Buck Hollow Sporting Goods - click or touch to visit their website Midwest Habitat Company

Creating recreational opportunities

JNRBRONC

Well-Known Member
Interesting article to read and think about. Makes me wonder if the trout I caught while fishing in a mountain lake in the Kootenai National Forest was an air drop. Should we be introducing species where that haven't traditionally been, fish or wildlife?

In the name of recreation
 
Exactly what I thought of!!!!^^^^. Pheasants. Some introductions are clearly fine & the ecosystem can support or thrive off of them. Some are a detriment.

Most introductions are not on purpose - everything from Asian carp, chestnut blight, covid, poison ivy, zebra mussels, bush honey suckle, etc etc etc) so many with downsides it’s an endless list.

The ones that we do introduce need vast thought at how they ripple through the ecosystem. Heck- my home state of MI…. Those salmon we caught in lake MI- all stocked I believe. The alewives (fish they eat)… accidentally introduced - that relationship worked out great!
Let’s also face it…. The sub-species of whitetail deer are not native to most areas. That one is a little easier to accept & clearly worked out well. & the “mad scientist” part of me that does like the animals that end up being very beneficial…. It has gone through my crazy brain with no seriousness….. “be cool if the areas where all the 1.5 year old deer get shot…. If restock those areas with deer that get 140”+ at 1.5”. Would be impossible without removing all/most the deer & getting a huge genetic stock that’s proven. Won’t happen but sure is interesting to ponder some “cool things” science could solve for hunting issues.
Basic science & wildlife biologists have created a lot of beneficial hunting & fishing opportunities through out the years. Even stuff like walleye stocking efforts. Can’t paint any of this with a broad brush. Some good, some bad.
 
Some time ago I read an article about African plains game introduced into Texas for rec hunting purposes. They have since gone on the endangered species list and thus they couldn't shoot the ones in Texas.... Not sure if that is completely true or not, but then what do you do? Trap and export them back? Might have been sable, I don't remember. Agree some good, some bad.
 
somewhat related.... the stuff they are doing now with DNA, cloning, etc is CRAZY. Heard they may bring back a woolly mammoth by 2028, for example.
Been reading about them bringing back the Dire Wolf through cloning and even the "creators" are saying that they really didn't bring them back, just some of the genetics made the journey.
 
Might as well try the Dodo bird as well. Well maybe not, they couldn't fly so there's no challenge. I guess that's why they went extinct :rolleyes:
 
Top Bottom