Baying for cougar blood in Oregon
Yet more bad wildlife news from Oregon … Gov. Kulongoski recently signed a bill allowing hound hunting of cougars and bears by anyone “selected, trained and supervised” by the Fish and Wildlife department. The bill ignores the will of the state’s voters, who have repeatedly voted not to reinstate a 1994 ban on hound hunting.
And all Oregon hunters can bag a mountain lion for the price of a couple six-packs of Bud. Fish and Wildlife dropped the cost of a lion tag from $50 to $10 after the ban was passed, and added the tag to its popular “SportsPac” combo of fishing and hunting licenses. The Eugene Weekly reports:
Record numbers of cougars have been shot by hunters in the past several years, according to ODFW’s website. ODFW sold almost 39,000 cougar hunting tags last year.
ODFW estimates there are about 5,000 cougars in Oregon. In 2006 284 (NOTE: original EW story says 442 but that’s not correct) cougars were killed in this state.
Meanwhile, no one really knows how many cougars are in the West, or what a sustainable level of “harvest” looks like. Biologists admit that population estimates are mostly based on anecdotal evidence and guesswork, and that hunting quotas are influenced much more by politics than by science (see our earlier story ). And with 39,000 tags sold for 5,000 animals, Oregon puts no limits on lion take.