Scientists cast doubt on North America’s hunting based conservation21/06/2011 18:25:15
Recreational hunting is not the only factor in wildlife conservation. June 2011. Often touted as the greatest environmental achievement of the 20th century, the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation is anything but, say wildlife ecologists and environmental ethicists from Michigan Technological University and Michigan State University. Writing in the summer 2011 issue of the journal The Wildlife Professional, Michigan Tech's John Vucetich and Joseph Bump, Michigan State's Michael Nelson, and Canadian environmental scientist Paul Paquet call the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation seriously flawed. The commentary is the first critique that the North American model has faced. Other recent hunting articles
Inadequate account of history and the other on an inadequate ethic The model's misconception of history gives recreational hunters the sole credit for preventing the ravages of wildlife exploitation caused by commercial hunting in the 19th century. It cites the efforts of famous hunters such as Theodore Roosevelt. Hunting = conservation misconception The historical narrative crediting recreational hunters with spearheading the drive for wildlife conservation in turn becomes the rationale for a belief that recreational hunting is necessary for wildlife conservation. Then that becomes a prescription for future conservation efforts.
The entire construct is misguided, say Nelson and Vucetich. "The principle of past behaviour is not, by itself, an appropriate justification for future behaviour," they explain. "Would you argue that society should perpetuate slave labour or gender discrimination simply because such practices are part of our history? Likewise it is wrong to conclude that hunting should play a central role in future conservation efforts simply because it has in the past." Hunting interests conflict with conservation principles Vuetich and Nelson examine the seven tenets of the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation:
"Consider the tenet that says wildlife may only be killed for legitimate reasons," the authors observe. "This principle is as basic and appropriate as it is void of useful insight about defining a legitimate purpose." The North American Model provides no further insight about what counts as legitimate, they note. The scientists also raise a question about the final tenet, that science is the basis for wildlife protection. "This equates a desire for policies informed by science with science itself determining what policies ought to be adopted," they say. "Scientific facts about nature cannot, by themselves, determine how we ought to relate to nature or which policies are most appropriate." What is conservation? The model's greatest value, Vucetich and Nelson say, is that it calls attention to the need to confront a more basic question: What is conservation? "All of us should explore whether wildlife management and conservation are the same or whether they represent different, occasionally conflicting goals," they suggest. "We still need answers for key questions like: What does it mean for a population or ecosystem to be healthy? How does conservation relate to or conflict with other legitimate values, such as social justice, human liberty and concern for the welfare of the individual? Resolving these and other questions could provide a truly meaningful conservation model." Courtesy of Michigan Technological University
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