Rounder
Offical New Hampshire Hunting Safety Course New Hampshire Fish and Game

Hello, hunter! The New Hampshire online hunting course has moved. Click here to go to the latest version of the Today's Hunter in New Hampshire course—the official hunting safety course of the New Hampshire Fish and Game.

The following course material is for reference only. Please go to the new course to complete your New Hampshire certification.

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.

Buck with doe

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.

Causes of Threatened and Endangered Species

Chart showing causes of species endangerment

Remember

No North American animal has become extinct because of sport hunting.

Separator
New Hampshire
Fish and Game
White-tailed deer tracks
< Back to Previous Page Table of Contents Go to Next Page >

New Hampshire Hunting
License Information
Official hunting safety course for Northeast hunters last modified: September 6, 2011
Email with questions or comments about this web site.
Questions? Call Today's Hunter at 1-800-830-2268
Copyright © 2002 - 2011 Kalkomey, Inc. All rights reserved.
Review Hunter Ed's privacy policy.
Rounder