A unit of Lasting Forests
Sustained forests; sustained profits
evolving since March 30, 1999

gamma

Gamma Theory

Modern Wild Faunal Resource Management

[ HOME | Gamma Home | Table of Contents | The Finder | Glossary ]

Hunting Concepts

Small game in good habitat cannot be over-harvested by classical harvest techniques.

Hunting losses may add to other mortality (be additive); taking more than natural mortality, or compensatory, taking animals that nature may not take.

Hunting rarely is area-wide or of equal intensity.

The hunted area is that in the stippled zone around the road.

Hunting intensity tends to decrease with distance from roads.

"Hunters per unit area" should have a strong area analysis (e.g., no hunting on steep areas, safety zones, across water, etc.)

Hunting regulations should include (1) area, (2) season length, (3 start date, (4) end date, (5) weapon type, (6) ammo type and number, (7) equipment, and (8) licenses/permits.

"Vulnerability" is a hunter concept, not an animal concept. How vulnerable is an animal to a hunter of type x? Where x is sex, age, experience, health, weapon, and knowledge of the area.

Rather than use permits or season length to regulate a hunt, a season may be closed when the zth animal is checked in.

Hunting tends to be self-regulatory. Hunters go home when the return rate on effort is poor. The result is that a small breeding population is usually left.

Hunting tends to have high returns on the opening days. Closing, then opening a season can get an extra "opening day phenomenon." See other material on season setting.

Hunting has secondary effects on animals:

Hunting success rarely requires taking animals but includes


Other Resources:
[ HOME | Lasting Forests (Introductions) | Units of Lasting Forests | Ranging | Guidance | Forests | Gamma Theory | Wildlife Law Enforcement Systems | Antler Points | Species-Specific Management (SSM) | Wilderness and Ancient Forests | Appendices | Ideas for Development | Disclaimer]
Quick Access to the Contents of LastingForests.com

This Web site is maintained by R. H. Giles, Jr.
Last revision January 17, 2000.