HUNTERS AND HUNTING PATTERNS IN PART OF THE KAIMANAWA RECREATIONAL HUNTING AREA

被引:9
作者
FRASER, KW
SWEETAPPLE, PJ
机构
[1] Landcare Research New Zealand Ltd, Christchurch
关键词
RECREATION; HUNTING; HUNTER STATISTICS; MOTIVATION; WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT; KAIMANAWA RANGE; SIKA DEER; CERVUS-NIPPON; RED DEER; CERVUS-ELAPHUS-SCOTICUS;
D O I
10.1080/03014223.1992.10422313
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
A postal survey of 156 hunters who used the three southeastern-most hunting blocks in the Kaimanawa Recreational Hunting Area (RHA) in 1986 and 1987 achieved a 74% response rate. Comparison of age distributions from this and earlier hunter surveys confirmed an apparent decline in recruitment of young hunters entering the sport during the 1980s. Most hunters had considerable experience (>10 years) and were motivated not only by hunting success but also by the aesthetic value of the outdoor experience. The prime motivation for hunting in the Kaimanawa RHA was the presence of sika deer, and more than two-thirds of the hunters came from outside the Tongariro/Taupo Conservancy. Hunting pressure over current sika deer range in the central North Island may decline if this species continues to disperse naturally or through illegal liberations to other areas. Most (80%) hunters felt that deer densities were acceptable and were satisfied with the present unrestricted hunting system. Fewer than half (41%) the respondents were in favour of active management in the Kaimanawa RHA. Suggestions for active management focused on increasing hunter safety and increasing hunting success rates. Deer densities, as indicated by faecal pellet counts, were inversely related to hunting pressure. Variation in hunting pressure between areas was caused mainly by differences in accessibility. This indicates some potential for manipulation of deer density through options such as increasing access to remote areas or restrictions on hunting pressure.
引用
收藏
页码:91 / 98
页数:8
相关论文
共 15 条
[1]  
Baddeley C.J., Assessments of wild animal abundance, New Zealand Forest Service, FRI Bulletin, 106, (1985)
[2]  
Challies C.N., Establishment, control, and commercial exploitation of wild deer in New Zealand, Biology of Deer Production. Royal Society of New Zealand Bulletin, 22, pp. 23-36, (1985)
[3]  
Davidson M.M., Fraser K.W., Official hunting patterns, and trends in the proportions of sika (Cervus nippon) and red deer (C. Elaphus Scoticus) in the Kaweka Range, New Zealand, 1958-1988, New Zealand Journal of Ecology, 15, pp. 31-40, (1991)
[4]  
Decker D.J., Brown T.L., Gutierrez R.J., Further insights into the multiple satisfactions approach for hunter management, Wildlife Society Bulletin, 8, pp. 323-331, (1980)
[5]  
Fraser K.W., Recreational hunting areas - a thorn in the Department of Conservation’s side? Management of New Zealand's natural estate, New Zealand Ecological Society Occasional Publication, 1, pp. 108-111, (1989)
[6]  
Fraser K.W., Batcheler C.L., Recreational hunting in future management of wild animals. In: Seminar 2000: The future of New Zealand’s wild animals, Proceedings of a National Seminar, pp. 126-129, (1989)
[7]  
Groome K., Simmons D.G., Clark L.D., The recreational hunter: Central North Island study, Lincoln College Department of Horticulture, Landscape and Parks Bulletin, 38, (1983)
[8]  
Hendee J.C., A multiple satisfaction approach to game management, Wildlife Society Bulletin, 2, pp. 104-113, (1974)
[9]  
Miers K., Wild animal control: Changing emphasis towards the 1990s, Forest and Bird, 16, 3, pp. 5-6, (1985)
[10]  
Nugent G., Successful control of fallow deer by recreational hunters in the Blue Mountains, Otago, New Zealandjournal of Forestry Science, 18, pp. 239-252, (1988)