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Reminder of what we are talking about Wildlife has value for humans –Economic –Recreational –Intrinsic Influences how we interact with wildlife.

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Presentation on theme: "Reminder of what we are talking about Wildlife has value for humans –Economic –Recreational –Intrinsic Influences how we interact with wildlife."— Presentation transcript:

1 Reminder of what we are talking about Wildlife has value for humans –Economic –Recreational –Intrinsic Influences how we interact with wildlife

2 Non-consumptive Use of Wildlife

3 Non-consumptive Use Any non-hunting or non-extractive use Examples: wildlife feeding & photography, bird watching, whale watching

4 Non-consumptive Use Sources of information Based on USFWS’s series of National Surveys of Fishing, Hunting and Wildlife-Associated Recreation –One of the Nation's most important wildlife recreation databases (since 1955) –Conducted by US Census Bureau every 5 years –Sample of 85,000 households –Funded by the 1937 Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act http://federalasst.fws.gov/surveys/surveys.html

5 2006 Survey Highlights Over 87 million U.S. residents 16 years old and older fished, hunted, or wildlife watched –29.9 million people fished –12.5 million hunted –71.1 million participated in at least one type of wildlife-watching activity including observing, feeding, or photographing wildlife (non- incidental activity)

6 2006 Survey Highlights 31% of the U.S. population fed, observed, or photographed wildlife 13% increase from 1996 to 2006 –10% decrease in hunting –15% decrease in fishing Expenditures for wildlife-watching equipment (binoculars, cameras, etc.) increased by 20% and for wildlife-watching trips by 40%

7 Wildlife Watching Participation Rates

8 Wildlife Watching Participation: Pacific Region

9 Wildlife Watching Trends Around home Away from home - + + + 1996-2006

10 Wildlife watching expenditures Hunters and fishermen spent $75 billion Wildlife watchers spent $45 billion Total = $120 billion, or 1% of US gross domestic product

11 Trip-Related Expenditures Food Lodging Transportation –Cars, boats, pack animals Guides Land use Fees Equipment rental Wildlife watching: equipment & expenses

12 Equipment Binoculars, spotting scopes Cameras Backpacking equipment Special clothing Field guides & maps Tents and camping equipment Blinds Nest boxes, bird houses, feeders, baths Other Expenditures Magazines, books Land leasing and ownership Membership dues and contributions Wildlife watching: equipment & expenses

13 Wildlife Watching & Photography Take a class Hire a guide Join a group No trespassing Don’t disturb natural behaviors – keep your distance

14 Wildlife Photography Tips Telephoto lenses Patience - practice low-impact photography Photograph in controlled wildlife management areas Use captive and conditioned animals at zoos / game farms

15 Wildlife Watching in WA

16 Principles of Birding Ethics of the American Birding Association Promote the welfare of birds and their environment –Protect habitats, stay on trails –Avoid incurring stress or danger Respect the law and the rights of others –No trespassing Ensure that feeders, nest structures, and other artificial bird environments are safe Group birding requires special care –Respect other recreationists

17 Feeding Wildlife "People" food is not formulated for animal consumption When animals learn that humans can provide a cheap and easy food source, they often lose their natural fear of humans

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19 Feeding Wildlife Feeding wildlife from vehicles –Traffic hazards –Costly property damage Animals dependent on human food sources –Gather in abnormally large numbers –Spread disease Backyard wildlife feeding –keep feeders clean –keep cats indoors

20 Domestic cats... > 90 million pet cats in U.S. Free-roaming cats kill hundreds of millions small wildlife each year!

21 Why Landscape for Wildlife? 1.Watching wildlife can be fun and relaxing 2.Provide refuge for wildlife 3.Restore habitats 4.Reduce the use of chemicals, conserve energy and water, and compost to help improve air, water and soil quality

22 Food - Plant native forbs, shrubs, and trees provides foliage, nectar, pollen, berries, seeds, and nuts - Provide feeders (seeds, suet, nuts) Landscaping for Wildlife

23 Water Natural features: ponds, lakes, rivers, springs, oceans, wetlands Human-made features: bird baths, puddling areas for butterflies, installed ponds, rain gardens

24 Landscaping for Wildlife Cover Sheltered places to hide and take young to be safe from people, predators, and inclement weather Shrubs, thickets, brush piles, dead trees

25 Landscaping for Wildlife Places to raise young Nest boxes Bat boxes Dead trees

26 Landscaping for Wildlife Sustainable gardening Mulch Reduce lawn area Rain barrels Remove invasive plants Add native plants Reduce or eliminate use of chemical pesticides and fertilizers Compost Shrubs, thickets, brush piles, dead trees

27 Top 10 native plants for feeding WA wildlife Douglas Fir Oregon White Oak Western Serviceberry Hollyleaf Oregon-grape Blue Elderberry Salal Salmonberry Hooker’s Evening Primrose Red Columbine Beach Strawberry

28 Ecotourism Responsible travel to natural areas that conserves the environment and improves the welfare of local people (The International Ecotourism Society)

29 Ecotourism Principles minimize impact build environmental and cultural awareness and respect provide positive experiences for both visitors and hosts provide direct financial benefits for conservation provide financial benefits and empowerment for local people raise sensitivity to host countries' political, environmental, and social climate

30 Ecotourism Most of tourism expansion in and around world’s last remaining natural areas (UN Environment Programme and Conservation International) Rapid loss of unique ecosystems damages the livelihoods of some of the world’s poorest people and drives unique biodiversity to extinction - Tourism provides a unique and valuable tool to addressing these challenges (Conservation International)

31 Ecotourism Tourists willing to pay more for responsible ecotourism Ecotourists invest more in local economy Ecotourism is growing 10% / year... Opportunity for good

32 Ecotourism in Cambodia Sam Veasna Center: alliance between Wildlife Conservation Society, Cambodian government and communities

33 Local employment Donations from ecotourism –Agricultural assistance, fish ponds, rice banks –Available when commitment to not kill wildlife and to follow land use plan Conservation fieldwork grants Ecotourism in Cambodia Sam Veasna Center: alliance between Wildlife Conservation Society, Cambodian government and communities

34 Sarus Crane, Grus antigone

35 Ecotourism Be a responsible consumer –Choose wisely – are the places you go eco-certified? –How are fees allocated? Not a perfect system – lots of ways to have a break down –Ecotourism operations come in shades of gray Don’t actually invest fully in conservation or community –Displacement of people –Resource harvesting for subsistence Illegal poaching Carbon collection Wood

36 Potential negative effects of wildlife watching Direct –Feeding patterns –social structure –communication Indirect –Species introductions, more roads/facilities, increased predation, increased pollution

37 Implications of Wildlife Watching Supplements traditional funding for wildlife, which alone is inadequate Engages the public into conservation efforts May help or hinder wildlife populations, depending on activity


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