Responsible Policies for Animals, Inc.
RPA is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt educational nonprofit organization.

Educating Leaders for a Humane Future
About RPA
Support RPA
Campaigns
Wildlife
Animal Rights
RPA Literature
RPA Statement on Violence
For Animal Advocates
RPA in the News
Newsletters
Home

 
This Land is Their Land RPA's Campaign for Wildlife

RPA's Campaign To Protect Wildlife

Responsible Policies for Animals' (RPA's) wildlife campaign, This Land Is Their Land, recognizes that human beings are not the only species entitled to sound habitat in which to live. RPA believes, along with many up-to-date urban planners, architects, environmentalists, conservationists, and others, that human land-use practices have in many ways become harmful to people, families, and communities.

Homeowners, farmers, realtors, builders, landscape designers, urban planners, architects: How can our society protect wildlife from being killed accidentally by automobiles, from being killed deliberately because they live where people make ideal habitat for them, from destruction of their habitat for unnecessary human practices, from results of over-farming the land to feed animals raised for food, from suburban sprawl with its forest and wetland destruction.

Tell us what you think at RPA4all@aol.com, P.O. Box 891, Glenside, PA 19038, or 215-886-RPA1.

Wildlife suffer even more than people from suburban sprawl, automobile dependency, forest fragmentation, 24 million acres of U.S. land covered with nonnative turf grass, and other disruptions of natural ecosystems. RPA's This Land Is Their Land campaign maintains it is inhumane and unethical to kill animals short of their species' natural lifespans other than to remedy irremediable suffering. The deer and goose slaughters perpetrated throughout the East Coast, in the Midwest, and elsewhere are unethical and reflect an unfortunate determination on the part of our government to rely on anti-environmental approaches.

Because "wildlife management" policies and poor land use have created virtually all situations that now lead to complaints about wildlife from many people, every complaint about free-roaming nonhuman animals should be assumed to indicate a change in human practices is required, not further or harm to animals.

RPA's This Land Is Their Land website page is just getting started. We hope the items currently posted will prove helpful, and we hope you will visit again soon for more! Thank you for your efforts to protect wildlife.

September 2003


RPA Factsheet #4

Deer Kills: A Bad Idea -- for Animals, Ecosystems, and People

Human beings do not have total control over all other species despite our species' huge impacts. The dramatically increased presence of white-tailed deer throughout the East Coast and elsewhere in the last couple of decades is mainly due to the transformation of the landscape brought about by our species -- suburban sprawl in particular. Altering the landscape brings about countless changes, some of them conspicuous, some of them at a microscopic level, some to our liking, some not. To reverse unwanted changes, we must again change the landscape.

Deer kills are essentially the same as deer hunting administered for many decades by the Pennsylvania Game Commission and other state wildlife agencies. Broadly speaking, hunting and suburban deer kills operate the same way:

(1) Destroy sections of forest, providing abundant new low-growing vegetation - deer food.

(2) Kill enough deer so that the population is noticeably smaller immediately afterwards but few enough so that surviving deer produce an overall increase in the local population.

(3) Same as (2) the following year and for years to come as long as other factors remain the same.

The increase in the deer population after a sizeable kill that does not amount to an extermination is a response to the new landscape with more food per animal than the old landscape with more deer. That is why some places in the Philadelphia area where deer "management" consists of killing deer have had deer kills every year far beyond a decade.

The part of the landscape known as "edge" - forest edges or clearings - is where sunlight provides the most low-growing vegetation. That is where deer obtain most of their food. Edge may consist of backyards, gardens, golf courses, roadways, or Game Commission clearcuts - wherever the forest that used to stretch from the Atlantic Coast to the Mississippi River is interrupted. Edge is deer food regardless of human intentions.

As Dr. Thomas Eveland said in his presentation Why Killing Deer Makes Poor Park Management, in Philadelphia on June 15, 1998, "A quick surge in a deer population can occur if hunting is implemented where it hasn't been before. In any event, if hunting is started, it'll have to continue." As Dr. Allen T. Rutberg wrote in "The Science of Deer Management: An Animal Welfare Perspective," "The most visible weakness in the assertion that hunting is necessary to control deer populations is that it has largely failed to do so over the last two decades. … Just because deer are being killed doesn't mean that deer populations are being controlled."

How should problems associated with deer be solved, then? The main thing is to recognize each of the typical complaints - Lyme disease, the eating of vegetation, and car-deer collisions - as human-caused problems that must be solved through changes in human practices. Responsible Policies for Animals, Inc. (RPA) is glad to provide details of the approaches briefly outlined here. Many items in the attached reading list give details. RPA believes one consideration in important choices like home purchasing and car driving should always be what animals are likely to be encountered and whether one is prepared to co-exist humanely with them.

The American Lyme Disease Foundation does not recommend killing deer to prevent Lyme disease, and in some locations where all deer were removed, incidence of the disease did not diminish. Useful short-term approaches include avoiding walking through brush when outdoors and to check for the very small ticks that spread Lyme disease after time outdoors.

Car-deer collisions depend on how much and how fast human beings drive. They peak during hunting and mating seasons. Special signs and patrolling can help. Roadside reflectors that cause deer not to enter roadways when cars are approaching between dusk and dawn are highly effective if installed and maintained properly. See http://www.strieter-lite.com or phone 309-794-9800.

Fencing can keep deer away from vegetation people wish to protect, over large or small areas. Vendors with expert staff include Benner's Gardens - 800-753-4660 / http://www.bennersgardens.com; Master Gardening - 301-694-1238 / http://www.mastergardening.com; and Wildlife Control Technology - 800-235-0262 / http://www.wildlife-control.com. It also helps to plant species deer do not prefer to eat.

Large-scale, long-term solutions to which we all can contribute will be the most effective, the most humane, and the best for people and ecosystems. Developing a genuine ecological perspective rather that of the last few centuries based on convenience, domination, manipulation, exploitation, and short-term private gain will help bring about the changes that are needed for human beings to live in peace with white-tailed deer and other wildlife as well as with each other.

Solutions must include restoring forest to the extent possible, including where no deer currently exist. Changes that will help: minimizing needless farming such as intensive feed-crop production for animals not needed for the human diet; curtailing and reversing suburban sprawl, which contributes to economic problems, air and water pollution, the breakdown of families and communities, and significant urban problems from loss of the tax base; and ending construction of new roads. The New Urbanism is on the right track.

In terms of individual American homes, trees are the only plantings that appreciate in value. Learning to emphasize native tree species rather than water-, fuel-, and time-wasting non-native grass lawns can help restore forest where houses and other structures already exist. Eventually, whether houses remain or not, trees will form forest canopies that will slow or prevent the growth of huge deer-food supplies. As Virginia Scott Jenkins writes in her book The Lawn: A History of an American Obsession, "A new landscape is a cultural creation, and it remains to be seen whether the environmental movement in this country can enlist as potent a group of supporters and teachers for the twenty-first century as the lawn industry, the Garden Club of America, the U.S. Golf Association, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture did during the twentieth century."

Thomas Berry explains in his essay on education "The American College in the Ecological Age," that "the emerging ecological phase" of human existence must, in building on the "scientific-technological phase" that has made our society much of what it is today, correct the destruction brought about by that last phase, in which "[o]ur concern for the natural world is one of utility or as an object to satisfy intellectual curiosity or aesthetic feeling."

No matter how quickly deer may die when shot - and wounding is common notwithstanding claims to the contrary - it is never humane to kill an animal short of his or her natural lifespan except to end irremediable suffering. Almost all human enterprise as we know it today developed without responsible policies for animals. Responsible Policies for Animals, Inc., a 501(c)(3) educational nonprofit organization, works to show influential people and institutions how to establish responsible policies for animals that are also responsible policies for people and ecosystems.

Recommended Reading

William S. Alverson, Walter Kuhlman, and Donald M. Waller, Wild Forests: Conservation Biology and Public Policy. Washington, D.C.: Island Press, 1994.

Animal Protection Institute, Humane Ways To Live with Deer. Brochure provided by the Animal Protection Institute. http://www.api4animals.org or 800-348-7387.

Thomas Berry, The Dream of the Earth. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1988.

Michelle S. Byers, "Sprawl Boosts Risk of Lyme Disease." New Jersey Conservation Foundation, April 16, 2003, Volume XXXV, Number 14.

David Cantor, "Killing Deer No Solution to, and Deer Not the Cause of, Pennsylvania 'Deer Problem.'" Proceedings of the Conference on the Impact of Deer on the Biodiversity and Economy of the State of Pennsylvania, September 24-26, 1999. Available from Responsible Policies for Animals, Inc., free of charge: RPA4all@aol.com or 215-886-RPA1 (-7721). Also at http://pa.audubon.org/dcp.htm.

David J. Cantor, "Land Use, Not Deer, Is Villain." USA Today, January 2, 2001 (letter). Available from Responsible Policies for Animals, Inc., free of charge: RPA4all@aol.com or 215-886-RPA1 (-7721).

David J. Cantor, "White-Tailed Deer: The Phantom Menace." The Animals' Agenda, September/October, 1999. Available from Responsible Policies for Animals, Inc., free of charge: RPA4all@aol.com or 215-886-RPA1 (-7721).

Alicia Chang, "Study: Risk of Lyme Disease Increases as Forests Shrink." Associated Press, February 23, 2003.

Dr. Thomas Eveland, Living with Deer. Booklet provided by The Fund for Animals. www.fund.org or 301-585-2591.

John Hadidian, Guy R. Hodge and John W. Grandy, eds., Wild Neighbors: The Humane Approach to Living with Wildlife. Golden, Colorado: Fulcrum, 1997.

Virginia Scott Jenkins, The Lawn: A History of an American Obsession. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1994.

James Howard Kunstler, The Geography of Nowhere: The Rise and Decline of America's Man-Made Landscape. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1993.

James Howard Kunstler, Home from Nowhere: Remaking Our Everyday World for the 21st Century. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996.

Robert Ornstein and Paul Ehrlich, New World New Mind. New York: Doubleday, 1989.

Holmes Rolston, III, Environmental Ethics: Duties to and Values in the Natural World. Philadelphia: Temple UP, 1988.

Allen T. Rutberg, Ph.D., "The Science of Deer Management: An Animal Welfare Perspective," in William J. McShea, H. Brian Underwood, and John H. Rappole, eds., The Science of Overabundance: Deer Ecology and Population Management. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997.

RPA Factsheet #5

The Human Causes of "Too Many Deer":
What Decision-Makers and Residents
Should Know about Organized Deer Kills

For decades, land-use practices in many parts of the United States that involve destroying forest and creating edge lands with abundant low-growing vegetation have naturally brought increases in deer populations. Deer eat low-growing plants, and food supply is a key factor determining animals' populations. Suburban sprawl is a form of edge land that has spread rapidly, occupies far more land than our species needs, has far-reaching impacts on natural ecosystems, and entails far more car driving than is good for people, wildlife, or ecosystems.

Farms, another form of edge land that maintains large deer populations, occupies much more land than necessary to feed the human population, because more than 60 percent of the major grain crops and soybeans grown in the U.S. are fed to animals being raised for food. Since deer populations grow and flourish on farm crops, over-farming the land, like suburban sprawl, produces many more deer than used to live in human-inhabited areas. Large deer populations are common where wooded areas abut sprawl or farms.

Even though human land-use choices that harm people and ecosystems in many ways are the main cause of large deer populations, some people complain of a "deer problem." Officials, conservationists, land managers, and others demonize deer and organize deer kills rather than change the harmful human practices and attitudes that give rise to such complaints.

Despite the countless deer kills that have taken place in parks and neighborhoods, the cry still goes up: "There are too many deer!" "We've got to do something about the deer!" Yet, government wildlife managers have understood for a century or more that killing a significant portion of a deer population helps ensure more deer will be present for hunting in the near future. Rather than solve problems, deer kills have become a big problem. Deer kills have made de facto gamelands of neighborhoods where discharging weapons is illegal and parks were designed to be safe for wildlife.

Rather than continue to "do something about the deer," it is way past time to do something about poor land use and the human, ecosystem, and wildlife destruction it causes. No matter what method is used, it is never humane to kill an animal short of his or her natural lifespan, except to end irremediable suffering. A vote for a deer kill is always a vote for inhumane treatment of animals, for excuses rather than responsible action, and against sound environmental stewardship.

The best solutions to problems often blamed on deer involve mitigating the effects of poor land use in the short term and ending sprawl and over-farming and restoring natural ecosystems in the long term -- not attacking deer. Responsible Policies for Animals recommends approaching each type of complaint based on a clear understanding of the options. Acting rationally and avoiding the anti-deer emotional frenzy that has been whipped up in some communities can help people take the most effective and humane steps. Our society needs to show more, not less, compassion for animals and to make real environmental improvements. We hope this information will help.

Roadside reflectors dramatically reduce car collisions with deer. The Federal Highway Administration's Hazard Elimination Program can cover 80 percent of costs. Funding is also available under Transportation Equity Act - 21.

"The objective of this study was to test whether the installation of the Strieter-Lite reflectors reduced accidents at the sites where the reflectors are installed. Before and after data from 53 sites were analyzed statistically. Since the data were reported for different time periods for sites of different lengths, the reported data were 'normalized' by converting to accidents per mile per year (A/M/Y). This facilitated the comparison of results from the different sites. The sample data conclusively supported the hypothesis that the installation of Strieter-Lite reflectors reduced accidents, involving collisions between vehicles and deer, by 78 - 90%."

-- Robert H. Grenier, "A Study of the Effectiveness of Strieter-Lite Wild Animal Highway Warning Reflector Systems," June 28, 2002

A vast amount of information is available on the Striter-Lite Wild Animal Highway Warning Reflector System, reports on the System's effectiveness, available financial support for the System, and more. Strieter Corporation, 2100 18th Avenue, Rock Island, IL 61201-3611; 309-794-9800; fax 788-5646; info@strieter-lite.com; www.strieter-lite.com.

Automobiles are not a natural part of any ecosystem. No animal species evolved over millions of years developing car-avoidance behavior the way many are good at avoiding other animals who may pose a danger. A Humane Society of the United States study estimated that on average one million animals per day are killed by automobiles in the U.S. alone. Though deer are larger than most and therefore more dangerous and costly to hit, collisions are much more harmful to deer than to people. And environmental damage from cars threatens all animals, some of them hundreds or thousands of miles from the nearest vehicle.

We must accept full responsibility for the high rate of car use, poor driving, and other factors in car-deer collisions. And we must understand that killing deer to prevent car-deer collisions is inhumane and futile. Killing deer does not prevent collisions with surviving deer or with those yet unborn or those soon to immigrate to an area where deer have been destroyed.

Hunting increases car-deer collisions, as illustrated in these studies over two consecutive years in Pennsylvania, the state with the second-highest percentage of hunters.

"Not surprising, the daily number of deer claims increases during mating season in late October to early November and with hunting season in late November to early December. During the 10-day period from November 4-13 of last year, Erie Insurance received over 1,300 deer claims. Erie Insurance received an average of 39 deer claims a day during 1999. That number rose nearly four times on the first day of buck season and doe season to 147 and 123 deer losses, respectively."

-- "Car-Deer Collisions Carry High Price Tag," news release, Erie Insurance Group, March 18, 2000.

"Not surprising, the daily number of deer claims increases during mating season in late October to early November and with hunting season in late November to early December. Last year, Erie Insurance received an average of 34 deer claims a day. That number rose nearly five times on the first day of buck season and doe season for 157 and 160 deer losses, respectively."

--"Deer-Car Collisions Carry High Price Tag," news release, Erie Insurance Group, March 18, 1999.

The American Lyme Disease Foundation (ALDF) does not recommend killing deer to control Lyme disease.

Lyme disease has persisted in some places where deer have been completely eliminated. Many animals other than deer carry and spread the black-legged ticks that cause Lyme disease -- even some migratory birds. White-footed mice are the main carriers of the Lyme disease bacterium the ticks spread to humans and other animals, some of whom do and some of whom do not suffer from Lyme disease. Poor land-use choices boost mouse populations and the incidence of Lyme disease while driving out foxes, weasels, and other carnivores who prey on mice.

"In recent years, urban sprawl has forced the animals to live in carved patches of forest land. As a result, biologists have found that ticks, known to be a culprit in the spread of Lyme disease, are on the rise in smaller forest patches, increasing people's chances of exposure. …

"Scientists have long suspected that tampering with nature increases a person's risk to some diseases due to a shift in animal population, but few studies have made a direct link. The Bard study [in the February 2003 issue of Conservation Biology] found that the density of infected ticks, a good indicator of Lyme disease cases, were higher in [forest] plots of five acres or less ….

"Federal health officials have said that people who live or work in residential areas surrounded by tick-infested woods are at a higher risk of getting Lyme disease. …

"People can avoid contact with infected ticks by wearing long sleeves and cinching pant cuffs around the ankles when entering tick-infested woods, quickly removing attached ticks and performing daily tick checks."

-- Alicia Chang, "Study: Risk of Lyme Disease Increases as Forests Shrink," Associated Press, February 23, 2003.

Developed at Harvard, small cardboard Damminix tubes placed in brush, stone walls, woodpiles, and other mouse habitat use the natural behavior of mice to prevent the spread of Lyme disease to humans. Mice remove permethrin-laden cotton from the tubes and use it as nesting material. When ticks attempt to feed on the mice, the permethrin kills them on contact.

An individual mouse can feed more than 100 ticks in peak tick season. Available at hardware stores, lawn & garden retailers, and from EcoHealth at 800-234-8425, Damminix is approved by the Environmental Protection Agency and is not believed to harm the mice who come in contact with it. It should be used only according to directions and should not be accessible to children or companion animals.

Black-legged ticks are easier to spot on light-colored clothing. Since they are very small, when checking for ticks after outdoor activities it can help to wear a pear of inexpensive magnifying eyeglasses sold at drug stores for reading. Preventing companion cats and dogs from roaming freely can help prevent them from bringing ticks home with them, and this also protects wildlife from domestic animals who are not part of natural ecosystems.

Lyme disease vaccines exist but are not universally recommended - people should consult with physicians about them.

Killing deer can cause people to forego more reliable, practical Lyme-disease prevention methods. Ticks carrying Lyme disease are common from Maryland to Maine and in Wisconsin, Minnesota, California and Oregon and are more common and more likely to be infected in areas of fragmented forest. People concerned about Lyme disease may consider it a factor in choosing where to live and engage in recreation.

Anyone bitten by a tick should be checked for Lyme disease immediately and if told he or she is not infected, seek additional opinions. Lyme disease can be difficult to diagnose, and early treatment is crucial for avoiding advanced stages of the disease.

Hunting is an ineffective method for reducing deer populations.

"The most visible weakness in the assertion that hunting is necessary to control deer populations is that it has largely failed to do so over the last two decades. … Just because deer are being killed doesn't mean that deer populations are being controlled."

-- Allen T. Rutberg, Ph.D., "The Science of Deer Management: An Animal Welfare Perspective," in The Science of Overabundance: Deer Ecology and Population Management, William J. McShea, H. Brian Underwood, and John H. Rappole, eds. Washington & London: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997.

"As we have seen, wildlife biologists have been nurtured on the hunting philosophy and have been taught that ecosystems can be improved by manipulation. Unfortunately, the more man tampers with Nature, the more he must rely upon 'management' activities to maintain a semblance of ecological balance; and these activities are harmful to established ecosystems.

"Hunting, whether in the presence or absence of large predators, is no guaranteed annual 'check' on deer populations."

-- Ron Baker, The American Hunting Myth. Vantage Press, New York, 1985.

"A quick surge in a deer population can occur if hunting is implemented where it hasn't been before. In any event, if hunting is started, it'll have to continue."

-- Thomas Eveland, Ph.D., "Why Killing Deer Makes Poor Park Management," public presentation, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, June 15, 1998.

Wildlife managers claim hunting is effective when it is not.

"In my experience with wildlife managers, a hunt that is followed by a reduction in deer population size is considered effective; a hunt that is followed by a stabilization in deer population size is considered effective; and a hunt that is followed by a rise in the deer population size is considered effective because, the rationalization continues, without the hunt the population would have grown even more. Under these rules, failure is impossible."

-- Thomas Eveland, Ph.D., "Why Killing Deer Makes Poor Park Management," public presentation, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, June 15, 1998.

Bowhunting is ineffective for reducing deer populations.

"[A]rchery has never been a valid control measure for animal populations. It's a recreational offshoot of gun hunting, and as such, they can't really sell it as a control measure …, so what is often done - and this is done wrongly … -- is that people will come in and they will often use what I call the 'D' words-'devastation,' 'destruction,' 'disaster' … -- to talk about these particular animals. … And … what they do is they steer the public into thinking these animals need to be killed. And many times these people will say, We understand archery is not going to control the deer herd, but, gosh, we gotta do something, these things are big rascals, we gotta kill some of 'em, just stick a few of 'em, anything."

-- Thomas Eveland, Ph.D., "Why Killing Deer Makes Poor Park Management," public presentation, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, June 15, 1998.
Bowhunting wounds and cripples a large percentage of deer.

"For a variety of reasons - the arrow's inherent rainbow-shaped trajectory, an animal's ability to hear the snap of the string and react (referred to as 'jumping the string'), and a hunter's excitement and nervousness when seeing an animal ('buck fever') - even experienced archers fail to retrieve approximately half of the animals they shoot."

-- Mike Markarian, "Bowhunting: Culling or Crippling?" The Animals' Agenda, Vol. 16, No. 1.

A former bowhunter and author noted "the impossibility of accurately placing shots with archery equipment" and concluded that "broadhead [arrows] are absolutely inadequate" for killing animals humanely.

-- Adrien Benke, The Bowhunting Alternative, B. Todd Press, San Antonio, Texas, 1989.

A large number of studies published by wildlife agencies and in wildlife journals from 1947 to 1989 revealed crippling rates of 38 to 68 percent, with an average of 50 percent. This is far higher than the wound rate from rifle hunting, which itself is too high. Some of the studies:

R.L. Croft, 1963: 44 percent wounded
G.A. Boydston & H.G. Gore, 1987: 50 percent wounded
J.D. Cada, 1988: 51 percent wounded
L.P. Hansen & G.S. Olson, 1989: 52 percent wounded
L.E. Garland, 1972: 63 percent wounded
M.K. Causey et al., 1978: 50 percent wounded
A.N. Moen, 1989: 68 percent wounded
R.W. Aho, 1984: 58 percent wounded

Elimination of predators does not account for large deer populations - suburban.sprawl, and over-farming the land, and deer management for hunting do.

"Scientists believe that the increased density and the shift in distribution are attributable to large-scale changes in land use. For example, logging and the conversion of forested lands into agricultural, suburban, and other types of developed landscapes created favorable deer habitat with year-round, reliable food sources that allow deer populations to flourish."

-- Michael A. Coffey, Wildlife Biologist, Natural Resources Management Division, National Park Service, White-tailed Deer in National Parks (National Park Service factsheet).

"We often think predators control prey, but that is rarely the case." Prey controls predators; predators diminish as prey declines. It is not the case that removing wolves, cougars, and other predators causes deer to increase.

-- Thomas Eveland, Ph.D., "Why Killing Deer Makes Poor Park Management," public presentation, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, June 15, 1998.

"[G]ame managers rely on a few specious ecological arguments to justify hunts and other lethal [deer] reductions. Probably the most widely used of these myths is that presettlement populations of deer were controlled by predators, removal of predators ended natural control, and, consequently, hunters are needed to control deer populations. … [Deer] populations are regulated through a complex interaction of food availability, predators, and other variables."

-- Allen T. Rutberg, Ph.D., "The Science of Deer Management: An Animal Welfare Perspective," in The Science of Overabundance: Deer Ecology and Population Management, William J. McShea, H. Brian Underwood, and John H. Rappole, eds. Wathington & Londdn: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997.

"[W]ildlife managers who promote deer abundance through the creation of edge habitat are responsible for the effects of these animals on the landscape."

-- William S. Alverson, Ph.D., Donald M. Waller, Ph.D., Walter Kuhlman, J.D., Wild Forests: Conservation Biology and Public Policy. Washington: Island Press, 1994.

To protect vegetation from deer, keep deer away from vegetation and work to restore natural ecosystems and reverse suburban sprawl and over-farming.

Deer kills rarely if ever destroy all of the deer in an area. Surviving animals continue to reproduce. More immigrate from outside of a territory where a population has been significantly reduced. The most killing deer can do to protect vegetation is to reduce for a short time the number of deer feeding in an area. That does not protect any particular plant, group of garden, farm, wildflower patch, or plant species.

Durable, long-lasting deer fencing of many kinds is available. Fencing can be installed in all terrains and over areas large or small. Driveway guards and gate systems designed to keep deer out are also available. A few reliable and knowledgeable nationwide vendors with extensive catalogs:

  • Benner's Gardens: 800-753-4660 / www.bennersgardens.com;
  • Wildlife Control Technology: 800-235-0262 / www.wildlife-control.com;
  • Master Gardening: 301-694-1238 / www.mastergardening.com.

Books on fencing and other methods include:

  • R.M. Hart, Deer Proofing Your Yard and Garden. Pownal, Vermont: Storey Publishing, 1997;
  • P.D. Curtiss & M.E. Richmond, Reducing Deer Damage to Home Gardens and Landscape Plantings, Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University;
  • J.B. McAninch, M.R. Ellingwood & R.J. Winchcombe, Deer Damage Control in New York Agriculture, New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets;

Deer prefer to eat some plant species over others. Their preferences vary over geographical regions and can be affected by drought and other environmental conditions. Some plant nurseries and landscapers are glad to recommend garden and landscape plantings less preferred by deer. Some offer printed lists.

Vast portions of our country consisted of mature forest and would over time naturally revert to forest ecosystems if allowed to. Turf grass is non-native, ecologically unsound in many ways, and covers many millions of acres of U.S. land - it is often called "green concrete." Grass lawns are a popular but misguided fad whose time has come and gone. Trees are just about the only landscaping item that appreciate in value over time. So the crucial steps we must take as a society are obvious:

  • create landscapes that increasingly come to resemble forest;
  • avoid occupying more land than we need;
  • plant and nurture trees and avoid removing trees wherever possible;
  • avoid removing trees or establishing turf-grass expanses when building homes and other structures;
  • establish incentives to reverse suburban sprawl and over-farming;
  • support and promote the New Urbanism architecture and urban-planning movement to ensure that most people live where most needs can be met within a 15 minute walk of home;
  • support efforts that help people switch from automobile driving to mass transportation;
  • oppose efforts to widen roads or build new roads;
  • support efforts to protect natural ecosystems;
  • support efforts to minimize or eliminate mineral, oil, gas, timber, and other "resource" extraction;
  • support efforts to reuse, recycle, and otherwise conserve materials rather than further disrupt ecosystems to produce or extract more materials;
  • teach and practice minimal use of materials in all activities, including foods that involve the least land, water, and energy use - plant foods - since we must eat every day and have no need of animal-derived foods that cause poor land use that ensures large deer populations.
  • work to reform the 1937 Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act (Pittman-Robertson Act), which increases deer populations by ensuring state wildlife agencies manage deer for hunting and provides incentives for increasing the number of hunters demanding deer to hunt.

The more rapidly we learn to take these constructive steps rather than attack deer or members of other species for engaging in their natural behavior, the sooner the war cry of the frenzied deer hater - "We've got to do something!" - will vanish from the landscape, the sooner the constant roar of engines, air pollution, and car-deer collisions will go, and instead we can hear the birds and other wildlife who used to exist in our regions in far greater number and variety.

Deer kills harm efforts to protect forest and other natural ecosystems, reverse suburban sprawl, and develop humane ways to live with wildlife. So when it comes to preventing deer kills, animal activists are the true environmentalists and conservationists.

People concerned about propensities of large human-generated deer populations to eat large amounts of vegetation, potentially affecting low-nesting birds, forest regeneration, groundwater, and other aspects of ecosystems should make common cause with animal activists. Promoting deer kills is contrary to conservation and environmental values. Every deer kill is another green light for people to keep harming the environment by destroying forest, expanding sprawl, and over-farming the land. Most people think protecting and restoring natural ecosystems are the objectives of conservationists, environmentalists, and open-space activists. Opposing deer kills and insisting on true environmental approaches will show that that is correct.

Responsible Policies for Animals is glad to provide additional information or referrals on these and other animal-related matters and to recommend additional organizations working constructively to prevent deer kills.

Solving problems wrongly blamed on deer, resolving other disputes concerning wildlife, restoring natural ecosystems, and living in harmony with other species and natural ecosystems involve long-term struggle. Attempted short cuts like killing deer will never work. Education at every level must contribute. So should every major institution of our society. Working together, we can make these struggles the local, county, state, national, and international priorities they deserve to be.

Op-Ed

Why Hunting Is Not a Sport

By David Cantor

Claims by hunters, officials, and outdoors columnists that hunting is a sport have long caused segments of the public to accept that notion. Yet an activity is not necessarily a sport just because those who practice it claim it is or because authorities reinforce the notion.

It is very much worth questioning whether hunting is in fact a sport-since hunting is a life-and-death matter with irrevocable results and many people deplore the deliberate killing of wildlife legally owned by all of us in common. The relevant facts lead to the conclusion that hunting is not a sport.

Consider activities universally accepted as sports, and you can see they share several qualities. Team sports like soccer, football, hockey, rugby, and basketball and sports of mainly individual effort like pole vaulting, shot put, marksmanship, skiing and tennis involve only participants who choose to take part and understand the object, skills, rules of the sport.

That cannot be said of hunting since key participants-the nonhuman targets of the human participants-do not know they are participating and do not choose to do so. They do not know the object is to kill them or the rules or regulations that govern hunting. Animals may sense danger, but that is a far cry from knowing they are participating in a sport. The more accustomed to human presence an animal is, the less "sporting" some hunters consider it to shoot that animal, but that does not mean shooting animals is a sport-it just means hunters choose to use that terminology.

Even in the most violent of sports, killing participants is never the object. Even though some people believe boxing should be illegal due to brain and other injuries often inflicted and deaths sometimes caused, inflicting injury or causing death is not the object of boxing. Hockey players, though castigated or ejected for undue violence, seek to get the puck into the opposing team's goal and prevent it from entering theirs, not usually to harm or kill opponents.

In those sports as in others, all participants know their sports, know the risks, and choose to participate. Not so with hunting, in which the aim is to kill nonhumans forced to participate unbeknownst to them and in which severe wounding without death or with slow, agonizing death often occurs. Of course, no veterinary "trainers" rush onto the field to help wounded Canada geese, deer, mourning doves, or others while an aggrieved audience hopes for the best. After all, killing is the objective.

The only way around this argument that hunting is not a sport is to claim human beings are the only participants-that the animals are not participants. In support, one would have to claim hunting could take place without animal "quarry" or that animals are not conscious beings capable of participating in anything. Both would be patently ridiculous assertions. The first contradicts the definition of hunting. The second contradicts scientific knowledge that animals are in fact conscious beings and that they participate in many things, such as seeking food and cover, watching for predators to protect self and social group, building nests, raising young, and more.

If, by calling hunting a sport, hunters simply mean they have fun doing it, sure, that fits one definition of "sport." But that would acknowledge hunting should not be respected like sports involving challenge, competition and sportsmanship including all participants' knowledge and consent. And killing for fun, smacking of the utmost disrespect for life, is always discouraged in a civilized society.

That is not to say some hunters, wildlife officers, elected officials, and members of the press do not honestly believe hunting is a sport. But they are seriously mistaken. They misunderstand as countless people have always misunderstood things. But in the case of hunting, their error is a basis of terrible suffering in animals and of distress in people who care about animals. Therefore, it must be understood that hunting is not a sport.

This op-ed was first published in Animal Writes.


Donations to Responsible Policies for Animals, Inc., are tax-deductible as allowed by law.

Responsible Policies for Animals, Inc., P.O. Box 891, Glenside, PA 19038