California," he said. "In Nevada, we hunt every single big-game species with the exception of the bear. The only thing that is shocking is why Nevada has not allowed a bear hunt up to now."

According to the meeting agenda, the black bear hunt proposal contains the following provisions:

• It would be illegal to kill a black bear cub or a female black bear accompanied by a cub.
• A hunter who successfully kills a black bear is not eligible to apply for another black bear tag for the next five years.
• The fee for a resident tag is $100. The fee for a nonresident tag is $200.
• Hunters must report their kills within 72 hours.
• Using bait to lure bears will not be permitted.
• The limit on bears taken during a given season and the length of season will be decided by the commission at a later date.
— Source: Nevada Wildlife Commission


Public outrage

Nevertheless, the possibility of a legalized hunt has stoked outrage throughout the Tahoe community, particularly on the Nevada side of the lake.

Incline resident Mary Ansari expressed concerns that hunting in the Carson Range — a popular recreation destination — could present unnecessary dangers to bystanders.

"Does it make sense to have a bear hunt in a mountain range that is so heavily used by recreationists and so close to urban areas?" asked Ansari, who added Lake Tahoe residents are not properly represented on the wildlife panel.

The nine-member wildlife commission features three members from Las Vegas, two from Reno, one from Carson City, and one each from Eureka, Ely and Dyer.

"I'm wondering how much input they have from those of us living with the bears at Lake Tahoe," Ansari said.

Kathryn Bricker, a Zephyr Cove resident who has collected more than 500 signatures on a petition opposing the bear hunt, said the commission has "an imbalance of voices."

"The nine-member wildlife commission is (composed) of five 'sportsmen', two 'rancher/farmers,' one 'citizen at large' and one 'conservationist,'" she said. "It is no wonder the commission demonstrates such a narrow (viewpoint)."Bricker said many living in Tahoe have formed a deep emotional affinity with the animals.

"As the wild mustangs are to many and ... gorillas were to Diane Fossey, the Nevada black bears are to many of us who reside in bear habitat — intelligent, awe-inspiring creatures that we consider a part of our extended family," she said. "We learn from them and love them and we want to see them treated kindly."

Lackey, Bricker and Ansari all agreed on one point — a bear hunt will not help reduce the number of bear/human interactions. Lackey said if a hunter kills a bear in the backcountry, it would be pure luck if the bear happened to be a nuisance bear accustomed to looking for meals in Tahoe's urban interface."The only thing that will stop bears from breaking into houses is individuals who reside in bear habitat taking responsibility for securing their trash and reducing bear attractants," Lackey said.If the bear hunt is approved, Lackey there are already ordinances dictating where hunters can pursue big game such as mountain lions and mule deer; therefore, new legislation or ordinances will not be necessary.

"There is a big misconception that hunting is not allowed in the Lake Tahoe Basin," he said. "Hunters are currently allowed to hunt big game in certain areas, so it already regulated. To my knowledge, there has never been an incident."

The California side
Bear hunting is legal in California. The areas approved for hunting bears are subject to county ordinances. The season opens on the second Saturday in October and extends for 79 consecutive days, unless the California Department of Fish and Game determines 1,700 bears have been killed before the season concludes. Hunters are required to present the killed bear's skull to fish and game officials within 10 days of taking the bruin.

Hunters are allowed one adult bear per season. Cubs and females accompanied by cubs may not be taken (cubs are defined as bears less than one year of age or bears weighing less than 50 pounds).

No feed, bait or other materials capable of attracting a bear to a feeding area shall be placed or used for the purpose of taking or pursuing a bear. No person may take a bear within a 400-yard radius of a garbage dump or bait.

— Source: California Department of Fish and Game




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