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An Environmental Guide to the
Hunters' Ten Commandments
1 - The hunt is 'applied' nature conservation
FALSE! Hunters exploit nature; they do NOT conserve it. At the most they preserve the species which are of interest
to them as prey. As a matter of interest German hunters discharge tons of highly toxic lead in the countryside annually -
not a bad contribution to conservation!
2 - Hunting is necessary to regulate wild animal numbers
FALSE!
Population regulation is not achieved through hunting but takes place as a result of infectious diseases, inter-racial competition
and shortage of food in winter. In areas of Europe where hunting is forbidden, for example the extensive Italian National
parks or in the Swiss Canton of Geneva, excessive populations of wild animals have not been recorded to date.
3
- Hunting takes care of annual surpluses
ONLY PARTLY TRUE. The estimation of surplus populations can only be estimated,
and then not completely accurately, for permanent populations of certain species (in Germany Fallow, Red and Roe deer). No
one can forecast the size of the annual arctic geese and duck populations which overwinter in our climes, and which are enthusiastically
hunted here, as the breeding success can vary greatly from season to season.
4 - No species is actively endangered
by Hunting
FALSE! Many species which are still legally hunted in Germany (Brown Hare, Pine Marten, Woodcock and Grey
Partridge) are on the national or regional Red Lists of endangered species. Hunting is not of course the only threat; but
it is not exactly conducive to their conservation.
5 - Hunters are a substitute for the extinct predators
FALSE!
Predators prefer old, sick and weak animals and thereby assist in preserving a healthy wild animal population. A hunter, who
shoots over long distances, can seldom determine if an animal is sick or old. Hunters kill according to other criteria for
example deer with particularly well-developed antlers. In addition the annual killing of some 700,000 martens, foxes and weasels
decimates the few remaining predators.
6 - Hunting is our Heritage
DEPENDS! Heritage has been defined
as the sum of the national intellectual and artistic expression and its way of life, upbringing and educational development
(Duden, Vol 5, 1982). It can safely be left to each citizens personal judgement as to whether the killing of wild animals
fits this description.
7 - Hunting prevents damage to the natural environment by wild animals
FALSE! The
opposite is often the case. Unnatural provision of food in winter for deer and wild boar can lead to a tenfold increase in
population which leads to massive damage to the environment. Hunting also leads to great expenditure of energy by wild animals
which increases their feeding requirements and the collateral natural damage.
8 - Hunting is also necessary within
nature reserves
FALSE! In almost every other country in the world hunting in nature reserves is forbidden, and there
are no signs that the natural balance is threatened. In the few nature reserves that exist in Germany the wildlife should
also be free from human persecution.
9 - The hunting license examination is a form of green matriculation
FALSE!
The one-sided and ideologically coloured knowledge that the examinee is required to learn would not enable him or her to achieve
a pass mark in a basic biology exam.
10 - Hunting follows the principles of German sportsmanship
CORRECT!
Unfortunately no one can define exactly what these 'sporting principles' are. There is no legal definition each individual
hunter applies them - enthusiastically - according to his or her own interpretation.
© Proact 2001 - 2004
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