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SPORTSMEN AND CONSERVATION
Hunters and anglers are North Americas greatest conservationists
By Matt Young
For more than
a century, sportsmen have stood at the forefront of the conservation movement
in North America. Billions of dollars paid by hunters and anglers for license
fees and excise taxes on sporting goods have conserved tens of millions of
acres of wildlife habitat, and these revenues remain the primary funding source
for state conservation agencies across the United States. Sportsmen also have been
the driving force behind critical national and state conservation legislation;
have founded and generously contribute to nonprofit conservation organizations;
and directly own, lease, and manage land themselves for wildlife. Their
conservation leadership has not only helped to ensure a bright future for
waterfowl and other game, but has also benefited a host of other
wildlifeincluding several threatened and endangered speciesthat share the
same habitats.
A recent nationwide telephone poll conducted by Ducks Unlimited confirmed that,
compared with the general public, hunters as a group are significantly more
committed to conserving wildlife habitat. The survey found that hunters were
more than three times as likely as nonhunters to participate in organized
wildlife conservation efforts. Fifty-one percent of hunters said they belonged
or contributed to conservation organizations, compared with only 15 percent of
nonhunters.
There is no doubt that waterfowlers and other hunters are the most passionate
and sincere supporters of wildlife habitat conservation, says DU Executive
Vice President Don Young. We certainly see this within our own organization.
DU was founded by a group of far-sighted sportsmen 66 years ago, and, today, 90
percent of our members are active hunters who want to give something back to
the resource.
According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), sportsmen provided
$1.8 billion in 2001 through license fees and taxes alone to help fund
conservation efforts nationwide. That same year, hunters contributed another
$200 million to conservation organizations, including DU, and other sportsmens
groups, and spent a staggering $4 billion to lease, manage, and own land for
hunting. The following is an in-depth look at the immense contribution that
sportsmen have made to conservation throughout history, and why participation
in waterfowling and other forms of hunting is critical to the future of
wildlife conservation.
LANDMARK
CONSERVATION LEGISLATION
When the first Europeans arrived on the shores of North America, the continent
harbored a seemingly limitless abundance of wildlife. As settlement rapidly
expanded westward and more land was cleared and developed, however, fish and
game populations suffered dramatic declines. Waterfowl were among the most
exploited of the continents wildlife. Almost everywhere that ducks, geese, and
swans gathered in large numbers, they were gunned from early fall through late
spring by commercial hunters to supply restaurants and markets in major cities.
The market hunters devised a variety of specialized equipmentsuch as punt
guns, sink boxes, and gunning batteriesand used them with devastating effect.
According to George Bird Grinnell, the influential publisher of Forest and
Stream magazine, more than 15,000 canvasbacks were being taken each day by
commercial hunters on Chesapeake Bay alone during the 1870s. This year-round
hunting of waterfowl on their migration and wintering grounds, coupled with
widespread wetland drainage across key breeding areas on the prairies and in
the Great Lakes region, led to sharp declines of many waterfowl populations
during the early 1900s.
American sportsmen were alarmed by dwindling numbers of waterfowl and other
game. Led by visionaries like Grinnell, they organized and pressured their
elected officials to bring an end to the commercial harvest of waterfowl and
other wildlife. As a result, a series of landmark conservation laws were
passed, helping to conserve waterfowl and their habitats to this day.
The first waterfowl hunting laws were passed by states. California established
the first rest area for waterfowl in 1870, and Arkansas banned market hunting
five years later. However, these laws were largely ineffective because of lax
enforcement and corruption. Federal authority was clearly needed to effectively
manage the harvest of waterfowl and other migratory birds, which cross state
and international boundaries. In 1913, President Howard Taft signed the
Weeks-McClean Act, placing migratory birds under federal protection. Waterfowl
management was further strengthened in 1918 by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act,
based upon the treaty signed by the United States and Great Britain (on behalf
of Canada). The legislation established federal bag limits for waterfowl, protected
threatened species, and banned market hunting, spring shooting, and the use of
shotguns larger than 10-gauge.
PAYING
THE BILL FOR WILDLIFE
While harvest regulations helped many waterfowl species rebound, wetlands and
other habitats continued to be lost at an alarming rate, and sportsmen realized
that legislation providing funds for habitat conservation would be required to
sustain waterfowl and other wildlife populations. In 1934, President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt appointed Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist and avid
waterfowler Jay N. Ding Darling as chief of the Bureau of Biological Survey,
the forerunner of the USFWS. Through skilled and tireless lobbying efforts,
Darling and his allies successfully pushed the Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation
Act through Congress that same yeara remarkable achievement during the Great
Depression. This act included the initiation of the federal duck stamp program.
To date, the sale of duck stampsprimarily to waterfowlershas raised $675
million, which has directly purchased more than 5 million acres of wetlands as
part of the national wildlife refuge system.
The next major legislation supporting wildlife conservation in the United
States was the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act, or Pittman-Robertson
Act, of 1937. Sponsored by Congressman A. Willis Robertson of Virginia and
Senator Key Pittman of Nevada, the act established an 11 percent manufacturers
excise tax on sporting rifles, shotguns, ammunition, and archery equipment, and
a 10 percent tax on handguns. The shooting sports industry strongly supported
this legislation, even at the risk of losing sales, at a time when most
Americans had little money to spend on recreation. The USFWS distributes the
tax revenues to state conservation departments, which partially match federal
funds, largely with money raised from the sale of hunting and fishing licenses.
In this way, all gun buyers and participants in the shooting sportseven those
who dont huntdirectly support wildlife habitat conservation.
How important are Pittman-Robertson funds to state wildlife agencies? A recent
report by the Izaak Walton League found that 37 states rely on license sales
and federal aid dollars paid by hunters and anglers to provide two-thirds or
more of their wildlife agencys funding. Twenty of these states relied
exclusively on sportsmens dollars to fund their wildlife agency. Revenues from
the program have been used to purchase, develop, and manage more than 4 million
acres as state wildlife management areas; restore Canada goose, wood duck,
turkey, beaver, elk, bighorn sheep, pronghorn, and moose populations; and to
support hunter education and wildlife research.
THE
ROLE OF CONSERVATION ORGANIZATIONS
Despite the success of conservation efforts in the United States, little
funding was available to conserve wetlands in Canada, where most of North
Americas waterfowl breed. In 1937, a small group of far-sighted waterfowlers,
led by printing magnate Joseph A. Knapp, founded Ducks Unlimited to raise funds
from American waterfowlers to restore wetlands on the drought-ravaged Canadian
prairies. Throughout DUs 66-year history, the generous support of several
million waterfowlers has enabled the organization to raise more than $1.6
billion, which has contributed to the conservation of nearly 11 million acres
of prime wildlife habitat across North America. DU served as a model for
several other conservation organizations founded by sportsmen during the past
century, including the Ruffed Grouse Society in 1961, National Wild Turkey
Federation in 1973, Pheasants Forever in 1982, and Rocky Mountain Elk
Foundation in 1984.
In addition to conducting on-the-ground conservation work, Ducks Unlimited and
its partners have sponsored several critical pieces of federal legislation that
have conserved millions of additional acres of wetlands and other critical
wildlife habitats. Among the most significant was the conservation title in the
2002 Farm Bill. Through cost-effective, incentive-based programs, such as the
Conservation Reserve Program and the Wetlands Reserve Program, this six-year
legislation helps farmers, ranchers, and other private landowners restore and
protect wetlands and associated uplands on agricultural lands. Another critical
piece of legislation reauthorized in 2002, with strong support from DU members
and other sportsmen, is the North American Wetlands Conservation Act (NAWCA),
which provides federal matching grants for wetland conservation projects in the
United States, Canada, and Mexico. To date, NAWCA has helped fund nearly 1,000
wetland projectstotaling nearly 9 million acres of habitatacross North
America. And, in 2003, DU and other sportsmen-funded organizations are working
together to ensure continued federal protection for so-called isolated
wetlands, such as prairie potholes, playa lakes, vernal pools, and many other
critical waterfowl habitats.
PRIVATE
LANDS
Waterfowlers and other hunters have not only made significant contributions to
wildlife habitat conservation by supporting government programs and
conservation organizations, but through private land management as well.
According to the 2001 National Survey of Hunting, Fishing, and
Wildlife-Associated Recreation, sportsmen own nearly 118 million acres and
lease an additional 225 million acres of land for hunting in the United States.
By purchasing and leasing land, hunters have directly conserved millions of
acres of critical habitat and have provided a strong economic incentive for
other landowners, such as farmers and corporations, to manage their lands in a
wildlife-friendly manner as well.
Waterfowlers have helped to save a large proportion of wetlands that remain in
many regions, including the Great Lakes watershed, Atlantic Coast, Mississippi
Delta, and Intermountain West. However, perhaps nowhere have waterfowlers made
a greater contribution to conservation than in the Central Valley of
California, where more than 60 percent of Pacific Flyway waterfowl winter.
Nearly 95 percent of the regions original 4 million acres of wetlands have
been lost, and roughly 70 percent of its remaining 300,000 acres of wetlands
are privately owned, primarily by duck clubs.
Many sportsmen who own land for hunting go a step further to permanently
protect the ecological value of their property by donating conservation
easements to DU. Under these legal agreements, landowners donate the
development rights on their property to DU; in exchange they get tax
reductionsmainly against income and estate taxesand peace of mind knowing
that the resources and lifestyle they cherish will remain for future
generations. DU has received conservation easements from private landowners
protecting nearly 174,000 acres in the United States, including many of the
continents most valuable wetlands for waterfowl and other migratory birds.
THE
FUTURE OF HUNTING AND CONSERVATION
Without alternative sources of revenue, sportsmen will continue to be the
primary financial supporters of wildlife conservation in North America for the
foreseeable future. Fortunately, an overwhelming majority of U.S. citizens
continue to support hunting and angling as legitimate uses of the nations fish
and wildlife. A recent Gallup Poll found that 76 percent of Americans opposed
banning all forms of hunting, and a similar survey conducted by Ducks Unlimited
found that 67 percent approve of hunting.
During the past decade, generally high duck and goose populations and liberal
harvest regulations have offered waterfowlers unprecedented hunting
opportunities. In response, the number of active adult waterfowl hunters in the
United States has increased from 1.2 million hunters during the 1991-1992
season to 1.6 million hunters during the 2000-2001 season. Todays waterfowlers
also are enjoying more time in the field, are bagging more birds, and are
spending more money in pursuit of their sport. Despite these promising trends
in waterfowling, the overall number of hunters in the United States continues
to gradually decline, and the average age of the hunting population is
increasing as well. Recruiting new waterfowlers and other hunters, especially
from among the nations youth, will be critical to the future of our sporting
tradition and wetlands and wildlife conservation.
Throughout its history, Ducks Unlimited has been among the strongest supporters
of waterfowling and shooting sports in North America. DU consistently ranks
among the top five private gun buyers in the United States, annually purchasing
more than 15,000 firearms used as raffle and auction items to raise funds for
its conservation programs. In addition, DUs three Great Outdoor Festivals
celebrate all forms of hunting and angling, and introduce thousands of
attendees, including many youngsters, to the shooting sports. DU also holds
hundreds of clay target shoots and Greenwing events across the country each
year, and is a member and supporter of the National Shooting Sports Foundation,
Becoming an Outdoors Woman program, and the International Hunter Education
Program. Most recently, DU has joined a lawsuit defending hunting on national
wildlife refuges, and has joined a coalition of conservation organizations,
hunters groups, and government agencies in endorsing the Hunting Heritage
Accord. Clearly, hunting and conservation are inseparable, and DU will continue
to do its part to ensure a bright future for waterfowling by efficiently
conserving the habitats used by the birds upon which the tradition depends.
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