Natural Resources moves on marauding elk

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Ministry allows hunt on burgeoning herd near Bancroft. Elk added to list of animals farmers can get permission to harass or kill for destroying crops

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Comments

On behalf of the North Hastings and Area Farmers and Landowners Association, let me concur with Mrs. Kuno's points and add this.

As long as people are led to believe that there are only 470 elk in this region, this development ( the hunt ) will be of little or no benefit to the farmers and landowners of this region. The 470 quoted is a number arrived at by Dr. Rick Rosatte, the MNR's own elk guru. If you were to read the release where that number originated you would see that it is an, out of thin air guess at best, and at worst, pure conjecture. It is a mathematically adjusted number arrived at by flying a certain grid pattern in a small part of the elk range and counting elk. I believe they saw less than 200. Then by estimating, Elk per square kilometer, and estimating their geographic spread, the population would be between 350 and 800,with a mathematically corrected number of 470, accurate to 90% 19 times out of 20, while that works fairly well with moose or deer, elk are a herding animal, where, the next valley over may contain another 150 animals.

We, the NHAFLA contend that the true population is far closer to 2000 than it is to 470. On my own farm,(in New Carlow ) we have watched the elk population rise from 8 in 2001, to over 120 in 2010.

We are being told that perhaps as few as 50 tags are to be issued. If that is the case, and all 50 were taken off of my farm ( which would never happen )I still am out of business because of elk

This hunt is a step in the right direction Minister Jeffrey, and we thank-you. Please do not insult the financially devastated landowners now by saying there are only 470 elk, and by issuing a paltry 50 tags.

Elson Ruddy, President

North Hastings and Area Farmers
And Landowners Association

I read this article with great interest. I find the "admitted" number of elk as advertised by the MNR to be unbelievably low. According to the Bancroft Times in the fall of 2007, Dr. Rosatte and the MNR proudly said there were 500 elk in the North Hastings herd. Now, I have great difficulty in believing that the herd size has actually decreased in the last 3 years. As Mr. Ruddy says, the average elk herd increases at an average of 24 to 33% per annum. If this is the case, then the herd in North Hastings has to be more along the lines of 1000 to 1500 animals by now (and 2000 by next fall). When the average number of 470 elk is used in articles such as this, that is what people remember. They do not know that the number is taken from only a small area that the elk actually roam over between HWY 7 and HWY 17 and they do not realize that the number is averaged between 390 and 766.

Rather than the permission for an elk hunt being headline news, for farmers your story should have been about the agricultural policy also included in the Elk Management Plan. As Bette Jean Crews says, that policy allows farmers to apply for permits to harrass or remove (kill) elk who are damaging their crops and fences or harrassing their livestock. If the farmers are lucky in North Hastings, a couple of hundred (minimum) tags should be issued with the assumption that 50% will be filled. The removal permits are more relevant to farmers trying to harvest their crops, preserve their fences and protect their livestock. The hunt is secondary and useless to the farmers until after their harvest.

Carol Counts
Maple Leaf, Ontario

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