Managing Public Forests for Wildlife

Similar documents
ALBERTA WILDERNESS ASSOCIATION. Hunting, Trapping, and Fishing

Monday, December 3, 12

Impact of Climate Change on Bees in the Eastern Forest: Diversity and Adaptations of Organisms

Announcements. Gray Whale History. Makah Treaty of Natural Resource Management. East Pacific (California) Gray Whale

IZAAK WALTON LEAGUE OF AMERICA. Strategic Plan

Chapter 20: Page 250

Modeling Population Decline

City of Galena 2017 Deer Hunting Survey

Wild Wapiti Wild Wapiti activities are directly tied to the third spread - pages 5 and 6 of Our Wetland Project.

Note: You do not need to be a Wisconsin landowner; we ll consider any woodland owner in the Midwest region.

SMALL GAME 2016 /2017 NEW HAMPSHIRE SUMMARY REPORT NEW HAMPSHIRE FISH AND GAME DEPARTMENT. huntnh.com

Saving China's elephants

CHECKS AND BALANCES. OVERVIEW Students become managers of a herd of animals in a paper-pencil, discussionbased

Chapter 16 Newsletter August Happenings Dove Hunt September 11 Sponsored by Northern Virginia Chapter 16

Law on the Conservation of Species and Biotopes

Resource booklet. Environmental systems and societies Standard level Paper 2 N15/4/ENVSO/SP2/ENG/TZ0/XX/T. Thursday 19 November 2015 (morning) 2 hours

COUNCIL DIRECTIVE 79/409/EC. of 2 April on the conservation of the wild birds

Non-fiction: Back from the Brink

This game has been adapted from SECONDARY PROJECT WILD 1983, 1985

Video zone How wolves change rivers

Contents. Foreword. For: The world needs zoos Against: Replace zoos with something better. For: Safety first Against: Whatever happened to privacy?

9-1 What Role Do Humans Play in the Premature Extinction of Species?

Reduction in Biological Diversity Section 4.1 p Section 4.3 p

Classroom Activity: Population Study Game (Oh, Deer!)

ACTIVITY FIVE SPECIES AT RISK LEARNING OBJECTIVES: MATERIALS: Subjects: Science, math, art, history

Deer and Deer Management in Central New York: Local Residents Interests and Concerns

Invasive Versus Endemic Species

ARkAnsAs tennessee Primary Partner: Primary Partner: Habitat Work: Habitat Work:

DESCRIBE THE HABITAT REQUIREMENTS AND OTHER FACTORS THAT AFFECT WILDLIFE SPECIES NATURAL RESOURCE I FISHERY AND WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT OBJECTIVE 5.

Game Guard Body of Hunting Organizations in Greece: A conservation success story

ARE WHITE-TAILED DEER VERMIN?

Cub Scout and Webelos Nova Award Wild! (Wildlife and Nature)

Reading 6.1 Competition Between Populations

Feral Horses. All About Discovery! New Mexico State University aces.nmsu.edu

Lesson Objectives. Core Content Objectives. Language Arts Objectives

Nearly Nine in 10 Canadians (89%) Consider Preventing the Extinction of Wild Plants and Animals Important

Upper Dublin Township Deer Management Program (DMP)

Welcome to the 2017 FRPA Conference!

IC Chapter 34. Nongame and Endangered Species Conservation

Chapter 14. Wildlife, Fisheries and Endangered Species. What are we Saving? Traditional Single-Species Wildlife Management

Township of Plainsboro Ordinance No County of Middlesex AN ORDINANCE ESTABLISHING A DEER MANAGEMENT PLAN ON CERTAIN PUBLIC PROPERTY

IMPLEMENTING REGULATIONS OF THE WILDLIFE CONSERVATION LAW. Authorized by the Republic of China Wildlife Conservation Law, amended October 29, 1994.

Cub Scout and Webelos Nova Award Nova Wild!

Invasive Versus Endemic Species

Western Pocono Chapter. Trout Unlimited. 67 West Butler Drive fc ^

Ruffed Grouse Conservation Plan Executive Report

What is Bushmeat? Bushmeat refers to all wildlife species used for meat, including threatened and endangered species

THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF PENNSYLVANIA HOUSE BILL

The VOICE STRATEGIC PLAN CONSERVATION HUNTING & FISHING HERITAGE PROACTIVE MANAGEMENT ONTARIO FEDERATION OF ANGLERS AND HUNTERS

The Value of Springs to The Petersen Ranch

The history of the bison: A symbol of the American story

Ecological Pyramids Adapted from The Nevada Outdoor School, The Playa Ecological Pyramids Lesson Plan

Running head: ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENESS: ENDANGERED MARINE ANIMALS IN AUSTRALIA

Invasive Species. 1. What do you think might happen if a species is moved out of its native habitat and into a new environment?

Western Great Lakes Region FAN UPDATE

Chapter Coverts Chapter Newsletter- New England

GIVE WILDLIFE a CHANCE Poster Contest

Endangered Animals at a Glance

Canon Envirothon Wildlife Curriculum Guidelines

Rhinos live in Africa. They are very big and have long horns. Do you live in Africa too? If not, where do you live? Have you ever seen a rhino? Where?

4-H Activity Guide. Spying on Wildlife. Lead-in Question(s) or Statement

A Forest Without Elephants: Can We Save One of Earth s Iconic Species?

Invasive Species. Grade Levels. Introduction. This activity is intended for grades 9 12.

Nutria STATION #9. Suspected of Crimes in the Wetlands.

ACTIVITIES. Welcome to Hotel el Mono Feliz

Protecting Biodiversity

Cincinnati Parks Wildlife Management Report

Developing a programme to make Taranaki predator-free

The great obstacle is simply this: the conviction that we cannot change because we are dependent on what is wrong. But that is the addict s excuse,

Biodiversity. Chapter 10

Your web browser (Safari 7) is out of date. For more security, comfort and the best experience on this site: Update your browser Ignore

Re: Consultation on the addition of narwhal and two bowhead whale populations to the SARA List

Unit2L.4: Care of the environment (Habitats)

TRCP National Sportsmen s Survey Online/phone survey of 1,000 hunters and anglers throughout the United States

ANIMALS UNIT 1 ACTIVATE YOUR KNOWLEDGE LEARNING OBJECTIVES

PERSIAN FALLOW DEER GRANT PROPOSAL

MISSISSIPPI COMMISSION ON WILDLIFE, FISHERIES, AND PARKS MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF WILDLIFE, FISHERIES, AND PARKS

Preserving Biodiversity. I can explain how and why communities of living organisms change over time.

Wildlife in the Classroom

Crossing Corridors. Objective. Materials. Background Information

COOKE COUNTY APPRAISAL DISTRICT WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT INFORMATION

Environmental Change and its Effects

Wildlife/Conservation Activities Wisconsin 4-H Shooting Sports

The Greater Sage-Grouse:

Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation. Aboriginal Territories in Washington

WILD GAME PLANNER. Food Plot Solutions from the People who know Seed TM

DEPT. 16 NATURAL SCIENCE JUNIOR DIVISION

"Oh! Deer! & Limiting Factors" adapted from Project Wild Mr. Mark Musselman Audubon at the Francis Beidler Forest

DMU 057 Missaukee County Deer Management Unit

Recommendations for Pennsylvania's Deer Management Program and The 2010 Deer Hunting Season

Quality Deer Management and Prescribed Fire Natural Partners in Wildlife and Habitat Conservation

DOWNLOAD OR READ : MY RIPPER HUNTING DAYS PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

At Risk Species. What do these have in common?

Department of Legislative Services Maryland General Assembly 2012 Session

Saving Endangered Plants and Animals

Tinneyhall Wood, Cornwall - About 9 ½ acres, 59,000

Profiles IN CONSERVATION. Keeping in Harmony with Family Legacy Delaware landowner develops diversion crops for deer

Nevada Academic Content Standards Science

Hunt ID: CA-AB-WDeerMDeerMooseWolves-NTONEDMO-OWSHAD-ENRYH.docx

FREE DOWNLOADABLE LESSON FROM

Transcription:

Ruffed Grouse Society (PEI) Managing Public Forests for Wildlife A Presentation to the Discussion Meetings, Forest Policy Initiative, Public Forest Council March 2-2005 Presented by Jack MacAndrew, RGS Communications Director, PEI Good Evening. My name is Jack MacAndrew The Ruffed Grouse Society of Prince Edward Island is a chapter of a national and international organization whose members have an abiding interest in wildlife and especially in the Ruffed Grouse, as a wonderful symbol of the attraction of the wild that nature holds for us all. We are hunters of the Ruffed Grouse, to be sure : but our interest in this magnificent specimen of nature s handiwork, and in other forms of wildlife, goes far beyond the hunting of them. Indeed, it is the hunt, and not the kill that attracts our membership to the woodland haunts of the Ruffed Grouse and the Woodcock. For our fraternity...there is no excitement to match the heart pounding thrill... the rush of adrenaline... when one of these birds explodes into flight from almost beneath your feet. The Ruffed Grouse Society s abiding purpose is the improvement,management and preservation of habitat so that the Ruffed Grouse will continue to be an integral part of our hunting heritage on Prince Edward Island.

Grouse, woodcock and other woodland birds must have young forest as habitat...and much of our forest is young. We endorse habitat management where it is required for these species and others. The techniques of management include the provision of young poplar for brood habitat; nesting habitat of hardwood or mixed forest; feeding stands of mature poplar ; and the provision of conifers for winter cover... These four types of habitat should be included within a 400 meter diameter,and the closer the better to provide the best nesting and brood rearing cover.. We have been active here for about two years, holding workshops on habitat management and bringing together people who want to improve both the status of this marvelous bird ; and our traditional hunting pursuits. We believe with these consultations there is now a real opportunity to examine the way we use our public forest lands; and to embed a holistic approach towards habitat management in forest policy.. There - we have introduced the H word. In the past government forest policies towards public and private land has concentrated on the production of fibre ; and the replacement of harvested forests with plantations - which are not forests at all - but single species tree farms without consideration of nature s need for bio-diversity in animal and plant life. Habitat - has not been a consideration ; except by happenstance. In our consuming arrogance we have considered woodlands to be uninhabited, if the human species was not present. It is a worldwide phenomenon.

In Belize, Fortis will flood an uninhabited river valley to produce more electricity.the unpaid price is the destruction of the habitat of the tapir, the scarlet macaw and many other specialized and endangered species of animal life. Here on this Island we turn over hundreds of acres of woodland into golf courses with the excuse that it is only woodland and not of any use to anybody. That would come as news to the life forms making a home in that piece of useless woodland. The reality is that nothing is ever useless in nature. That rotten log quietly decaying after a hundred years of life, is not useless. It is food and shelter to a staggering variety of life forms, and ultimately returns to the soil from which it emerged to enrich that soil for new life. Our forest policies must flow from and reflect the realities of nature, if they are to be credible. They must work within nature s plan if they are to be workable at all. We hear a lot about Bio-diversity these days. It s become part of the new eco - jargon. But there s nothing new about bio-diversity. It is simply... nature s way. It is the way nature works to ensure the survival of plant and animal species. and life on the planet itself. It is the way nature provides habitat for its life forms. It s pretty simple really. For a species to exist it needs shelter and food. That is what habitat provides. That is, until we come along with our industrial values of productivity and efficiency and try to impose them on a natural system of life. Inevitably we destroy life systems.. or try to keep them alive through artificial means. The imposition of industrial values on a natural resource

is inevitably a sentence of death to that resource. The judgement of the value of a woodland must be much more inclusive than an estimate of the short term economic value of the board feet to be harvested in a clear-cut. Management of woodlands for Ruffed Grouse creates a diverse forest. That is a woodland with conifer and hardwood species of differing species maturing at different times : with shrubs and bushes and a living forest floor to provide food and shelter for wildlife. Such a forest provides other economic opportunities besides fibre production, as well as values that cannot be counted in the coin of the realm. Such a forest is a place for spiritual renewal ; an opportunity to see, and touch and smell nature; in the memorable phrase of Allan Baker - to ground us. It is in the experience of nature that we see a new reality in ourselves. Such a forest is a place for other economic activity as well: in the harvest of ground hemlock and other useful by-products. In hiking, and skiing and bird watching... and in hunting. We in the Ruffed Grouse Society are hunters. We take great enjoyment in the woodland hunt for the Ruffed Grouse. Any hunter will tell you that it is the hunt.. rather than the kill that attracts us to our pastime. And any good hunter will make sure that no animal or bird is hunted to endangerment or extinction. In fact, hunting has little effect on the grouse population. The Ruffed Grouse population is subject to cyclical downturns here on the Island...but it is neither endangered or extinct. We want to keep it that way.

We believe public lands should be open to hunting, with very careful control of licensing in specific areas of good grouse cover. We believe forest management polices embodying a holistic approach ; with wildlife habitat as a primary consideration ; will preserve our forests and our wildlife for the enjoyment and benefit of many generations to come.. We believe nature s way is the only sound, sensible and common sense way to approach forest management ; with equal consideration for the non economic values of the forest ; and the contribution made by woodlands to the preservation of our Island environment ; especially the protection of ground water and the prevention of erosion. It is not an exaggeration to point out - that our woodlands hold the Island together. The Ruffed Grouse is but one species calling the woodland home. But its presence is a signature that a woodland is healthy. The Ruffed Grouse is - the canary of our woodlands. Nature s way links every life form in a chain of life. We break that chain at our peril. Habitat holds that chain together. It is the key to effective management of our woodlands Thank you for this opportunity to appear before you.