this post was submitted on 29 May 2026
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[–] arrow74@lemmy.zip 3 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 13 minutes ago)

Wow talk about false equivalency.

Environments are designed for forest fires. They need fire to function. Which is why there are intensive control burn programs.

The issue is before we began trying to let our forests burn properly people spent decades not burning the forests and trying to stop every fire immediately. This led to way too much fuel being available and combined with climate and you get fires that are outside of what they should be naturally. Hopefully we can continue to correct to the point where we can let fires burn naturally. Sometimes people struggle to understand that we've been shaping the environment for decades and it's going to take decades of work to fix. Just walking away would not have the intended result.

Anyway back to the need to cull or manage hunts, you clearly have no idea the ecological issues overpopulation causes. When populations get out of control you can have an environment that becomes completely overgrazed. This is a disaster for the plant communities, and causes ripple effects throughout the whole ecosystem. Leading to the extinction of threatened plant and animal species and a loss of biodiversity.

Naturally it would not get to that point. We should reintroduce predators. Until then it is absolutely necessary to cull some species. I'd much rather people go and kill a couple hundred deer every few years (most parks do not do yearly hunts) than to lose vulnerable species.

And like I said it's not the hunters preventing predator reintroduction it's primarily ranchers with a helping hand from NIMBYs. Truthfully I've never heard a case of hunters saying anything at all about reintroduction.