Someone’s got to pay for wildlife…
Fishing = 42 Billion
Hunting: 34 billion
Wildlife watching: 55 billion
Total = 145 billion (1% of GDP)
2016: 184,000,000 hunters
Days hunting: 147,000,000 hunting trips
3.3 billion dollars generated from trip related costs
gas, food, lodging
low-expenditure activities
90 million people (38%) participated in outdoor recreation
37 million fishing or hunting
each individual spent $2,407
22 million 6-15 year olds participated
More Americans fish than play basketball (24 million) and football (8.9 million) combined
More American women fish than play basketball (7.5 million), volleyball (6.4 million) or softball (5.9 million)
If fishing were ranked as a corporation in the Fortune 500, it would outrank Sears, Pepsi, Apple and Intel
The more than 1 million jobs supported by anglers are more than the number of people employed by Home Depot, Target, and General Electric combined
Roughly equal United Parcel Service’s 2010 revenue which is ranked 44 in the Fortune 500
The number of jobs supported by anglers could employ all attendees of the last seven Super Bowls—twice!
The economic activity generated by fishing is greater than the gross state products of 23 states
Hunting/fishing license fees by states
significant revenue for states
Federal
duck stamps
excise taxes
Pittman-Robertson (wildlife), Dingle-Johnson (fish)
1937, Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration
11% tax on hunting equipment
50% habitat, 20% acquisition, 25% research
Since 1937, hunters = 14 billion from Pittman
Since 1950, anglers = 38 billion Dingell-Johnson
P-R funding pays 75% of costs
States pay 25%
Tax check offs
many states now have them for a variety of causes
wildlife state tax return
License plates NC and many other states
Sales taxes—Missouri, Minnesota
2007 raised $102 mm
Minnesota 3/8 of 1% sales tax = $1 per person per week
Other states are considering similar models
Teaming with Wildlife Coalition (1990’s)
push to create funding for nongame
State Wildlife Grants (SWG) (2001)
comprehensive wildlife conservation plan
provides federal grant funds to state fish and wildlife agencies for developing and implementing programs that benefit wildlife and their habitats, including species that are not hunted or fished
NC’s was the first in the country to be approved
Watchable wildlife
whales
whooping cranes
Ecotourism (ecoquesttravel.net)
Provide local dollars
Tax check offs, license plate sales, sales taxes, etc
Civets in Ethiopia for musk
Sambar deer in Taiwan for antler velvet as an aphrodisiac
Ostrich farms in NJ
Elk
Fur farming
mink, chinchilla, nutria, sable
Benefit: may relieve pressure on wild populations—not scientifically evaluated
Problem: animal welfare
Liability: can escape and establish an exotic invasive
Bird nest soup in Asia
Cave swifts
Birds’ nest soup
African ungulates
Adapted to local conditions
Efficient grazing, niche separation, water conservation, mouth shape, etc
Domestication problems of free-ranging African ungulates
Competition with existing meat trade
Habitat destruction
Opposition from conservationists
Low profit margins
Distant markets
Trophy hunting
all hunters have a little bit of trophy hunting in them, even if they hunt for meat primarily
trophy hunting endangered species is where it gets troubling
this term has been manipulated in the media
World Hunting Association
We don’t want the European Model here
Costs to participate
equipment, travel, license, housing, etc
TV shows, magazines, outdoor expos, etc
Dixie Deer Classic
Banquets/fundraisers
Per animal harvested/caught
$1000’s to $10,000’s
Can be profitable for farmers and ranchers
offsets cost of crop damage, land taxes, management costs
farmers manage deer in NC
May lead to less participation of hunting overall…
Public trust is eroded by:
game ranching
leases and fee hunting so fewer can participate
hunting solely for “sport”
Hunting must be thought of as part of an ecological community
Non-Frivolous Use, using all of the animal killed
Hunting Opportunity for All
Prohibition on Commerce of Dead Wildlife
In USA, wildlife publicly owned but access under the control of landowner (e.g. Texas)