I wonder how many collars were destroyed by "unlicensed" hunters upon funding it that the animal was collared
I wonder how many collars were destroyed by "unlicensed" hunters upon funding it that the animal was collared
Either way, the researches would speculate that the collars were destroyed thru human causes.
And any other way of a collared moose dying they would still find the collar and maybe that answer to whether it was pred or human death.
Unless the transmitter on the collar just "crapped out".
But, would be a good stat if it isn't in there already.
Have you seen the stats for what the actual usage of sprays is? total acreage? per cent of blocks sprayed vs per cent left alone? What regions even use spray anymore? Does the spray effect deciduous for more than one growth season? are blocks sprayed with followup coverage?
The facts show a sensible picture
Never say whoa in the middle of a mud hole
Someone explain to me how the forestry companies got away with spraying that crap on that underbrush etc.
Yet, never got approved to spray to kill for beetle (granted, it would have affected everyone every where).
Just saying, and sort of wondering.
Would have been much more "lucrative" in the end, imo.
Okay, thanks for the info.
Did the Forestry Sector use "Pheromones" at all in a spraying attempt to out the beetles at bay.
Must be a way to have "baited them somehow"? and then burn them just like using a vacuum cleaner to suck up all the yellow jackets, toss filter in
metal can, add gas, and boom, no more wasps!
Before the MPB outbreak they would bait them and followed up with a buck and burn program in the winter on small inaccessible areas.
Believe it it or not but the bark beetle has evolved over time and is a master of survival. A quick note, the woodpecker is not density depended meaning it’s number doesn’t fluctuate with the beetle numbers unlike the rabbit and lynx.