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What do y’all think of the politics of bear hunting in Louisiana?

Posted on 1/18/24 at 10:32 am
Posted by tigerdude12
Member since Feb 2015
746 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 10:32 am
Posted by auggie
Opelika, Alabama
Member since Aug 2013
28262 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 10:35 am to
Just the black bears huh? Sounds raciss.
Posted by CoachChappy
Member since May 2013
32606 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 10:37 am to
If I'm not going to eat it, I don't hunt it unless it is a nuisance animal.

I don't know anything about the current black bear population in Louisiana. If they have become over populated, it may be a good idea to start taking out culls.
Posted by beulahland
Little D'arbonne
Member since Jan 2013
3586 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:08 am to
Tens of thousands are for the plan.
Including landowners whose crops are being ravaged by bears.
Those against bear hunting are a vocal minority. Mostly non hunters who pay nothing tword wildlife conservation.
Posted by kingbob
Sorrento, LA
Member since Nov 2010
67220 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:09 am to
I’ve never seen a wild black bear where I live in Louisiana, but I wouldn’t be surprised if there were any number of them in North Louisiana. I would not be opposed to a limited hunting season with tags similar to how we treat alligators.
Posted by deeprig9
Unincorporated Ozora, Georgia
Member since Sep 2012
64286 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:12 am to
Article is behind paywall.

Posted by doubleb
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2006
36255 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:13 am to
quote:

I’ve never seen a wild black bear where I live in Louisiana, but I wouldn’t be surprised if there were any number of them in North Louisiana. I would not be opposed to a limited hunting season with tags similar to how we treat alligators.


The powers that be are floating the idea of permitting select hunters to kill 10 bears in NE La. this year in an effort to thin the herd and keep bears and humans apart.
Posted by lsufan1971
Zachary
Member since Nov 2003
18401 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:13 am to
quote:

I’ve never seen a wild black bear where I live in Louisiana, but I wouldn’t be surprised if there were any number of them in North Louisiana. I would not be opposed to a limited hunting season with tags similar to how we treat alligators.


We have them in East Feliciana and West Feliciana parishes now. They are like a 400 lb coon. My boss had a 600lb corn feeder turned over by a black bear in Catahoula parish and b destroyed the $1000 feeder.
Posted by ksayetiger
Centenary Gents
Member since Jul 2007
68407 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:17 am to
quote:

My boss had a 600lb corn feeder turned over by a black bear in Catahoula parish and b destroyed the $1000 feeder.



I mean, that's what he gets for feeding bears.










(I am joking)
Posted by auggie
Opelika, Alabama
Member since Aug 2013
28262 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:19 am to
Is it them again Yogi?
Posted by Tchefuncte Tiger
Bat'n Rudge
Member since Oct 2004
57418 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:20 am to
quote:

Article is behind paywall.


...and a blind link to boot! At least post an excerpt of the article.

LINK

quote:

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — A move is underway that wildlife advocates hope will persuade the state to end plans to overturn a nearly 40-year-old hunting ban on Louisiana black bears.

Jeff Dorson, executive director of the Humane Society of Louisiana, started an online petition in late December after the state Department of Wildlife and Fisheries began a process that could let hunters kill up to 10 bears this year.

The petition, which says it’s better to “educate our residents to live with other creatures .. than to kill them,” had just over 7,500 signatures as of Wednesday.

“There’s nothing amusing or entertaining about killing an animal, especially a big omnivore that has such a small population,” Dorson told The Times Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate.

A Louisiana black bear hunt in 1902 inspired the creation of the iconic Teddy bear toy, when President Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt refused to shoot a bear that was tied to a tree by members of his hunting party.

Black bears had all but disappeared from the state by the 1950s and 1960s, but wildlife experts say they’ve counted at least 1,212 bears in just the Mississippi Delta and the Atchafalaya Basin. However, John Hanks, manager of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries large carnivore program, said the current estimate is probably 80% to 90% of the bear population. He said the animals can be found across the state with the largest population in the Tensas National Wildlife Refuge.

Louisiana banned bear hunting in 1988. Four years later, the bear was granted federal protections under the Endangered Species Act. In 2016, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service removed the bear from the endangered list after deeming it mostly recovered.

A carefully managed hunting season will have little impact on the species, state biologists have said.

The proposed hunting season would be limited to December 2024 and confined to the northeast corner of the state — an area that includes Tensas, Madison, East Carroll and West Carroll parishes, and portions of Richland, Franklin and Catahoula parishes. The new rules would prohibit killing juvenile bears weighing under 75 pounds (34 kilograms) as well as females with cubs.

Hunting advocates contend killing a few bears each year will help them from becoming a nuisance in rural and suburban areas. In north Louisiana, black bears are increasingly showing up in people’s yards, where they rummage through trash cans, compost bins and bird feeders in search of food. Pecan and corn growers say bears are also taking a toll on their yields.

“There are ever-increasing reports of bear conflict,” said Mark Lance, a southern region coordinator for the Congressional Sportsmen’s Foundation, a hunting advocacy group. “Hunting is the most desirable way to balance their numbers.”

But opponents said reviving bear hunting seasons will put the animal’s recovery at risk.

Dorson said the state isn’t doing enough to curb bear vs. human conflicts. Rather than kill bears, Louisiana should “teach people to coexist,” he said.

That’s what Florida does through its “ BearWise ” program, which helps residents with wildlife-resistant trash and pet food storage and other strategies that can make properties less attractive to bears, he noted. Some Florida communities have reduced conflicts with bears by 70%, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

Louisiana has a similar program but does far less outreach and education, Dorson said.

Ultimately, he said, bears shouldn’t suffer the consequences of a human-caused problem.

“We’ve taken away most of their land,” he said. “Where else are they supposed to eat?”

Louisiana’s Wildlife and Fisheries department is hosting three public hearings on the proposed hunting season this month in north Louisiana. The first is scheduled Thursday at 6 p.m. at the West Monroe Convention Center in West Monroe. The others will be held Jan. 23 in Delhi at the Black Bear Golf Course Conference Center and on Jan. 25 at the LSU Ag Center in St. Joseph.

Public comments can be submitted to Hanks at jhanks@wlf.la.gov until Feb. 5.
This post was edited on 1/18/24 at 11:26 am
Posted by CoachChappy
Member since May 2013
32606 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:20 am to
quote:

Those against bear hunting are a vocal minority. Mostly non hunters who pay nothing tword wildlife conservation.



What those types usually don't understand is that true conservation means taking some of the population out.
Posted by GumboPot
Member since Mar 2009
119059 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:21 am to
quote:

Department of Wildlife and Fisheries initiated a process that could allow up to 10 hunters to kill one bear each, for a total of 10 bears, next year.


If the biologists have done the work to determine that this is the sustainable limit in Louisiana I’m good with it.
Posted by Sidicous
Middle of Nowhere
Member since Aug 2015
17304 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:24 am to
My 91 year old aunt got a call early last summer from her back door neighbor (wfh) telling her to stay in. A momma bear and cub were in a tree in the back yard.

This is in the middle of suburban West Monroe, mid Wallace Road for those familiar with the area, less than a mile from a WM school aged kids all around the area.
Posted by Broke
AKA Buttercup
Member since Sep 2006
65055 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:27 am to
quote:

I’ve never seen a wild black bear where I live in Louisiana,


The felicianas have quite a few bear
Posted by cwill
Member since Jan 2005
54753 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:27 am to
What's the population? I grew up hunting in the Atchafaylaya Basin and heard about bears, but in all my time in those woods never saw one or knew someone that personally saw one. Has the population grown in recent years?
Posted by The Maj
Member since Sep 2016
27261 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:28 am to
By the time the State allows any intervention, LA will be overrun with black bears... Usually the way it goes...
Posted by Zach
Gizmonic Institute
Member since May 2005
112643 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:30 am to
quote:

I’ve never seen a wild black bear where I live in Louisiana, but I wouldn’t be surprised if there were any number of them in North Louisiana.


I lived in South La. for 18 years and never saw a bear. Lots of gators and lots of poisonous snakes.
I've lived in North La. much longer and never saw a bear. Lots of deer. They eat breakfast in my front yard and then return to the forest an hour before sunrise.
Posted by GumboPot
Member since Mar 2009
119059 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:47 am to
quote:

I’ve never seen a wild black bear where I live in Louisiana,


Mandeville has had a couple of black bear sightings the past decade or so. Wildlife and Fisheries are called in to tranquilize and relocate the bear to the Honey Island swamp area.
Posted by choupiquesushi
yaton rouge
Member since Jun 2006
30762 posts
Posted on 1/18/24 at 11:50 am to
the proper habitat is well past it's carrying capacity. People are seeing many bears in places that have never had them before - it's long past the time for a season
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