Benefit Of Hunting Essay

1573 Words4 Pages

The Benefits of hunting in our Society(Draft) Hunting has always been a cornerstone of the American way of life. To Our forefathers, and Native Americans before them, hunting was a necessary for their survival. In our current times hunting, generally, is not viewed as a way of life, but as a destructive pastime. What most people don't understand is that without hunting, the population of deer and other wild game could grow to unsustainable levels. Without hunters, animals could overpopulate, and cause great ecological damage. The role that hunting plays in sustaining animal populations is defiantly the difference between sustained populations, and mass starvations. Is hunting really necessary in the maintenance of a balanced ecosystem? …show more content…

In 1978, the town officials banned hunting in the area, thinking that they would be helping the natural symbiotic balance. The ordinance in fact had the completely opposite effect. Deer quickly began to overproduce at a tremendous rate. Besides damaging cars and plants, the estimated herd of 500 deer were slowly starving themselves by overpopulating the area. They had very low body weight, as well as a low body fat percentage, and poor reproductive success ( Budiansky). After the idea of killing the deer was brought out into the public, the Humane Society of the United States, quickly tried to have it stopped. After the Humane Society was turned down in court, police officers were hired to carry out the shooting. In 1993 they shot eighty deer. The next year as many as a 160 were shot, and many more are killed each year to maintain a balance of deer and food. According to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety In 2008 deer collided with over one million automobiles in the U.S. alone, each time causing an average of $2,000 per collusion. Farmers also suffer from the overpopulated herds. Deer and other animals eat billions of dollars worth of fruit and crops each year ( Insurance Institute for Highway Safety). The scope of problems associated with heard overpopulation goes further then the ecological damage they cause. The economic damage done to the economy is more than one billion a

Open Document