Stepping off the
Cliff
The
South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks Commissioners voted
unanimously this morning to approve their game
agency's proposed 2013 lion hunting quota of 70
females or 100 total lions. They also authorized the
use of hounds for the hunt in Custer State Park and
extended a year-round no-limit hunting season for
lions outside of the Black Hills. Lions killed outside
the Black Hills region of the state will not be
considered in the quota count.
The
Mountain Lion Foundation fought hard alongside a
coalition of conservation groups and local lion
activists to stop the madness, but unfortunately our
efforts were not sufficient to overcome the mindset of
a commission determined to extirpate the species as
their forefathers did one hundred years
ago.
The
South Dakota Game Commission is one of the most
egregious examples of state game commissions setting
high lion hunting quotas in spite of compelling
scientific facts that lion populations will be harmed
or destroyed. Commissioners have repeatedly ignored
the advice of even their own staff biologists and have
excused their actions by finding "testimony from
hunters and landowners too compelling to ignore."
Apparently
such is the case again. Despite the flurry of e-mails,
calls, and petition signatures presented by MLF, as
well as calm insightful testimony by Black Hills
Mountain Lion Foundation President, Sharon Seneczko,
as well as representatives of sportsmen-oriented
groups such as the Izaak Walton League and South
Dakota Wildlife Federation, the Commission chose to
believe the small group of attending lion hunters who
testified on their belief that South Dakota's lions
were responsible for eating 13,000 deer each year:
thereby making it harder for them to do the
same.
While
the new hunting quota of 100 lions may seem small when
compared to that of other states, South Dakota's new
"official" lion population estimate (which most
experts discount as exaggerated to justify the
Commission's actions) is a total statewide population
of only 303 lions: 45 adult males, 87 adult females,
33 sub-adult males, 35 sub-adult females and 103
kittens.
If
the female quota is reached--which has happened almost
every season--hunters could kill 80 percent of South
Dakota's adult female lion population, a possibility
that has many biologists shaking their heads in
disbelief.
What's
more, the hunting quota doesn't even consider the
entire picture. Each year, an average of 40 lions die
in South Dakota as a result of illegal hunts,
trapping, poaching, depredation, public safety
removals, road kills, and natural causes. These deaths
weren't even considered by the Commission when it set
the 2013 lion hunting quota.
South
Dakota's 2012 lion hunt quota of 70 lions
was not only exceed during the hunt (January 1 - March
31) by an extra 3 lions, but as of September 28, 2012
there have been an additional 26 recorded lion deaths.
That means that so far this year South Dakota's lion
population has lost 99 lions--not 73 as state game
agency keeps telling the public.
MLF's
supporters rallied to the cause and did everything we
asked of them in our efforts to convince South
Dakota's game commission to see reason and make
management decisions based on peer-reviewed scientific
facts. That didn't work. Now it's time to take the
next step.
The
Mountain Lion Foundation is considering legal recourse
to stop South Dakota's 2013 lion hunt. We tried a
similar action in 2005, but at the time could not
prove "irreparable harm." This time, we believe it
will be hard for our opponents to argue that the
breeding population of lions in South Dakota will not
be set back decades. The South Dakota game
commissioners have clearly violated the public's trust
and their actions will not only harm South Dakota's
lion population, but could also hinder the natural
recolonization of lions to the Midwest and other
portions of their historic range.
You
can help South Dakota's lions by either making a tax
deductible donation to the Mountain Lion Foundation so
that MLF can continue its public education efforts in
South Dakota and surrounding states, or by
contributing directly to MLF's new South Dakota Legal
Defense Fund.
Together
we will end the madness!
Take
Action!
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