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Ballot Measure to Ban Lion Hunting Divides Colorado
Ballot Measure to Ban Lion Hunting Divides Colorado
Sep 20, 2024 8:29 PM

  Colorado residents will have a new issue to vote on this November: whether to continue to allow the hunting of mountain lions and bobcats.

  All hunting of these feline predators would end under a petition filed in Colorado this week by animal rights group Cats Arent Trophies. The group has already collected 188,000 signatures — 60,000 more than necessary to get the proposal on the states November ballot. State officials approved the petition Wednesday, ensuring that Initiative 91 will come to a vote.

  That has created a widening rift among Colorado residents. On one side, animal rights activists call hunting of lions and bobcats a cruel, unjustifiable practice. They said Colorados state-managed hunting program results in the needless killing of mountain lions and bobcats for their heads and beautiful fur coats.

  Opponents, on the other hand, claim that Cats Arent Trophies has invented a problem that didnt exist. They say a hunting ban on the states wild cats wouldnt just impact longtime hunters — its also a threat to effective wildlife management. They also note that it is already illegal — indeed a felony offense — to kill mountain lions or bobcats for only their fur and head. Their meat legally must be collected.

  As for Colorados wildlife officials, theyre stuck in the middle. Colorado Parks Wildlife (CPW) says its hunting plan has proven effective in managing animal populations. But if voters pass the measure this November, they have no choice.

  We take no position for or against it, said CPW spokesperson Bridget O’Rourke. We will implement anything passed by the voters and the legislature.

  View this post on Instagram A post shared by Cat’s Aren’t Trophies (@catsarenttrophiescolorado)

  Science or Emotion? Its not the first time that Colorado voters have decided to change the states wildlife management policy. An initiative to reintroduce gray wolves passed in 2020, and the first animals were let loose last year. State officials worried the new predators would further impact the states elk population, and some reports suggest its already happening.

  Making decisions about how to manage wildlife — from gray wolves to mountain lions — should be based on science, not emotion, said Bryan Jones, Colorado Chapter Coordinator for Backcountry Hunters and Anglers.

  It’s an emotional issue and the folks that are leading it are playing to those emotions, he said. It totally goes against science-based management and has quite a bit of misinformation.

  There are several examples of this in the messaging of Cats Arent Trophies, Jones said. For example, Initiative 91 would ban the hunting of lynxes, as well as lions and bobcats. But its already illegal to hunt lynxes anywhere in the U.S., where they are federally protected.

  Mountain lion and bobcat populations remain healthy, according to state officials, and have steadily increased since the 1990s — even as Colorado continued a limited annual hunting program.

  Cats Arent Trophies contends otherwise. The group points to supporters who are wildlife biologists, veterinarians, or even hunters, arguing that any hunting of the cats is damaging to the environment.

  Indiscriminate killing of predators who are not causing any problems is unwarranted and destabilizes the peaceful coexistence between humans, domestic animals and predators, the group says on the website.

  View this post on Instagram A post shared by Howl For Wildlife (@howl_org)

  Activists: Trophy Hunting Not a Good Look In Colorado, its illegal to kill a mountain lion without using the meat.

  There are hundreds of recipes and hundreds of hunters that make amazing meals out of these animals, Jones said.

  Again, Cats Arent Trophies says otherwise.

  Anyone who says they recreationally hunt mountain lions or bobcats to fill their freezer and feed a family is being disingenuous. It is not normal behavior to eat a cat, the groups campaign manager, Sam Miller, told GearJunkie. When someone says they’re eating cats, they are attempting to justify a behavior the public finds unacceptable. It is merely an excuse to kill mountain lions and bobcats for trophies.

  The term trophy hunting looms large in the groups argument. They sent GearJunkie many examples of hunters using the term for mountain lions killed in the state.

  Colorado does allow mountain lion hunters to use dogs. Electronic predator calls are allowed when dealing with conflict lions near residential area, according to a 2020 state management plan.

  However, even Cats Arent Trophies acknowledges that some animals will still need to be killed. The language of Initiative 91 allows for the lethal removal of lions when they pose a danger to humans.

  So, Colorado will still have to manage the animals — but without the funding that comes from selling hunting licenses. Colorado wildlife officials said that money supports conservation efforts throughout the state.

  

Ballot Measure to Ban Lion Hunting Divides Colorado1

  A mountain lion and her cubs; (photo/Shutterstock) A Fine Line Between Hunting and Conservation If Colorado voters approve Initiative 91 this fall, its hard to predict what will happen to the states wildlife.

  California, for example, banned the hunting of mountain lions in 1990. But it left an exception for cats that attack livestock. That has led to more mountain lions killed each year than before the ban was enacted, according to a 2017 investigation by The Sacramento Bee. Animal rights groups are now pressuring the governor to take further action to protect the states big cats.

  Utah officials went the other direction. Last year, the legislature approved the year-round hunting of mountain lions. In 2022, the states Division of Wildlife Resources offered nearly 4,000 cougar hunting permits — twice the animals estimated population.

  In Colorado, officials limit mountain lion harvests to 17% of the species populations in a given region. The cap for mountain lion harvests is changed every year, with the 2023-24 hunting season cap at674 animals. In 2023, hunters harvested486 lions.

  Colorado Parks and Wildlife requires hunters to report each lion they kill within 48 hours. After that, the hunter has 5 days to present each lion at a CPW office for an inspection. Theres also an official seal that allows the hunter to keep the hide. 

  But no amount of regulation makes hunting mountain lions acceptable, according to the Mountain Lion Foundation, which supports Initiative 91.

  Some people claim that without hunting mountain lions, they will overpopulate, decimate deer herds, and lose their fear of people, wrote Paige Munson, the organizations science and policy coordinator. Every piece of evidence we have indicates that mountain lion populations are limited by habitat and food availability requiring no levels of hunting. Remember, cougars didn’t evolve to be hunted.

  

Ballot Measure to Ban Lion Hunting Divides Colorado2

  Colorado Cancels Spring Mountain Lion Hunt Ahead of Vote to BanLast week, the Colorado Parks and Wildlife Commission made the unanimous decision to cancel the April mountain lion hunting season. Read more

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