And, I assume, human population growth and habitat encroachment has nothing to with the issue. I'm sure you all hit the nail on the head with your assumptions (you know which ones I mean, there are some level headed views, in this thread).
Canadian population
1976 - 23.5 million
1996 - 29.7 million (26% increase in 20 years)
2016 - 36.3 million (22% increase in 20 years)
Since, in this thread, the answer seems so obvious from those in the know, and proclaim that it is those exercising treaty rights/privileges as the demise of us all.......
Hypothesize; if one half of one percent of NEW Canadian population, become hunters, that is approximately 33,000 hunters, per year, extra. Does that have any impact on whether or not there are enough tags for non-treaty hunters? If you take that as an even split between the provinces and territories, each gets 2500+ new hunters/year. (according to a number of posters in this thread - NO) Does the total population growth, urban sprawl, added use of resources to support the extra population, and habitat encroachment, have no impact on declining wildlife populations?
Foreigners can still come to Canada (AFAIK) and pay their money and bag their trophy. Because we call this tourism, and it brings that awesome MONEY in, that is acceptable still? Should this door be closing to leave opportunity for Canadians? Just a thought.
Some truths in this thread.....
1) Until everyone is treated equally, and with dignity and respect, no fix is going to happen
2) Until root causes of wildlife population decline are pinpointed, no fix is going to happen
I still submit that indigenous peoples exercising the provisions of their treaties, is NOT the primary cause of disastrous declines in wildlife populations.