Alaska predator control doesn’t result in more moose harvests, according to a study of one game unitThis photo was published in an Alaska Department of Fish and Game pamphlet “Understanding Intensive Predator Management in Alaska,” part of the department’s efforts in 2012 to educate the public about practices that have been controversial, especially to observers outside Alaska.
published in the scientific journal Diversity , says an analysis of one Southcentral Alaska game unit, Game Management Unit 13, found no increase in moose harvests in the years following predator control work there. The state Division of Wildlife Conservation disputes that, saying not enough time had passed between the predator control work and the analysis of moose harvests to expect higher numbers of moose.
But the study’s lead author, Sterling Miller, spent two decades at the Division of Wildlife Conservation and says the state’s predator control programs are driven by politics, not science.: I think the Fish and Game Department, and the Division of Wildlife Conservation, has not done adequate analysis, and in some cases even misled the Alaska public about whether or not these programs are accomplishing their objectives.
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