Global Warming to kill Mule Deer

This entry was posted by on Monday, 5 May, 2008 at

Below is an article posted in the Washington Press where hunting and fishing organizations are referred to as swing groups, where there seems to be a race by sportsmen’s organizations to be politically correct, and where mule deer are expected to disappear from the Western US.

I’m afraid that Mule Deer have a lot more to worry about than global warming ( how many Mule Deer have disappeared because of lions and coyotes? ) Check out the article below, then click on this link to see how much you know about Global Warming.

Hunters, anglers worry about global warming, loss of wildlife
WASHINGTON (AP):
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Global warming could force elk and mule deer from much of the western United States. Wild trout could disappear in lower Appalachian streams. Two-thirds of America’s ducks may disappear.

A new U.S. assessment of the threat to fish and wildlife habitat has hunters and anglers calling for action.

Groups representing nine major hunting and fishing organizations planned to meet Thursday with the House committee chairman who hopes to write legislation to curtail greenhouse gases linked to global warming.

“These are the branches of the conservation movement from which I come,” Democratic Rep. John Dingell said in an interview with The Associated Press. Dingell said the groups’ concerns are very important in helping with a measure to address the problem.

Dingell is an avid sportsman whose office is adorned with hunting and fishing trophies. As the leader of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, he has promised action on climate change. He also has issued a series of reports examining legislation that would cap carbon dioxide _ a product of burning fossil fuels _ and other greenhouse gases. The Senate is considering similar legislation.

The alarm sounded by hunting and fishing organizations is significant.

They “are a critical swing constituency in so many states,” said Paul Bledsoe, a spokesman for the National Commission on Energy Policy. The bipartisan group argues for mandatory steps to reduce climate change pollution.

Alan Wentz of Ducks Unlimited Inc., one of the groups meeting with Dingell, noted that scientists are predicting that climate change “will significantly affect almost every aspect of our environment, including North America’s wetlands and waterfowl.”

The others are Trout Unlimited, Pheasants Forever, BAAS/ESPN Outdoors, Izaak Walton League of America, Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies, the Coastal Conservation Association, the American Sportsfishing Association, Pheasants Forever and the Wildlife Management Institute, a Washington-based advocacy group for hunters and sportsmen.

“Sportsmen are seeing the effects of climate change and know full well that foresight and proactive management will be necessary to help fish and wildlife adapt,” said George Cooper, president of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership.

A report compiled by the Wildlife Management Institute and based on work done by the groups provided a glimpse of their concerns. It says:

_Prairie pothole regions essential for waterfowl could lose 90 percent of their wetlands, causing a 69 percent decline in North America’s breeding ducks.

_About 42 percent of the trout and salmon habitat could be lost by the end of the century, with bull trout virtually disappearing in the high mountain West and wild trout from lower Appalachian streams.

_The number of Pronghorn antelope, elk and mule deer will dwindle as rising temperatures allow trees and shrubs to overwhelm the sagebrush ecosystem in the West.

_Populations of bobwhite quail will shrink in the Deep South as summertime drought and higher temperatures disrupt their breeding cycles. And drier conditions in fall and early spring will threaten quail in the Southwest.

_While an increase in water temperature and other change could benefit some salt water marine species, sea-level rise would destroy thousands of acres of coastal salt marshes and seagrass that are home to larval and juvenile game fish.

“We know now that climate change has the very real potential to affect fish and wildlife resources and activities that hunters and angers hold dear … and on a landscape level scale that is incomparable in modern times,” warned Matt Hogan, executive director of the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies.

5 Responses to “Global Warming to kill Mule Deer”

  1. Huh. That was odd. I never knew I was supposed to climb aboard this global warming boat. How ridiculous.

    I don’t get how higher temperatures are going to make trees and shrubs wipe out the sagebrush ecosystem First off, wouldn’t higher temperatures and drier weather be MORE conducive to sagebrush than trees and shrubs? Secondly, even if trees and shrubs replaced the sage – doesn’t that still give deer and elk all they need? I just don’t get it. I don’t like to get involved in political stuff – but I don’t care for my money being thrown at stuff I don’t agree with, either.

  2. It’s kinda strange how the climate has been changing for millions of years for various different reason – volcanic eruptions, meteors smacking into the planet, glacial movements etc…even if humans are the cause of it….who are we to stop climate change? That don’t think we shouldn’t cut down our carbon emissions, but we’re getting a little too worked up over this thing.

  3. Tom and Jim,

    I believe the global warming scam is being used for certain political purposes. I also believe that there is nothing we as humans can do to alter global warming or cooling, since warming and cooling cycles are much bigger than all of us combined. Heck, we can’t even understand these cycles let alone control them. I see nothing wrong with trying to understand. If we want to quickly reduce CO2 then all we have to do is stop planting so many trees and cut down the rain forest. Just kidding.

    Admin

  4. Mary

    Global warming is a very serious issue and I hate all you hunters wasting EVERYTHING. I can’t even enjoy a nice walk in the wilderness without stumbling upon trash that you’ve left, polluting this beautiful earth.

  5. Humans are not in control of the earth nor are they in control of warming and cooling cycles. Hunters are no more trashy than the rest of the population. Waste is in the eye of the beholder. For me, I am not wasting a deer when I eat it or when I have a wall-mount made from the cape and antlers. Wasting a deer, for me, is when the deer dies of old age or is killed by a car or a predator.

    Admin


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