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Lessons in Wildlife Management
Initially, wildlife management in the United States was skewed toward protection. In the early 1900s, for example, wildlife managers attempted to preserve a mule deer herd in the remote Kaibab Plateau of Arizona. Hunting was banned, and predators were destroyed. The result was severe overpopulation, habitat destruction, and mass starvation.

wildlife management: Science and practice of maintaining wildlife populations and their habitats
The Kaibab Plateau was opened to hunting in 1929, which brought the population into balance with the habitat. Today, a large, healthy herd of mule deer inhabits the area.
Around the same period, a similar event took place in Pennsylvania. Deer had been brought into the state after the native population was thought to be extinct. With most of the predators eliminated and little hunting allowed, the herd grew out of control. As the food supply dwindled, thousands of white-tailed deer starved to death.
From these hard lessons wildlife managers learned that there is more to conservation then just protecting wildlife. They discovered that nature overproduces its game resources and that good wildlife management yields a surplus that can be harvested by hunters.

The North American Model of Wildlife Conservation
In the first two decades of the 20th century, sportsmen from the United
States and Canada developed a set of guiding principles for managing wildlife
resources. Called the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation, these
seven principles provide the foundation for the success of fish and wildlife
conservation in North America.
- Wildlife is public property. The government holds wildlife in trust for the
benefit of all people.
- Wildlife cannot be slaughtered for commercial use. This policy eliminates trafficking
in dead game animals.
- Wildlife is allocated by law. Every citizen in good standing—regardless of
wealth, social standing, or land ownership—is allowed to participate in the
harvest of fish and wildlife within guidelines set by lawmakers.
- Wildlife shall be taken by legal and ethical means, in the spirit of "fair chase,"
and with good cause. Animals can be killed only for legitimate purposes—for
food and fur, in self-defense, or for protection of property.
- Wildlife is an international resource. As such, hunting and fishing shall be
managed cooperatively across state and province boundaries.
- Wildlife management, use, and conservation shall be based on sound scientific
knowledge and principles.
- Hunting, fishing, and trapping shall be democratic. This gives all persons—
rich and poor alike—the opportunity to participate.
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No North American animal has become extinct because of sport hunting. |
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