cbc-Trophy hunting stunting the horns of Bighorn sheep, study finds

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Trophy hunting of bighorn rams is stunting the growth of the species' most famous feature, according to research at the University of Alberta.

The 43-year study on a population of bighorn sheep at Ram Mountain near Nordegg, Atlta., about 300 kilometres southwest of Edmonton, concluded that hunting is responsible for the "artificial evolution" of the species, resulting in smaller horn sizes.

"What you have here is clearly artificial selection," said biological sciences professor David Coltman. "You can imagine that harvested animals don't have any more offspring. Their genes are removed from the gene pool."

In an interview on Edmonton AM Thursday, Coltman said the average size of horns within the isolated herd declined more than 20 per cent over 20 years, a trend which continued with surprising regularity until the mid 1990's when hunting was halted in the area.

"In the first half of the study, the population was being hunted under the same regulations as the rest of Alberta, so any ram that reached the legal size limit could be shot," said Coltman.

"When hunting stopped, the decline stopped," he said. "They gradually started to recover but the decline was much more rapid than the recovery was. Human influence is much stronger than natural influences."
Big trophies become sparse

Because rams reach their peak reproductive years long after their horns reach the legal size limit for hunting, Coltman said the trait for large horns is systematically culled from ram populations.

"It's a very sharped-edged selection," he said. "A large-horned ram is pretty unlucky, because he's more likely to be shot before he reaches the age where he's dominant and having lots of sons.

"As soon as you become legal, you've got a 50-50 chance of making it to the mating season that year."

Coltman said the phenomenon continues in areas of the province where hunting is prevalent and the horns of mature rams — racks which can weigh up to 30 lb — are coveted.

"From a trophy-hunting perspective, it means that it's harder to find a good-quality trophy. They're getting to be more rare.

"And there's a certain irony in that," said Coltman, who notes that more licences are issued to trophy hunters than there are available legal rams.

According to Coltman, Albertans need to hunt fewer rams, re-examine size requirements or adjust the timing of the hunting season to allow more rams to reach maturity.

The findings will be published in the scientific journal Evolutionary Applications.


-http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/trophy-hunting-stunting-the-horns-of-bighorn-sheep-study-finds-1.3413295
 
I'm willing to bet this applies to deer around here.
Tuff to find a four point mulie.
Down in the Lillooet valley a couple years ago and them farmer's fields
had big two point bucks herd'in the gals.
 
no no guys the rams discovered that if they shrinkds their horns they wont be shot ... we heard the same for chamois and mouflon trophies in France in the 80s and 90s then they find out that hunters were benefitting the herds in taking old males and giving new bloods to the species not everything is about the size of the horns even for hunters ...
 
After reading the article posted above I would suggest that anyone interested in trophy management of game, including private landowners who want to improve their game through management as well as provincial biologists, look into the excellent collection of video and body of work of Keith Warren and his "Take the High Road" series of videos.

It no doubt will improve your understanding of many of the issues that both hurt and benefit us as hunters and the wildlife that has become so central to our lives. Few of us on any of these forums can claim to be a more dedicated hunter and conservationist than this man.
 
I don't like when people bash legal hunting. If the complainers ancestors didn't hunt and eat meat, they wouldn't be alive to complain about it .
 
It's not a big stretch of logic to realize that hunting pressure on the biggest rams has a long term effect on horn size. If you need more proof, the same has been demonstrated in Europe with Red deer for a couple centuries. As responsible ethical hunters, we have to look at all the facts, not just the ones that benefit us. I'd be just as happy hunting ewes as rams, but populations of sheep cannot support my preferred activity. If rams can't take a 3/4 curl rule with over the counter tag hunting opportunity perhaps it is time to change the hunting pressure and regs. Makes sense to me.
 
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