Hunters: To protect our social licence, we have to stop killing animals we don’t eat

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Hunters: To protect our social licence, we have to stop killing animals we don’t eat

Hunters: To protect our social licence, we have to stop killing animals we don’t eat

CHRIS DARIMONT

Contributed to The Globe and Mail

Published 1 day ago

Updated January 23, 2018

Chris Darimont is an associate professor in the department of geography at the University of Victoria and science director for the Raincoast Conservation Foundation.

Television personality and hunter Steve Ecklund recently became a target. He posted images of his smiling face lording over a cougar he had legally killed in northern Alberta. Mr. Ecklund and a team of hunting guides had released dogs to pursue fresh cat tracks. After a chase, the exhausted cougar took short-lived refuge up a tree as frenzied dogs barked below. Some time later, Mr. Ecklund arrived at the tree with his weapon.

The imagery of a delighted hunter holding up his trophy – the bloodied, lifeless cougar – was grotesque to many. Thousands commented online, including Laureen Harper, the wife of former prime minister Stephen Harper, who suggested on Twitter that Mr. Ecklund "must be compensating for something, small ##### probably."

Broader outrage also erupted, many lamenting the senseless killing of a large carnivore or questioning the ethics – indeed, legitimacy – of a wildlife-management system that normalizes the killing of animals that are not eaten. Many hunters, myself included, were among those disgusted. Though far fewer in number, other hunters fired back with fervent support.

Such fiery debate, increasingly common, suggests that change is coming. But it will not come easy for either side.

Understanding this conflict requires acknowledging that wildlife can mean not only populations but also individuals that comprise them. Wildlife managers in Alberta and elsewhere focus their concern for wildlife exclusively at the population level. In general, they estimate whether the population contains a so-called "harvestable surplus." If so – fair game! Those opposed, however, consider the suffering endured by the individual animals caught up in this system. They understand that hunting involves suffering, and that wildlife can suffer in the same way humans can. The logic was expressed elegantly by an early ethicist: Jeremy Bentham famously asked, "The question is not, 'Can they reason?' Nor, 'Can they talk?' But, 'Can they suffer?'"

And here's the important part: most people can accept the idea of suffering and death if the hunter kills to fulfill a basic life requisite, such as feeding one's family; in contrast, most people oppose killing inedible animals for trivial reasons, such as feeding one's ego.

Proponents of predator hunting understand the nature of the opposition, and are desperately trying to adapt. That is why, no doubt, Mr. Ecklund made the point to show off a photo of his cougar stir-fry. Most people were repulsed, understanding intuitively that the meat of large carnivores should be avoided. Evolutionarily and culturally, this ability evolved because of the risk of acquiring diseases we share with predators. Recognizing this, hunting regulations in Alberta and elsewhere have never required hunters to take any potentially edible portions from the carcasses of large carnivores. The explicit understanding is that these hunters are only interested in trophy items: skins, heads and claws and, more recently, photos to post online.

Together, this means that deceptive claims of food hunting will not fool those opposed to the killing that large carnivores and the trivial benefits the hunter receives. In the case of Mr. Ecklund, he called it "an unreal ending to a fun filled season."

Opposition to the killing of carnivores will intensify in North America. This values-based opposition will mirror other campaigns for just treatment of those human and non-human groups commonly mistreated. Many managers and hunters will vigorously defend the status quo, often using questionable science as justification. Their population-level logic, however, which draws on our reverence for science, is seductive. That is, until one confronts its central assumption: that science alone (i.e. the presence of a "harvestable surplus") can dictate policy. In theory and practice, this is not the case.

Sound wildlife policy needs to draw from many domains. Clearly, it should reflect not only the values of hunters (often less than 10 per cent of the population) but also the values generally expressed by society. Conflicting economic interests, such asecotourism, must also be considered. For example, economic analyses have shown that grizzly bear viewing brings in over 10 times the annual revenue of grizzly hunting in coastal B.C.. Policies and laws asserted by Indigenous governments also need recognition. All these factors led to the ban of grizzly bear hunting in British Columbia. Similarly, a referendum in the 1990s led to a ban on cougar hunting in California, not because there were too few cats, but rather because society thought that the time of hunting mountain lions was up.

Hunters argue, reasonably, that if non-hunters want to influence wildlife policy then they, too, need to contribute to the system, doing more than solely expressing passionate emotion in their online advocacy. As individual recreationists or ecotourism clients, they could, for example, pay for access to wildlife-rich areas. They could consider contributing to the purchase of guided hunting territories, a conservation economic strategy pioneered in B.C. At the very least, they must minimize the impacts of their recreational, consumer and investment behaviour that ultimately causes suffering and death of wildlife. Finally, non-hunters must understand that in North America, habitat loss is typically a much larger threat to wildlife than hunting.

Hunters and their lobby groups have a choice. One option is digging in their heels and ignoring the changing times. The BC Wildlife Federation (the organization that represents B.C. hunters) has done precisely that in response to the grizzly hunt ban. Such a stand endangers the social licence afforded to all hunters. A minority of hunters – those that kill large carnivores – sully the reputation of the whole group. Anachronistic policies also cause conflict with environmental groups, foreclosing opportunities for collaboration over shared interests.

The other, more promising option would require hunters and their organizations to rid themselves of the fringe trophy-hunting element. That way, the privilege to feed our families is not jeopardized by a minority who hunt carnivores to feed their egos.
 
I'm not into trophy hunting, but this guy lost me at "social licence". There is no such thing. In free societies, one does not need the approval of the mob for doing or refraining from doing anything. Only the law can do that.

"Social licence", my nose.
 
If the voting mob get their way, you can throw any effective model of wildlife mamagement out the window.

In the age of social media, it is all about "optics"... we can't control all of our image with the non-hunting public, but at the very least we should avoid fitting a noose around our own necks.
 
If the voting mob get their way, you can throw any effective model of wildlife mamagement out the window.

In the age of social media, it is all about "optics"... we can't control all of our image with the non-hunting public, but at the very least we should avoid fitting a noose around our own necks.

I keep saying, stay the **** off Facebook, Twitter etc with hunting and fishing pictures!! It’s doing us more harm than good.
 
Whoever wrote this nonsense article or has never tried mountain lion.... it’s delicious....

Delicious or not, just like the grizzly bear hunt in BC got closed, cougar hunting across this country is at risk if people keep up with this ego trip style hunting, and posting pictures of dead animals all over social media.

I for one don't want to see another hunting opportunity taken away because people don't know how to behave in public...
 
Delicious or not, just like the grizzly bear hunt in BC got closed, cougar hunting across this country is at risk if people keep up with this ego trip style hunting, and posting pictures of dead animals all over social media.

I for one don't want to see another hunting opportunity taken away because people don't know how to behave in public...

Or maybe the public can just learn to accept how people behave.
 
There is enough non hunting people taking pics to be put on Facebook and "shared" by them that the rest of hunters do have to. That happened the other day by a snoopy neighbour. It will not end till they have it all taken away. Hopefully comon sense comes to them but I have bets the predators will get them first
 
Delicious or not, just like the grizzly bear hunt in BC got closed, cougar hunting across this country is at risk if people keep up with this ego trip style hunting, and posting pictures of dead animals all over social media.

I for one don't want to see another hunting opportunity taken away because people don't know how to behave in public...

In some ways I agree with you..... but I also come from a time when, if you didn’t like hunting, you didn’t buy hunting magazines, watch hunting videos or hunting tv shows.....

The fact is, cougar is very edible, and the whole premise of the article is that you shouldn’t shoot what you don’t eat....
 
In some ways I agree with you..... but I also come from a time when, if you didn’t like hunting, you didn’t buy hunting magazines, watch hunting videos or hunting tv shows.....

The fact is, cougar is very edible, and the whole premise of the article is that you shouldn’t shoot what you don’t eat....

Then would you be ok with them changing the rules, so you'd have to remove the edible portions of cougar?
 
Well time to put on my flame suit I guess.

I am not a hunter. It never appealed to me. I love animals.
That said, I see little difference between going to the store to buy meat or getting it yourself.
So I am not against hunting for food.

I am against what has become known as trophy hunting . By that I mean someone who hunts for the thrill of the kill,
to put a trophy on the wall or to have a picture taken with the dead animal.

I also realize that the media tends to push stories that portray ALL hunters as cruel , sadistic people .

If the animal is for food, to eliminate a dangerous predator or to control the population of a species, fine.
However do not give the anti hunters a photo or story of someone seemingly bragging about the kill that they just made.
Then it becomes a matter of perception not facts.
 
In the age of social media, it is all about "optics"... we can't control all of our image with the non-hunting public, but at the very least we should avoid fitting a noose around our own necks.

Agreed, long ago I decided to make a separate Instagram account for personal images. My public work account is strictly kept to work related images, my private account is where I post hunting or homesteading images and the only people that have access to it at friends or people I personally know. It works well and nobody gets offended or surprised when hunting season roll around and I post pics of animals I've shot.
 
Just another case of mob rule, with zero fact and all emotions, seriously social license? We as humans impact the ecosystem. We provide tasty livestock for predators when the natural food supply dries up from over predation and in affect create an ability for an overabundance of predators to exist. We exploit land and force predators to live with us and not separate from humans. We are lucky here in Canada that there is still large tracts of land for predators to roam on .... but that is changing quickly in a lot of places in Canada. Most of us who are a little older can remember where there were fields and bush that have given away to the onrush of civilization. Management of game is necessary do to human impact, we accept that for the animals we eat but not the ones we don't eat ... does that even make sense to most people?

I hunt and work on 30,000 hectares in South Africa that is now a game preserve because of trophy hunting ... it use to accommodate sheep and cattle. Plains game are what we make our living on and having predators around economically doesn't make sense when they effect your bottom dollar. We do have predators around though and why you may ask? Well trophy hunting of course as it pays for itself.

We are a long ways from having to deal with our wildlife in this way here in Canada ... however we do have to manage our wildlife ... both the delicious animals and the ones that don't taste quite as good. Stop the bear hunt in Ontario and most will argue the moose calves suffer as one example.

Science is the way forward here, not the court of popular opinion!
 
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