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 Tuesday, December 02, 2008
Audubon Society Promotes Deer Hunts
Posted by DDH Staff
The Audubon Society might not be thought of as a staunch pro-hunting organization, but the society can't deny the necessity of deer hunting. In fact, across New Jersey the conservation group has supported deer hunts in the face of undeniable evidence that overpopulation of deer leads to decimated habitat. What's more, the New Jersey
Audubon Society is actually leading an effort to get the Morris County Park Commission and local towns governments that surround the Jockey Hollow section of
the Morristown National Historical Park to urge the National Park Service to institute a whitetail deer hunt there. As reported on dailyrecord.com: The Aububon Society began deer hunts on its properties in 2006,
Ettel told the park commission, because assessments of the agency's
3,700 acres of preserves showed that deer browsing was a major factor
in the creation of "skeletal forests" that have become common in many
areas of central and northern New Jersey. The impact of deer on
forests is "devastating," he said. As a result, since 2006 Audubon has
advocated for increased hunting activity on public and private land and
for the expanded harvesting of whitetail deer statewide. While far too often non-hunters view "conservation" as being divorced from hunting, it is encouraging to see an essentially non-hunting conservation group supporting what hunter-conservationists have always known: Deer hunting isn't just something we like to do -- it's something we need to do. That is, if we take conservation seriously.
Tuesday, December 02, 2008 2:47:46 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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