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Explores State-Landowner Wildlife PartnershipsA Summary
Ranching for wildlife provides landowners with such advantages as hunting tags to sell directly to hunters and extended hunting seasons. In return, landowners make habitat improvements, often designing site-specific management plans. Ranching for wildlife leads to improved success rates and trophy animals for hunters, better habitat management for state game agencies, and wildlife viewed as assets rather than pests by landowners. Hunting for Habitat discusses the controversies as well as the benefits of ranching for wildlife and answers difficult questions such as:
In addition, Hunting for Habitat offers advice on implementing ranching for wildlife in other states as well as improving existing programs. The authors are associates of PERC (Political Economy Research Center), a nationally recognized institute in Bozeman, Montana, that seeks market solutions to environmental problems. PERC recognizes that when it comes to wildlife, often the most applicable phrase for saving animals is "if it pays, it stays." Copies of Hunting for Habitat are available as PDFs on this Web site. |
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"Free market environmentalists are pushing against an open door." - David Morris, Institute for Local Self-Reliance
Recycling What's wrong with our federal lands? National TV Broadcasting and the rise of the regulatory state Not a walk in the park |