I saw a program the other day looking specifically at the Moose, its reproductive process, life cycle, predation, etc.... Most of the piece concentrated on Alaska and northern Canada, while also touching on Alberta & Europe briefly.
What really struck me was the impact that parasites like the winter tick are having on Moose located in what they called "southern climes" like Alberta. They showed one young Moose being tracked by two Alberta conservation officers who were trying to drive it back into the woods or put it down if they couldn't. The animal was so weak that it actually expired in front of them. It had massive patches of fur gone, was skinny as a rake and when the officers examined the carcass, the animal was literally crawling with grape sized ticks, bloated with the Moose's blood.
I've been hunting Moose down here in Newfoundland since I was 12 with my Dad. I'm in my mid-30s now and have taken lots of moose and caribou. I can't remember a single animal that I've taken that had so much as a single tick, although I've heard some guys say they've seen them. I'm not so naieve as to believe that our animals are parasite free; I trap, so I've seen lots of creepy crawlies living on furbearers...just looking at what lives on a beaver will blow your mind!
That said, I'm wondering just how widespread this problem is on the mainland? I love moose and moose hunting, but looking at those poor animals literally having the life sucked out of them by those vermin stirred some prehistoric horror within me. After watching that program, if there were a way, I'd happily wipe out every single tick and similar parasite on the planet if it were possible. No animal should have to expire that way in that much pain and discomfort. Nature can be a cruel ##### sometimes I guess...
What really struck me was the impact that parasites like the winter tick are having on Moose located in what they called "southern climes" like Alberta. They showed one young Moose being tracked by two Alberta conservation officers who were trying to drive it back into the woods or put it down if they couldn't. The animal was so weak that it actually expired in front of them. It had massive patches of fur gone, was skinny as a rake and when the officers examined the carcass, the animal was literally crawling with grape sized ticks, bloated with the Moose's blood.
I've been hunting Moose down here in Newfoundland since I was 12 with my Dad. I'm in my mid-30s now and have taken lots of moose and caribou. I can't remember a single animal that I've taken that had so much as a single tick, although I've heard some guys say they've seen them. I'm not so naieve as to believe that our animals are parasite free; I trap, so I've seen lots of creepy crawlies living on furbearers...just looking at what lives on a beaver will blow your mind!
That said, I'm wondering just how widespread this problem is on the mainland? I love moose and moose hunting, but looking at those poor animals literally having the life sucked out of them by those vermin stirred some prehistoric horror within me. After watching that program, if there were a way, I'd happily wipe out every single tick and similar parasite on the planet if it were possible. No animal should have to expire that way in that much pain and discomfort. Nature can be a cruel ##### sometimes I guess...